'As tough as it has ever been' - Wayne Pivac
With three of the four Rugby Championship giants plus upwardly mobile Fiji due to visit Cardiff over a four-week period few would dispute that Wales face a hugely challenging autumn campaign.
This view is shared by head coach Wayne Pivac who has told BBC's Scrum V that his team's schedule will be "as tough as it has ever been."
To make matters doubly hard, the 59-year-old Kiwi's team must not only face the huge test provided by his native New Zealand first, but do so without some significant squad members.
The All Blacks visit the Principality Stadium on Saturday October 30 - outside the agreed international window. This means English-based players such as Bristol fly half Callum Sheedy and Gloucester's British Lions' wing Louis Rees-Zammit will be unavailable to Pivac even if they are fully fit.
"It's going to be as tough as it has ever been," Pivac said of a schedule which sees South Africa, Fiji and Australia arrive in consecutive weeks.
"It's a good test on us, on our style of game we want to play, we are building towards a World Cup in 2023, we're at the halfway stage.
"It's a great time for us to come up against the southern hemisphere boys. At the World Cup we've got Fiji and Australia in our pool, so mentally for us those two games are massive for us."
Pivac will announce his squad selection in late October and with the World Cup in France still two years away he said plenty of opportunity exists for players to catch his eye through their club performances.
"Form is everything," he said.
"There are few injuries about at the moment so some players won't be able to be selected.
"We've looked at around 50-odd players in the last two years, so it's time for us to start nailing down 40 to 45 players of which 33 will come from that group for the World Cup.
"We are looking forward to naming that squad, getting back into training and challenging ourselves against the southern hemisphere sides."
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Agree with Wilson B- at best. And that is down to skilled individual players who know how to play the game - not a cohesive squad who know their roles and game plan. For those who claim that takes time to develop, the process is to keep the game plan simple at first and add layers as the squad gels and settles in to the new systems. Lack of progress against the rush D, lack of penetration and innovation in the mid-field, basic skill errors and loose forwards coming second in most big games all still evident in game 14 of the season. Hard to see significant measureable progress.
Go to commentsKeep telling yourself that. The time for a fresh broom is at the beginning - not some "balanced, incremental" (i.e. status quo) transition. All teams establish the way forward at the beginning. This coaching group lacked ideas and courage and the players showed it on the pitch. Backs are only average. Forwards are unbalanced and show good set piece but no domination in traditional AB open play. Unfortunately, Foster - Mark 2. You may be happy with those performances and have some belief in some "cunning plan" but I don't see any evidence of it. Rassie is miles ahead and increasing the gap.
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