Full name | David Vincent Nucifora | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Date of birth | 15 January 1962 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Place of birth | Brisbane, Australia | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
School | Brisbane Grammar School | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Rugby union career | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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David Nucifora (born 15 January 1962) is a rugby union former player, coach and performance director. He is currently performance director for the Scottish Rugby Union. [1]
Nucifora played for Queensland and Australia. He played as a hooker. He played for the Queensland team from 1986–1993 and was selected into the Wallabies in 1991 and was also a part of the 1991 Rugby World Cup winning squad which beat England in a nail-biting final winning 12–6.
In 2002 he was appointed as the coach of ACT Brumbies team and he took them to 3 consecutive finals series, including two finals, winning the 2004 Super 12 tournament. He was also named Australian coach of the year from 2002 to 2004 (3 years). In April 2004, he was sacked by the ACT Brumbies because the Brumbies' management believed that Nucifora introduced changes to the squad and the development of younger players, that his job was done and that the development program required another set of skills. As a result of this, Nucifora became the first ever coach in Super Rugby history, to be sacked after winning the title.
In 2005 he joined the Auckland Blues team as a technical advisor and high performance manager, with the positions previously held by former All Blacks coach Graham Henry. After Peter Sloane's four-year tenure as the head coach for the Blues ended, David was chosen as the new head coach for the team. This appointment was initially supported by fans but the team's inability to win and the loss of the high risk attacking rugby caused many fans to call for his immediate dismissal. Pat Lam took over this role in 2009.
In late 2007 Nucifora applied for the role of Australian Head Coach. It was well known throughout this time that Crusaders coach Robbie Deans was the favourite of ARU CEO John O'Neill;[ citation needed ] however Deans applied for the All Blacks coaching role instead. Deans’ decision to apply for the All Blacks made Nucifora the front runner for the Wallabies post, but the NZRU controversially decided to keep incumbent coach Graham Henry despite the All Blacks worst ever performance at a world cup which led to Deans successfully applying for the Wallabies job. Despite Deans' appointment, Nucifora has insisted that he hasn't given up on coaching internationally one day.[ citation needed ]
On 20 March 2008 Eddie O'Sullivan resigned from his post as Irish rugby manager. Nucifora's name was connected as O'Sullivan's successor although he did not claim any interest in the job.
In 2009 Nucifora was appointed General Manager of the ARU High Performance Unit. He coached the Australian U20 team at the IRB Junior World Championship in Japan from 5–21 June 2009.
As of 1 June 2014 he is IRFU High Performance Director. [2] He is known in Ireland for his role in ensuring the supply of elite players to the professional pool, be they sourced internally or externally. In his time with Ireland, the men's and women's 7s programmes were relaunched, with the men's team achieving some success at international level, qualifying for the 2020 Olympics. He has also been criticised for failing to foster more cohesive links between the professional game and the domestic and schools games in Ireland. In 2021 he was criticised in a letter from the Irish women's rugby team, citing loss of trust in the union, and historic and systemic failings. He left his job with Ireland in 2024. [3] During his 10-year reign at the IRFU, Ireland won four Six Nations titles including two grand slams as well as helping Ireland to world number one in the world rankings. [4]
In August 2024 the Scottish Rugby Union announced that Nucifora was taking up a part time role in the leadership of rugby development in Scotland on an initial two year contract. In December 2024, he outlines his plans for Scottish rugby over the duration of his contract including establishing a grassroots structure to create long-term prosperity for the national team as well as assisting the union in appointing a long-term successor at the conclusion of his contract. [5] [6]
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