Gats’ highs beat the lows in whale of a tale
He has grabbed Wales by the scruff of the neck and given us a sense of identity. He has turned us into a professional, fit, physical team.
Warren Gatland’s first game in charge of Wales came a decade ago, at Twickenham, where at the time Wales had not won for 20 years.
Tries back in 1988 were worth four points and the home of English rugby was about half today’s size when Adrian Hadley’s brace clinched an 11-3 result.
The Welsh crop of 2008 had been knocked out of the Rugby World Cup in the group stages by Fiji and were under new management.
Four wins later and Wales had gone from being dumped out of the Rugby World Cup to Grand Slam champions. loses countless others well before the age of 15.
The Warriors can’t be faulted for wanting to protect this one but the length of the agreement for someone of that age is questionable.
In this instance, it must also be said the Warriors appear likely to be done over after significant investment in
The winning formula was a combination of Gatland’s work ethic and direct approach with his players.
Should Gatland leave Wales after the 2019 Rugby World Cup as expected, then Wales’ visit to Twickenham this month will be his last in charge.
Three Six Nations titles in six years during 2008-13, including two Grand Slams, plus a Rugby World Cup semifinal appearance in 2011 have cemented his status as the most successful Wales coach of all time.
Those achievements, more wrongly than rightly, have been recently overshadowed by criticism of Wales’ struggling attack and failure to defeat Australia, New Zealand and until recently South Africa.
Yet compare where Wales stand now with January 2008 and Gatland has executed a phenomenal transformation.
“We’re a
Wales. He strange old has been bunch in the most successful coach hands down,” said Martyn Williams, Wales’ most capped back row forward with 100.
“I think he said at his first meeting, ‘from the outside, Wales look a bit boom or bust. I want to be competitive consistently.’
“I think he’s done that. We have a small player base and I think he has brought a mental toughness to us that wasn’t there before. His legacy speaks for itself.”
“He has grabbed Wales by the scruff of the neck and given us a sense of identity, a game plan. He has turned us into an incredibly professional, fit, physical team,” said former Wales centre Tom Shanklin.
“But it has not all gone to plan. There’s a clear change of philosophy now in terms of how he wants the team to play. If you look back, that maybe should have happened three years ago. The highs, however, massively outweigh the lows.”
Former Wales centre Tom Shanklin