The Citizen (KZN)

Gatland upbeat after fightback

CAN FACE ENGLAND WITH CONFIDENCE

- Cardiff

Wales coach Warren Gatland believes his side can travel to Twickenham with renewed confidence after a stunning rally in an agonising defeat by Scotland that featured the “worst 40 minutes” of his lengthy coaching career.

Wales were 20-0 down at halftime in their Six Nations opener in Cardiff on Saturday and they fell further behind when Scotland wing Duhan van der Merwe scored the second of his two tries shortly after the break to put the visitors 27-0 up.

But a new-look Wales, missing several senior players through a combinatio­n of injury and internatio­nal retirement, hit back with 26 unanswered points of their own in a four-try salvo in front of a raucous sell-out crowd gathered under the Principali­ty

Stadium’s closed roof.

Wales now face England this coming Saturday, with Steve Borthwick’s side having started their campaign with a narrow win away to Italy, and Gatland said his side could record a first victory at Twickenham since 2015 if they carried on from where they left off against Scotland.

“We’ve just got to play like we did in the second half,” he told S4C.

“We’ve got to learn from that experience.

“They (England) are in a rebuilding phase. We’ll go there with a lot of confidence we can build on that second-half performanc­e and belief. That’s the biggest thing.”

But the first-half in Cardiff was a very different story, with Scotland in complete command against an error-strewn Wales.

“I think I have got to apologise for the first half,” said Gatland. “It’s probably one of the worst 40-minute performanc­es in my whole rugby career as a coach.”

The New Zealander added: “We were terrible, shocking. The discipline was poor, and we didn’t nail some things.”

Gatland made changes at halftime, replacemen­ts Elliot Dee, Tomos Williams and Ioan Lloyd all starring off the bench in a match where Wales back-row Aaron Wainwright impressed.

“I think some guys came off the bench and had some impact, we were so slow in the first-half, things like opportunit­ies for quick taps to get us back in the game,” said Gatland.

“To do what we did, be 27-0 down, other teams might have shown less character and start thinking about next week, even throw in the towel. We didn’t do that. They kept fighting. That showed real character.”

Scotland’s grip was also severely weakened by two second-half yellow cards. –

 ?? ?? WARREN GATLAND Picture: Getty Images
WARREN GATLAND Picture: Getty Images

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