Otago Daily Times

Howley exit may bring Wales closer together: Gatland

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TOKYO: The departure of Wales assistant coach Rob Howley from the World Cup over a possible breach of rules governing gambling in the sport could ultimately bring the team closer together, head coach Warren Gatland said yesterday.

Gatland told a news conference in Fukuoka he was still shocked at the exit of his righthand man and sometimes replacemen­t in 11 years as Wales coach, which was announced by the Wales Rugby Union late on Tuesday.

Chief executive Martyn Phillips said the WRU had received a tipoff from the integrity unit of an online betting company last Wednesday and more detailed informatio­n on Friday before informing World Rugby.

The former Wales skipper departed on Monday only a few hours after the squad arrived in Japan and now faces a formal probe into the allegation that he breached the regulation that forbids those involved in the game from gambling on matches.

‘‘We got a shock the other day. It took us a bit of time for it to sink in,’’ Gatland said.

‘‘You have to deal with adversity at times. You lose key players at times and have to respond to that.’’

‘‘I have to say, the players in the last 24 hours have really stepped up and been incredibly responsibl­e and resilient. Sometimes that brings teams closer together.’’

Former Wales first fiveeighth Stephen Jones will step into the role of attack coach and is expected to arrive in Japan today. The team starts its pool D campaign on Monday, against Georgia in Toyota.

‘‘We have had some challenges, but having [had] a chat to Stephen, he knows what we do,’’ Gatland added.

‘‘I’m sure the coaches and players will give him as much support as possible and I think he’ll come in and potentiall­y add to the environmen­t. It’s about turning a difficult situation into a positive.’’

Six Nations champion Wales arrived in Japan as one of the pretournam­ent favourites after recently topping the world rankings for the first time.

Howley (48) has been attack coach since Gatland took the reins in 2008 and was placed in the top job in a caretaker role when the New Zealander led the British and Irish Lions on their 2017 tour.

Like Gatland, he was set to leave his post after the World Cup and had been linked to the top job with the Italy team.

He could face a punishment as severe as a lifetime ban from rugby if the allegation­s prove founded.

‘‘At the moment these are allegation­s,’’ Gatland said.

‘‘Obviously Rob was devastated by these allegation­s. That’s all I can say on that.’’

World Rugby earlier released a statement supporting the WRU’s proactivit­y on the matter and Phillips said the body had confidence in the processes put in place to prevent gambling by players and coaches.

‘‘We do respond well to difficult situations,’’ Gatland said, adding that it was a ‘‘Welsh trait’’.

‘‘We know there will be speculatio­n and criticism in the next 24 hours. We have to deal with that and stay focused. Hopefully, rugby is what does the talking.’’ — Reuters

 ??  ?? Rob Howley
Rob Howley
 ??  ?? Warren Gatland
Warren Gatland

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