Warren Gatland comes out swinging about his future as Wales boss
A defiant Warren Gatland has claimed he absolutely has the desire to continue in his role as Wales head coach. Speculation continues to rage about Gatland’s future after a record run of 11 successive Test match defeats. World champions South Africa are next up for Wales on Saturday, with the Springboks overwhelming favourites to emphatically extend that losing sequence.
A South Africa victory would mean Wales going the entire calendar year without winning a Test, which has not happened since 1937. “If you start thinking about other things, it is a distraction you don’t need,” said Gatland, after naming a team showing five changes from the one beaten 52-20 by Australia.
“We have been pretty clear in terms of the plan we have had. We have got a group of young players that need a bit of time. I have been pretty honest in terms that I understand the pressures of international rugby with performances and results. We can only work as hard as we have done.
“I am aware of the pressure and that decisions could be made outside of my control. We have just asked for a little bit of time. Whether we get that time, we will have to wait and see.”
Asked if he had a strong desire to continue, Gatland replied “absolutely”, while also confirming he would consider resigning if he thought it was in Welsh rugby’s best interests. Gatland, meanwhile, ended speculation that he might have had a break clause in his contract with the Welsh Rugby Union after the Six Nations, confirming that was not the case.
During his first stint as boss between 2008 and 2019, Wales were twice Rugby World Cup semi-finalists, in addition to winning Six Nations titles and Grand Slams. But this time around Wales have plummeted outside the world’s top 10-ranked countries and have won just six of 23 Tests under Gatland’s direction since he returned in late 2022.
Wales host the Springboks on the back of a comprehensive defeat against Australia and home loss to Fiji. They have not won a Test since the 2023 World Cup. Gatland revealed on Sunday that he had spoken with WRU executive director of rugby Nigel Walker and WRU chair Richard Collier-Keywood immediately after the Wallabies game.
After the Springboks encounter, Wales’ next game is a tough Six Nations opener against France in Paris on January 31. Gatland’s switches from the side crushed by Australia see starts for wing Rio Dyer, fly-half Sam Costelow, lock Christ Tshiunza and number eight Taine Plumtree.
One positional change, meanwhile, has wing Blair Murray moving to full-back instead of Cameron Winnett. Dyer wears the number 11 shirt worn by Murray in the last two games, with Costelow replacing Gareth Anscombe, Tshiunza taking over from an injured Adam Beard and Plumtree replacing Aaron Wainwright.
On the replacements’ bench, meanwhile, there is a role for uncapped Gloucester forward Freddie Thomas, and his club colleague Josh Hathaway is also included. A gulf in experience between the two teams is highlighted by the Wales matchday 23 having a total of 334 caps, whereas the Springboks bench alone boasts 431.
Gatland added: “Last week’s result hurts, and we are just as disappointed by it as the fans. There were good elements that we can definitely build on going into Saturday, but we have to improve our accuracy. We know what a quality side South Africa are and the physicality they bring. This week we need to show real courage and front up against the world champions.”
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You know nothing about the incident in question and your attempts to portray yourself as an expert of domestic abuse are laughable at best. You mentioned domestic abuse to deflect criticism away from your beloved Irish team. Your arguments are fallacious and your continued attempts to justify th3m are pathetic. I support the All Blacks but am not so naive as to belive they are perfect human beings, some of them are arseholes I'm sure. I don't know Sevu Reece and neither do you, and your attempts to 'educate' me on domestic violence are self serving. His behaviour was unacceptable, and he was punished. I can't help but think your views on the matter are coloured as all your comments seem to be by a childiish slavish devotion to your rugby team. So hold whatever options on the matter you see fit, im just not going to bother paying attention to them.
Go to commentsI was just reading a very similar post on (I think) The Telegraph about merging the URC and the Prem into a couple of conferences.
I'm not against the idea, but it sounds like it would be incredibly complex to pull together and obviously require complete buy-in from the leagues, which seems unlikley.
Also, you ask can the Premiership be sustained in its 'current form'. I agree that currently, there aren't enough strong teams and it does no one any favours when clubs have a couple of 'Newcastle' type walkovers each season. But, if Wasps, Worcester and London Irish can be revived and promotion and relegation introduced, then I think that will help make the Prem competitive again.
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