The Gold Coast Bulletin

YOUNG COACH IN AUSSIE GAME FOR LONG HAUL

- MATT WINDLEY

NEW coach Dave Wessels opted for the Melbourne Rebels over European offers because of a sense of loyalty to Australian rugby.

And it is that commitment to the local game that means the South African is happy to be touted as a future Wallabies coach, rather than a Springboks boss.

Wessels was the coach of the ill-fated Western Force last season. Now 12 of those players find themselves in Melbourne, as do Wessels and several assistants.

For Wessels, Melbourne felt like the natural fit after everything the Force endured in 2017.

“We were lucky enough to have some options to go to different places,” he said.

“But we love living in Australia. I certainly wouldn’t be a Super Rugby coach had I not moved to Australia and I’ve got a lot of people in Australian rugby to thank for that.

“I just thought, without wanting to sound over the top, I felt a lot of people had been loyal to us through this process, certainly a lot of our coaching group.

“I didn’t want to feel like I was leaving them high and dry when the time came.

“I felt like they’d stuck by us through the difficult time and that it was the right thing to stick by them and the wider community of Australian rugby.”

Wessels turned 35 on Sunday.

He is the youngest coach of any side in Australia’s four football codes.

And he arguably has the toughest job of them all this year as he tries to bring together two playing groups.

The Rebels host the Queensland Reds in Round 1 on Friday night.

 ?? Picture: GETTY IMAGES ?? New Rebels coach Dave Wessels knows he has a big task ahead of him this season.
Picture: GETTY IMAGES New Rebels coach Dave Wessels knows he has a big task ahead of him this season.

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