Cynon Valley

Former Wales head coach John Ryan dies aged 83

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FORMER Wales head coach John Ryan has passed away at the age of 83. He guided the national side from 1988 to 1990, a particular­ly turbulent time when Welsh rugby was hit by a series of departures to rugby league.

Before he took on the Wales position, he had enjoyed success at club level, coaching both Newport and Cardiff to Welsh Cup final triumphs. No-one had ever previously steered two different clubs to cup glory in Wales.

But his time as national coach was to prove exceptiona­lly challengin­g. The Wales national side were engulfed by a perfect storm during Ryan’s tenure. Injuries at various points to two world-class players, Robert Norster and Ieuan Evans, didn’t help, nor did the aforementi­oned haemorrhag­e of players to the 13-a-side code after Wales’s trouncing in New Zealand in the summer of 1988 which precipitat­ed the departure of Tony Gray as team boss.

It left the national coach with an unenviable job. Some might have called it an impossible job.

Wales duly went from Triple Crown winners in 1988 to finishing joint bottom of the Five Nations in 1989. Nor did matters improve the following term, with a defeat by New Zealand in the autumn preceding losses to France (29-19) and England (34-6).

The loss at Twickenham saw the largest margin of defeat for a Wales team ever against the men in white.

At the press conference after the game, Wales captain Robert Jones fielded most of the questions, and at the post-match function, the skipper apologised to the coach for the team performanc­e. But Ryan subsequent­ly resigned, having overseen just two wins from nine games.

It was a period when Wales went through four team bosses in little more than three years.

“One of the reasons why we played so badly was instabilit­y in coaching, leading to constant changes in style,” wrote Jones in his book Raising The Dragon. “The team lost confidence and cohesion as it tried to adjust to the changes.”

Jones described Ryan, Ron Waldron and Alan Davies, three of those coaches, as “men of integrity, decent men who were desperate to achieve success for Wales and went about it in ways they were convinced were right”. Ryan, he said, was organised and analytical.

“If you could have brought together the best qualities of John, Ron and Alan you would have been somewhere close to an ideal. But, as I said, it was never easy for them.”

The Wales job may not have worked out for him but Ryan kept his dignity and was respected inside and outside the game. He had previously played in the back row for Newport and London Welsh and would later manage the Wales Sevens team.

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