After leading the Springboks to the Rugby World Cup glory Jake White took on a role working at the International Rugby Board assisting with their technical committee. He performed this role from 2008 to 2012. He also held positions in the IRB as a consultant, as well as in the South African Rugby Legends Association's upliftment programmes for underprivileged people.
Brumbies 2012–13 The Brumbies finished first in the Australian conference with ten wins, and third on the overall table. The Reds had also won ten games, but the Brumbies had a greater points difference. They faced the
Cheetahs at home in Canberra in a semi-final qualifier, and survived a last-minute scare when
Riaan Smit's conversion attempt – which if successful would have forced the match into extra-time – hit the upright, the final score 15–13. The Brumbies then travelled to Pretoria to face the
Bulls at
Loftus Versfeld in the semi-final. The Bulls had won 22 of their previous 24 games at Loftus, including all five finals. The Brumbies started well and led at half-time 16–11. But the Bulls were determined to keep their unblemished finals record at home intact, and worked their way back into the game to lead 23–19 with 14 minutes to go. Then Bulls captain
Dewald Potgieter turned down three opportunities to score penalty goals, instead opting each time to go for a try, presumably to put the game beyond the Brumbies' reach. In the 78th minute, the Brumbies seized their chance when fly-half
Matt To'omua made an incisive break and passed to
Tevita Kuridrani who touched down to help give the Brumbies a 26–23 lead. There was still time for one last kick-off, but the Bulls lost possession, enabling the Brumbies to kick the ball into touch and celebrate a victory which White described as "the greatest the Brumbies have ever had". On 7 October 2013, White was appointed director of rugby at the
Sharks, replacing Brendan Venter.
Sharks 2014 One of White's first actions as the Sharks' director of rugby was to establish
Pat Lambie at fly-half for the upcoming Super Rugby season, saying that he felt that the talented Springbok utility back had been "messed around" with enough. White also announced that François Steyn would play at inside centre. The decision was partly to provide Steyn some much-needed stability, but also because he felt that playing Steyn at inside centre would help Lambie: With Frans at 12, you will see a much better Pat Lambie. Even at 80 percent, Frans is a better player than most people at 100 percent. We will do whatever we can to make those two the best 10–12 combination in the competition. White's next move was to restructure the Sharks' on-field leadership; he replaced
Keegan Daniel with
Bismarck du Plessis as captain, and appointed Lambie,
Odwa Ndungane and
Jean Deysel as vice-captains. White's first game in charge of the Sharks was a friendly on 25 January with
Saracens F.C. in London. On 15 February, the Sharks started their
2014 Super Rugby campaign in the best way possible with a bonus-point 31–16 victory against arch-rivals the
Bulls in Durban. But the Sharks' first major hurdle of the season came during the re-match against the Bulls in Pretoria on 22 March. Up to that stage, the Sharks had been undefeated. In addition to losing the match 23–19, their starting halves combination was injured early. Pat Lambie was subsequently ruled out for the rest of the season with a torn bicep tendon, and
Cobus Reinach fractured his hand, which would cause him to miss eight weeks. White went on to coach the Sharks to top of the South African conference, finishing third overall in the table. They had to host the
Highlanders in the quarter-finals, where for much of the match, the home side led, finishing 31–27. Unfortunately for the Sharks, they had to travel to
Christchurch to face the
Crusaders who were favourite to win the competition. The Sharks lost the match 38–6, conceding 5 tries, 4 of which came in the second half. The result came as a massive surprise for some, since the Sharks had the best defence in the competition in the normal season. Like with the Brumbies, two months after leading the Sharks to that semi-final, White resigned as Director of Rugby, to pursue an international role ahead of the
2015 Rugby World Cup.
Tonga On 13 October 2014, White joined
Tonga as a member of the backroom staff, and acted as a technical advisor for head coach
Mana Otai for the Test Tour of Europe. White and Otai led Tonga to 2 from 3 wins during their
2014 European Tour. The tour began with a 23–9 victory over
Georgia, which included a late surge off tries during the closing quarter to secure the win. The following week, Tonga kept their 100% win rate intact against the
United States, winning 40–12 in
Gloucester. The 'Ikale Tahi were praised heavily for their defensive abilities in their opening two matches of their tour, keeping Georgia tryless completely and the United States tryless in the second half. But Tonga were also praised for their new attacking flair, and with hand in ball, with some people expecting a first-ever clean sweep on European tour heading into the final match against Scotland. Jake White had believed to be the main inputter into this new structure. Despite the first half being a close 14–12 at half time, Scotland ran away with the match in the second half, scoring a further 3 tries to win 37–12. Mana Otai had hoped to keep White on board for the World Cup, and until December 2014, there had still been no official announcement on White's future with Tonga.
Montpellier On 30 December, Jake White was announced as the new boss for French club
Montpellier, where he would oversee all coaching aspects for the club. This came after a poor run of results in both the
2014–15 Top 14 season and the
2014–15 European Rugby Champions Cup. Already Montpellier's forwards coach Mario Ledesma had been sacked, with backs coach
Stéphane Glas also tipped to be getting the boot. However, on White announcement, Glas would remain at the club with former Springbok
Shaun Sowerby joining the backroom staff as the new forwards coach.
Fabien Galthié who was in charge of the club before White, will still remain with the club but it is still unclear what role he will play in the new set-up. "...He also held positions in the IRB as a consultant, as well as in the South African Rugby Legends Association's upliftment programmes for underprivileged people" ==Springbok coaching record and achievements==