'Desperate' Wales on mission to show public they're better than Dublin flop
Wayne Pivac wants to see “an improvement across the board” when Wales face a crunch Guinness Six Nations clash against Scotland on Saturday.
Wales have not started a Six Nations campaign with successive defeats since 2007, and they must beat Scotland to revive any hope of a successful title defence following last weekend’s tame 29-7 loss in Ireland.
Scotland last won in Cardiff 20 years ago, losing eight Six Nations Tests, a World Cup warm-up game and an autumn international during that time.
But they will arrive at the Principality Stadium following a stirring Calcutta Cup victory over England last weekend that confirmed serious Six Nations title credentials.
“It is an improvement across the board, really,” Wales head coach Pivac said, after making four changes of personnel, including a Test debut for 22-year-old Ospreys flanker Jac Morgan.
“The players are very critical of themselves. They are very disappointed after the game last week.
“They are desperate to go out there and show we are a much better team than the display we put on last week. Across the board, everybody in the camp was very disappointed.
“We are at home, we are in front of 75,000 people, and we owe it to ourselves and our public to put on a better display, as simple as that.
“They (Scotland) are a very good side. They have got a number of British and Irish Lions.
“They showed last week (against England) that they fight for every blade of grass, and that is certainly what we have got to be doing on the weekend.
“We have to match that, and then bring some on top of that. It is going to be a very hard-fought game, we know that, and it is a Scotland team coming full of confidence.”
Morgan replaces Ellis Jenkins and lines up at openside flanker in a reshaped back-row that also sees Ross Moriarty start at number eight instead of Aaron Wainwright, with Taine Basham wearing the number six shirt.
Elsewhere, Morgan’s Ospreys colleague – wing Alex Cuthbert – makes a first Six Nations appearance for five years, being preferred to Johnny McNicholl.
But Cuthbert’s fellow wing Josh Adams, who started at outside centre in Dublin, is sidelined because of a tight calf muscle, so Owen Watkin fills the number 13 position.
Pivac has resisted any temptation to make further changes, while captain Dan Biggar makes his 100th Test match appearance for Wales and the British and Irish Lions, becoming the ninth Welshman to achieve that feat.
And centre Jonathan Davies will join Biggar in reaching 100 Tests for Wales and the Lions if he features off the bench.
Pivac added: “Jac has trained very well. He is a very abrasive sort of player, and Ross we know is very strong in that area.
“It just goes to show. There are performances on the park in a Test match that obviously carry a lot of weight, but it is also what you do in training.
“And Jac has certainly done everything asked of him. We are all looking forward to seeing him out there.
“He has been throwing himself about, and I think you will see a big performance. He certainly won’t be lacking in effort.”
On Adams’ injury, Pivac said: “It is just one of those ones where we don’t think it is worth the risk.
“If it does worsen, then that would be him gone for the rest of the tournament and quite some time.
“There has been a lot of talk about that selection (Adams at 13). When you break down the performance, we certainly don’t think that him playing at 13 was the cause for certainly the tries they (Ireland) scored. He did a lot of good work at 13."
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Ten years ago we were discussing how
Australia had made the Giteu Law and how we didn’t have to to do anything like that because NZ produced more talent than Australia.
The current model only works if you are constantly producing players good enough to take over when players leave.
New Zealand will struggle to do this as time goes on because rugby is dying here at the grass roots level.
Rugby league, football, basketball are where young kids are choosing to go more and more.
Even combat sports such as jiu jitsu are rapidly gaining in popularity all the time.
Picking players from overseas will give us a sugar hit of success for a wee while…. But the crash
afterward could be Wales-like.
Go to commentsYou see BS when you white Saffers (and you're white drop your ruse) make xenophobic comments, they are just flagging themselves as the type of white South African who would have been a defender of your despicable State back in the day. You are just too stupid too see it. When you say these things in front of non whites from your own country they will think you're just the type of Kant who would have them in chains a few decades ago. And you are that Kant.
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