Northern Edition
Select Edition
Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

Dafydd Jenkins: 'I am not playing the game to lose'

By PA
Welsh players celebrate after scoring against Ireland - PA

Dafydd Jenkins says the emphasis is on hard work for Wales after green shoots of recovery surfaced in their performance against Guinness Six Nations title favourites Ireland.

ADVERTISEMENT

Wales 15th successive Test match defeat had no resemblance to the previous 14 as they defied being widely written off with a display that showcased ambition, creativity, character and resilience.

Interim boss Matt Sherratt worked a minor miracle to mould a team after just four training sessions into one that appeared capable of winning again.

That ability had largely disappeared under Warren Gatland, who oversaw just six wins in 26 Tests and departed within 72 hours of a dire defeat against Italy.

Wales were reduced to ruins in Rome, yet Sherratt instilled belief and introduced a new attack structure that his players bought into with relish. The combination almost proved too much for one of the world’s best teams.

22m Entries

Avg. Points Scored
3
6
Entries
Avg. Points Scored
3
6
Entries

“There is confidence in terms of the way we played. Just hearing how the crowd were, I think they all saw that as well,” Wales lock Jenkins said.

“We really wanted to show the crowd how much we wanted it in terms of our emotion and how proud we are to play for Wales. Hopefully, we did that.

ADVERTISEMENT

“There were some difficult conversations last year, but we are just pushing to move forward.

“I am not playing the game to lose, I promise you that now. If we didn’t believe in this group of players, there is no point going out on the pitch, is there?

“We understand it is not just going to fall into place for us, we are going to have to work extremely hard. The Six Nations is very competitive.

“Ireland are one of the top teams in the world, and if we are competing with them we are in a good place at the moment.

“The learnings we have taken individually and as a team are going to be huge for us in terms of you learn a lot when times are hard.”

ADVERTISEMENT
Jenkins Wales captaincy Gatland
New Wales skipper Dafydd Jenkins (Photo by Paul Harding/Getty Images)

Next up are Scotland at Murrayfield, where Wales have won on six of their last eight visits, followed by England in Cardiff a week later.

And Sherratt’s team can tackle those assignments with optimism that the long losing streak could soon be a statistic consigned to history.

“Obviously, we are disappointed with the result. It’s never nice losing, and in your home stadium,” Exeter forward Jenkins added.

“But there were some real positives in that performance in terms of the way boys have picked up our new shape, and something we can really look forward to getting better at, moving forward.

“We are going to work hard to make sure we come out the other side of those results, because it is all about results. It was before, and it still is now.”

Related

Download the RugbyPass app now!

News, stats, live rugby and more! Download the new RugbyPass app on the App Store (iOS) and Google Play (Android) now!

ADVERTISEMENT

Toshiba Brave Lupus Tokyo vs Kubota Spears | Japan Rugby League One 2024/25 Final | Full Match Replay

Saitama Wild Knights vs Kobe Steelers | Japan Rugby League One 2024/25 Bronze Final | Full Match Replay

Boks Office | Episode 42 | Investec Champions Cup Final Review

Spain's Incredible Rugby Sevens Journey to the World Championship Final | HSBC SVNS Embedded | Episode 14

Australia vs USA | Pacific Four Series 2025 | Full Match Replay

New Zealand vs Canada | Pacific Four Series 2025 | Full Match Replay

South Africa vs New Zealand | The Rugby Championship U20's | Full Match Replay

The Game that Made Jonah Lomu

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

1 Comment
T
Teddy 101 days ago

It’s good for the 6N to see them improved but celebrating the fact that they didn’t get kerb-stomped isn’t a great look.


It’s still another two score loss at home and now 15 losses on the bounce. Ireland had 7 changes from their usual starting 15 and Wales only looked to be on top during the 20 min red card. They shipped 10 unanswered PTS and then 17 unanswered PTS. Not really progress.

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Features

Comments on RugbyPass

T
Tommy B. 1 hour ago
Rassie Erasmus wades into heated debate over Jaden Hendrikse antics

🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂

I’ll go with one more because it’s so funny but then I must stop. There’s only so long you can talk to the nutter on the bus.

There is no legal impediment in the GFA to ANY form of border. It’s mentioned very briefly and ambiguously but even then there’s a caveat ‘if the security situation permits’ which is decided by the British government as the border is an internationally, UN recognised formal border between sovereign states. Now, you can argue that this is because it was assumed it would always be in the EU context - but we all know the issue with ‘assumption’. As to your hilarious drivel about what you think is in the GFA, you clearly haven’t read it or at best not understood it. There are still 1,580 British Army troops in NI. The legal status of NI as part of the UK is unchanged.

So, there was a problem for those that wanted to use the border to complicate any future British government changing regulations and trade arrangements through domestic legislation. Hence ‘hard border’ became ANYTHING that wasn’t a totally open border.

This allowed the EU and their fanatical Remainer British counterparts to imply that any form of administration AT the border was a ‘hard border.’ Soldiers with machine guns? Hard border. Old bloke with clipboard checking the load of every 200th lorry? Hard border. Anything in between? Hard Border. They could then use Gerry’s implicit threats to any ‘border officials’ to ensure that there would be an unique arrangement so that if any future parliament tried to change trade or administrative regulations for any part of the UK (which the EU was very worried about) some fanatical Remainer MP could stand up and say - ‘this complicates the situation in NI.’

You’ve just had a free lesson in the complex politics that went WAY over your head at the time. You’re welcome.

Now, I must slowly back out of the room, and bid you good day, as you’re clearly a nutter.

584 Go to comments
TRENDING
TRENDING All Blacks vs France series enhanced by landmark agreement All Blacks vs France will be real deal after agreement is reached
Search