Manawatu Standard

At a glance

- Rugby

For Wales rugby coach Warren Gatland, the Six Nations game against Ireland tomorrow cannot come soon enough.

And that’s not just because it marks the start of the New Zealander’s second spell in charge of the national team.

It also means, for many, the focus of Welsh rugby turns to exactly that – rugby.

‘‘Last week, there was only one topic of discussion and that was understand­able,’’ Gatland said, referring to the scandal engulfing the Welsh Rugby Union following allegation­s of sexism, bullying and racism made in a TV documentar­y.

‘‘This week, the message to the players is we have a test match to focus on.

‘‘Rugby has been the only talking point and the players have been great in terms of that. It has been a bit of a challenge, but our whole focus is on Saturday.’’

After all, that’s what he was hired – again – for. To ignite the energy and spark in a Welsh team that appeared to be drifting under his predecesso­r, Wayne Pivac. Heck, Wales lost to Georgia in November.

With Gatland back, excitement levels have risen. Belief is back. That’s what happens when you bring in one of the world’s best coaches.

‘‘I often get asked about the Welsh and what they are like,’’ he said. ‘‘They are very knowledgea­ble about the game, passionate and opinionate­d. And I love that.

‘‘The emotion is all about playing in an incredible stadium, with a passionate crowd and the buzz that you get from that. There is a lot of pressure, a lot of expectatio­n, a lot of scrutiny – that comes with the role – but there is nothing better than playing in a full stadium with the intensity that is required.’’

Watch out, Ireland. A red tide is coming your way.

Then again, this is an Irish team coming off a series win in New Zealand and a clean sweep of autumn victories over South Africa, Fiji and Australia. This is the world’s top-ranked nation.

Indeed, for Ireland coach Andy Farrell, savouring the experience of the Principali­ty Stadium is important for his players in the bigger picture.

He’s agreed, even though the weather forecast is dry, to close the stadium roof. That guarantees a wall of noise visitors often struggle with, but Farrell wants his players to bank the experience.

‘‘We’ve been there before when it’s closed and there’s no atmosphere like it. It’s fantastic. It can only be good for us,’’ Farrell said. ‘‘We want ... to sample the atmosphere and keep progressin­g on our journey.’’

Understand­ably, Gatland has retained veterans he chided Pivac for not retiring, so there’s new skipper Ken Owens, Alun Wyn Jones in his 17th Six Nations, Justin Tipuric, Taulupe Faletau, Dan Biggar and George North. Leigh Halfpenny was starting until he had a back spasm on Thursday. Liam Williams has come in at fullback despite limited training and match time.

Farrell dropped tighthead prop Tadhg Furlong, who wasn’t fully recovered from a calf issue and was being saved for the France clash next week. Australia-born Finlay Bealham will make his first Six Nations start at age 31.

His and captain Jonathan Sexton’s inclusion were the only changes to the side which beat Australia 13-10 in Ireland’s last autumn test.

 ?? ?? New Zealander Warren Gatland begins his second tenure as Wales coach in the Six Nations opener against world No 1-ranked Ireland at the Principali­ty Stadium in Cardiff tomorrow .
New Zealander Warren Gatland begins his second tenure as Wales coach in the Six Nations opener against world No 1-ranked Ireland at the Principali­ty Stadium in Cardiff tomorrow .

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