Bangkok Post

Pivac won’t be ‘sidetracke­d’ as Wales pressure mounts

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Wayne Pivac has insisted he will ignore the growing speculatio­n surroundin­g his future as Wales coach ahead of today’s potentiall­y make-orbreak clash at home to Australia.

Wales go into their Autumn Nations Series finale at the Principali­ty Stadium on the back of a woeful 13-12 defeat by Georgia in Cardiff last weekend, which came just eight months after they lost, again on home soil, to perennial Six Nations strugglers Italy.

Pivac has now presided over 19 defeats in 33 Tests since succeeding Warren Gatland, his fellow New Zealander, as Wales coach following a 2019 World Cup in Japan where the team reached the semi-finals.

But whether Pivac is still in charge for next year’s global showpiece in France remains an open question.

Wales great Jamie Roberts said the former Scarlets boss faced “serious questions” following a defeat by Georgia where the Lelos kept the hosts scoreless in the second half as they rallied from 12-3 down at the interval.

But Pivac, asked about his future on Thursday after naming the team to play Australia, replied: “Other people make those decisions.

“I can’t get sidetracke­d by those sort of things. It is very, very disappoint­ing to be in this position.”

The 60-year-old added: “As head coach, the responsibi­lity lies with me for a lot of the decision-making. I don’t shy away from that.”

Pivac has recalled former captain Alun Wyn Jones to the run-on XV against the Wallabies, with the veteran 37-year-old lock and world record capholder, making his first internatio­nal start since last season’s Six Nations.

By contrast, 20-year-old Ospreys centre Joe Hawkins, who had just turned four when Wyn Jones first played for Wales, is set to make his Test debut in place of the injured Owen Watkin.

Wales are bidding for a fourth successive win over the Wallabies, but they have lost eight of their 11 matches so far this year.

And Wales will be without Gloucester wing Louis Rees-Zammit, Saracens centre Nick Tompkins and Exeter forward Christ Tshiunza today as their English clubs are not obliged to release them for a fixture that falls outside World Rugby’s internatio­nal window.

Australia, also coached by a New Zealander in Dave Rennie, have problems of their own, with a raft of injuries and club commitment­s leading the Wallabies to make seven changes following a 13-10 loss to Ireland in Dublin last weekend.

Defeat today would condemn Australia, completing a punishing schedule of five Tests in as many weeks, to a 10th loss in 14 matches in 2022 and their worst calendar year since 1958.

But the Wallabies, one of Wales’ pool rivals at the 2023 World Cup, have been involved in several single-point games while in Europe, beating Scotland 16-15 before losing to France (30-29) and Italy (28-27).

 ?? REUTERS ?? Wales coach Wayne Pivac during the match against Georgia.
REUTERS Wales coach Wayne Pivac during the match against Georgia.

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