The Peterborough Examiner

That face is familiar ... coach to meet old friends

- NEIL DAVIDSON

Coach Kingsley Jones will see familiar faces everywhere he looks Saturday when his Canadian side takes on Russia at Ottawa’s Twin Elm Rugby Park.

Russian forwards coach Alexander Voytov was Jones’ captain when he coached Russia.

Jones brought backs coach Josh Taumalolo, a former Tongan internatio­nal, to Russia.

The Russian performanc­e coach played lock under Jones. And the Bears have the same team manager, who worked closely with Jones.

Jones joined the Russian team as a consultant prior to the 2011 Rugby World Cup before being elevated to national teams director and taking over the national squad. He resigned in 2014 for family reasons.

“Going to a World Cup, you can’t buy that,” he said. “To take a team to a World Cup was a tremendous time.”

The Russians dropped all four games at the 2011 World Cup but came close in a 13-6 loss to the U.S. — Jones recalls his team made 220 tackles in the rain — and managed a total of 61 points against Australia, Ireland and Italy.

They are headed back to rugby’s showcase, qualifying for the 2019 tournament in Japan after Spain, Belgium and Romania were sanctioned for fielding ineligible players.

Canada has one more crack at joining them, via a last-chance repechage tournament in November.

Both Canada and Russia are coming off disappoint­ing performanc­es.

The 21st-ranked Canadian men were battered 48-10 last week in Edmonton by No. 6 Scotland, which brought a young but very capable touring side to North America. No. 19 Russia was hammered 62-13 by the 15th-ranked U.S. Eagles in Denver.

Jones expects a better performanc­e from the visitors on Saturday.

World Rugby says a win would move Canada back into the top 20. A loss and Canada drops below Hong Kong into 22nd place.

Jones came to Russia at the behest of Howard Thomas, an Englishman who was an executive with Russia Rugby.

The Welsh native combined his coaching responsibi­lities in Russia, a part-time role that took 24 weeks a year, with first a consulting position with London Welsh and than as assistant coach of the Newport Gwent Dragons (now known simply as the Dragons) in Wales.

While he has good memories of his time with Russia, being away from his young family was difficult. “I commuted, if you like,” he said, noting it’s a four-hour flight from London to Moscow. “But it was still long periods away from them.”

In Russia, he divided his team between Sochi, Moscow and other cities.

Jones had an interprete­r to start with but eventually dispensed with him, realizing that speaking rugby was a language in itself. He started learning Russian and began using players like Voytov, Yuri Kushnarev and Vasily Artemyev, who speak English, to help get his message across.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Rugby Canada coach Kingsley Jones will be renewing acquaintan­ces Saturday.
DARRYL DYCK THE CANADIAN PRESS Rugby Canada coach Kingsley Jones will be renewing acquaintan­ces Saturday.

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