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How Johann van Graan rebuilt broken Bath

Johann van Graan’s Bath rebuild has taken the club from Premiership bottom in 2022 to English champions and Investec Champions Cup contenders in just three seasons.

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Johann van Graan's Bath are the best team in England and among the title contenders in the Investec Champions Cup

Johann van Graan took over the worst Bath side of the professional era and, in three seasons, rebuilt them and turned them into the best team in England and contenders for the ultimate club prize of the Investec Champions Cup.

Johann van Graan and Bath

Bath host Northampton Saints in the Investec Champions Cup quarter-final on Friday night.

Van Graan’s Bath, winners of last season’s EPCR Challenge Cup, are chasing the club’s second European star. They were the first British team to win the biggest rugby club title in Europe, beating French club Brive 19–18 in the final in Bordeaux with Jon Callard scoring all the points for Bath.

Despite winning two EPCR Challenge Cup titles, it has been a long wait in between drinks for the second star and the crown of rugby’s Kings of Europe.

Van Graan, in 2022, inherited a mess at Bath.

The former Springboks assistant coach and Munster head coach arrived in Bath as a system coach, a rugby man and a detail obsessive shaped under former Bulls and Springboks coach Heyneke Meyer, where the philosophy is on team, family and winning.

His five seasons as head coach at Ireland’s Munster, where he succeeded Rassie Erasmus and Jacques Nienaber, were influential in shaping his mentality and maturity for the challenge of fixing Bath.

At Bath, he stripped everything back.

He fixed conditioning.
He fixed defensive alignment.
He fixed clarity of role.

And most importantly, he fixed belief.

The result is a team that now knows exactly who it is.

From bottom to champions: the Bath rebuild

The scale of the rebuild is best understood in hard numbers.

Season Position Outcome
2021/22 13th (last) Worst season in club history
2022/23 8th Champions Cup qualification secured
2023/24 2nd Premiership finalists
2024/25 1st Premiership champions

Year one was about credibility. Year two was about contention. They went to Twickenham and lost a final, but Van Graan insisted they would be back 12 months later to win the title.

Year three was about winning and Van Graan was true to his word. They topped the table, controlled the knockouts and won the final.

The 2025/26 shift: Bath the European force

This season has confirmed that Bath are England’s best and also a European threat.

They topped their Investec Champions Cup pool.

Metric Detail
Pool Finish 1st (Pool 2)
Points 16
Points Difference +91
Seeding 4th overall

Last 16

Match Result
Bath vs Saracens Won 31–22

What Van Graan has actually changed

He has won trophies, but the real shift is deeper because Bath are now respected as a team that is:

  • Physically dominant
  • Structurally sound
  • Game-aware
  • Emotionally controlled

They have a magician at flyhalf in Scotland’s Finn Russell, a talisman in Springboks prop Thomas du Toit and a group of players and coaches that refuse to settle for second best.

Why this quarter-final matters

Van Graan has taken Bath from broken to the bosses of English rugby, but the legacy in Europe is defined by winning the Investec Champions Cup.

Coaching Career

Years Team
2003–2007 Blue Bulls (Technical Advisor)
2005–2007 Bulls (Technical Advisor)
2007–2011 Blue Bulls (Assistant Coach)
2007–2011 Bulls (Forwards Coach)
2012–2017 Springboks (Forwards Coach)
2017–2022 Munster (Head Coach)
2022– Bath (Head Coach)

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