New Argentina coach to use time as Australian 'spy' to his advantage
Former Puma Mario Ledesma has admitted his surprise following his quick elevation to head coach of the Argentina national team.
The 45-year-old was given a four-year deal to coach Argentina just six months after he took the helm of the Jaguares Super Rugby side, where he led the club to their first finals appearance.
“Being the captain of the ship fills me with pride. I’m not intimidated by the pressure,” Ledesma said.
The 84-Test hooker isn't short on coaching experience, especially in the international arena, having worked for the Waratahs and Australia under Michael Cheika from 2015 to 2017.
“I went to Australia as a spy, just in case I would come back to coach in Argentina,” said Ledesma.
“I didn’t think I would come back so soon. I’d always dreamed of coaching the Pumas.”
When Ledesma was named Jaguares coach at the start of 2018, not many expected the franchise would play knock-out rugby in just their third season.
In their first campaign under Ledesma, the Jaguares scored impressive away victories in New Zealand – against the Chiefs and Blues – and Australia – at the Rebels and Brumbies - as part of an incredible seven-match winning streak.
Unfortunately, their performance at the Super Rugby level failed to translate during the June international window. Argentina lost all three of their fixtures, losing twice at home to Wales before being thumped by Scotland. Ledesma's predecessor Daniel Hourcade announced his resignation during the series.
“We need to improve as a team. It’s defence that wins you games,” said Ledesma.
“When we’re on top we’re dangerous and we score, but when we’re under the cosh we concede too many points.”
Argentina have failed to beat a tier one opponent for close to two years, and have fallen to 10th in the World Rugby rankings, a far cry from the form of Ledesma's side that finished third at the Rugby World Cup in 2007.
Ledesma will make his coaching debut with Argentina with a trip to South Africa. Los Pumas will take on South Africa on August 18, the opening fixture of their Rugby Championship campaign.
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Semi-professional. A mixture of amateurs and paid players. It's basically NPC for the lower-tier unions.
Go to commentsSA has consistently been protected by WR/IRB officials for the past 3 decades. This same protection and bias was also clearly evident in SR when they competed there and SA were never the top SA rugby nation. They went 9 years without winning it before fleeing.
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