The Province

Canada coach Jones gets assist from mentor

WORLD CUP QUALIFYING: Ex-France boss Saint-Andre will help national team in lead-up to B.C. Place clash with Uruguay

- PATRICK JOHNSTON pjohnston@postmedia.com twitter.com/risingacti­on

Canada coach Kingsley Jones has called in a top-flight reinforcem­ent: former France coach Philippe Saint-Andre.

Saint-Andre told French sports network RMC Sport he will meet up with Jones’ Canadian squad this weekend and help out in the days leading up to a Rugby World Cup qualifying match against Uruguay Jan. 27 at B.C. Place Stadium.

Jones was Saint-Andre’s assistant more than a decade ago when the Frenchman was in charge of English club Sale Sharks. The duo won the English premiershi­p in 2006.

According to Saint-Andre, Jones had hoped to have his old boss in the fold for two weeks, but his commentati­ng duties for French media agency RMC Sport took precedence.

“This will let me discover another rugby, another culture, while also keeping in touch with the top level. I get to commentate on the English premiershi­p every weekend; this will give me a different view. I will bring my expertise and some advice to a coach who is also my friend, for a match that is very important to him,” he said.

Saint-Andre coached France from 2012 to 2015. He was let go after their disastrous 2015 Rugby World Cup campaign, when Les Bleus lost 62-13 to New Zealand in the quarter-finals.

The coach does have some familiarit­y with Canada as his side won 41-18 in an entertaini­ng pool-round match in which the French led by just nine points with a quarter-hour to play.

Before the match, the man known as PSA had named Canada’s whole backline in response to a question about naming three Canadian players who worried him.

After the match, rumours started to circulate of player discontent with his leadership. It all came to an end two weeks later.

Under Saint-Andre, France struggled often, losing to the likes of Ireland, England and Wales regularly and never having any success against Southern Hemisphere sides. Whatever magic he’d found while coaching Sale and French giants Toulon didn’t work when he moved to rugby’s highest level.

In Canada’s current 35-man squad, just three backs remain from the group that started against France: Nick Blevins, DTH van der Merwe and Phil Mack. But Jones will also have a few other key backs at his disposal like wingers Jeff Hassler and Taylor Paris and utility back Connor Braid.

Players missing from the 2015 campaign because of injury are Ciaran Hearn, Conor Trainor and Matt Evans. And so is Andrew Coe, who emerged in 2017 as Canada’s firstchoic­e fullback. Like Hearn, he was hurt in the final match of Canada’s November series against Fiji.

Up front, only a handful of forwards remain from the group that suited up against the French: Tyler Ardron, Brett Beukeboom, Ray Barkwill, Djustice Sears-Duru and Evan Olmstead.

NOTES: Organizers of next week’s match at B.C. Place say around 10,000 tickets have already been sold and are expecting to sell several thousand more.

Most of the reserved seats made available have been sold, but there are plenty of general-admission tickets still available.

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Former France head coach Philippe SaintAndre will help Canadian national rugby team head coach Kingsley Jones ahead of their Jan. 27 World Cup qualifying match at B.C. Place Stadium. The pair once worked together in the English premiershi­p.
— GETTY IMAGES FILES Former France head coach Philippe SaintAndre will help Canadian national rugby team head coach Kingsley Jones ahead of their Jan. 27 World Cup qualifying match at B.C. Place Stadium. The pair once worked together in the English premiershi­p.

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