Could Joe Schmidt be about to make a dramatic return to New Zealand rugby?
However much some Kiwis might relish the prospect, the truth is, two factors stand in the way of any such move. Pat Lam's determination and potential to turn around a losing sequence with the Blues is the first. And the second is that Irish province Leinster will fight hard to keep Schmidt in Dublin.
There is good reason for that. Leinster have played the best, the most innovative, entertaining, and effective rugby anywhere in the Northern Hemisphere this season. The defending Heineken Cup champions, now preparing for a semifinal in this year's competition against crack French outfit Clermont Ferrand at the end of this month, have stood out for the quality of their rugby.
Schmidt is responsible for that. He is regarded as one of the top coaches in Europe, with the possible exception of another Kiwi, his old colleague at Clermont, Vern Cotter. Their meeting in the Heineken semifinal on April 29 will be a meeting of coaching masterminds.
Schmidt left Clermont and Cotter's side almost two years ago and in that time has taken Leinster forward, always a valuable criterion on the part of any coach. The quality yet simplicity of their rugby is a triumph: quick ball, clinically and efficiently procured, is the key to their game, just as it has been that of the most successful sides such as the Crusaders and the All Blacks.