Wayne Pivac on Louis Rees-Zammit's 'exciting' positional switch
Wales will aim to start piecing their Autumn Nations Series campaign back together when they tackle Argentina on Saturday.
New Zealand’s demolition squad put a huge hole in the autumn schedule last weekend, scoring eight tries during a 55-23 victory that posed way more questions for Wales than provided answers.
And life is not about to get a whole lot easier, with Argentina arriving in Cardiff on the back of victories over Australia, New Zealand and England.
The Pumas brushed Wales aside 33-11 on their last Principality Stadium visit 16 months ago.
Wales have just four survivors in their starting line-up from that game for this weekend’s clash – Nick Tompkins, Tomos Williams, Gareth Thomas and Will Rowlands – but another king-sized task awaits a team with just two wins this year.
“It has been about bouncing back on the training field and putting things right,” Wales captain Justin Tipuric said.
“We are all hungry after last weekend.
“Argentina are so passionate in everything they do and you know every time you play them you are in for a tough game.
“They play to their strengths, and when they do that they are a very hard team to beat.”
Wales head coach Wayne Pivac has made just three changes, calling up wing Alex Cuthbert, prop Dillon Lewis and flanker Dan Lydiate.
The most intriguing selection call, though, is a positional switch from wing to full-back for Gloucester’s Louis Rees-Zammit, with Leigh Halfpenny and Liam Williams both injured.
Lydiate, meanwhile, packs down alongside Tipuric and number eight Taulupe Faletau in a back-row containing 246 caps as Wales target a morale-boosting success.
Pivac said: “It (New Zealand game) ended up as it did and we are disappointed, as everyone is.
“There were some parts of that game which were just unacceptable at Test level, and we’ve talked around that and the boys have identified that themselves.
“As a forward pack, we want to step it up this week and be a lot more physical than we were.”
Central to those efforts will be Faletau, who features on his 32nd birthday after a lung-busting contribution saw him emerge as Wales’ top tackler and ball-carrier against the All Blacks.
“To be successful at international level you have to have some world-class players,” Pivac said.
“He is a world-class player in my view and he keeps showing that time and time again.
“He came into camp off the back of an injury, he has worked really, really hard and he puts out a performance like that at the speed of that game, which is just totally different from what our players have been used to playing.”
Pivac, meanwhile, has described Rees-Zammit’s move to full-back as “an exciting selection for the future”.
“He has a big kicking game on him, a long kicking game, which helps,” Pivac said.
“He’s got pace, as we know, so the biggest thing is getting time in the saddle and understanding the positional play, at which someone like Leigh Halfpenny is obviously world-class. He has had a few conversations with Leigh.
“I think it is an exciting selection for the future, to give us another option. Liam and Leigh have shared injuries and shared the jersey, and with them both out we feel it is a good opportunity.”
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GB is England, Scotland, Wales. They are the 3 constituent countries in Great Britain. Ergo playing only those three countries is a tour of GB. The difference between GB and the UK is Northern Ireland. It's not a huge deal to be accurate and call places by their correct name. But please refrain from your idiotic attempts to BS that GB=UK. It doesn't.
Go to commentsThe 2023 draw was only criticized when it became apparent that the top 5 sides in the world were on the same side of the draw. Nowhere did they discuss the decision to backtrack to 2019 rankings which ensured that England and Wales (ranked #12 in 2023) were ranked top4.
The parties who trashed out the schedule were England Rugby, NZ Rugby and ITV. It is bordering on corrupt that a Rugby nation has the power to schedule its opponents to play a major match the week before facing them in a QF.
You won't find commentary by members of the relevant committees because a committee did not make the scheduling decision. I have never heard members of World Rugby speak out on the draw or scheduling issues.
For example in 2015 Japan were hammered by Scotland 4 days after beating SA. The criticism only happens after a cock up.
A fair pool schedule is pretty straightforward: The lowest two tanked teams must play on last pool day but not against each other. That means that TV can focus on promoting big matches with a Tier2 involved for that Friday.
Why does NZ Always get its preferred slot playing the hardest pool match on day 1?
Why do other teams eg France, Ireland, Scotland get so often scheduled to play a hard match the week before the QFs?
If you believe the rules around scheduling are transparent then please point me in the right direction?
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