Glasgow Times

Gatland has finally seen the light, says Davies after selection

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JAMES Davies reacted to his World Cup selection against Fiji by telling Wales boss Warren Gatland he had “finally seen the light”.

And Gatland admitted he loved the Scarlets flanker’s response, having named him among two changes from the side that beat Australia eight days ago.

Davies replaces Justin Tipuric for a World Cup debut, while Ross Moriarty packs down at No.8 and Josh Navidi switches to blindside flanker.

“When I congratula­ted James and said well done, his reply was, ‘You have finally seen the light, have you?’ He said he was only joking!” Gatland said.

“I loved that. I thought it was brilliant, a great response. I love a bit of banter like that and I have no problem with comments like that.

“It just says to me that players believe in their own ability and they want to be in the squad and they think they are good enough to be in the starting side.

“Justin was disappoint­ed, but he will probably start the game against Uruguay and bring some experience to that side.

“He was tight in his quad (thigh muscle) before Australia. He was 100 per cent fit for that game and he was 100 per cent available for this game as well.

“We are trying to look at that bigger picture.”

Gatland has otherwise kept the starting line-up that accounted for Georgia and Australia in Wales’ first two World Cup games.

Davies will feature alongside his brother – centre Jonathan

– as Wales target a third successive World Cup victory over Fiji following successes in 2011 and 2015.

And fly-half Dan Biggar, who failed a head injury assessment during the Wallabies clash in Tokyo eight days ago, is fit to resume.

If Wales beat Fiji and then defeat Uruguay next Sunday, they will reach the last-eight as unbeaten group winners for the first time in a World Cup campaign since 1987.

Gatland added: “When Fiji get some confidence and belief they are incredibly dangerous and they were really strong in that second half (against Georgia).

“We are in control of our own destiny, we know that.

“Psychologi­cally, you win the group and win your four games, you are up against a team that has lost a game. We haven’t spoken at all about potential quarter-final opponents.

“It is important we focus 100 per cent on Fiji, and then we have got a four-day turnaround to Uruguay, which is going to be challengin­g as well, and then get through that and then we can start thinking about what’s further on down the line.”

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