The Rugby Paper

Dom’s putting in long hours – he’s obsessed, says Atkinson

- ■ By NEALE HARVEY

GLOUCESTER midfielder Mark Atkinson has explained why brother-inlaw Dom Waldouck’s slavish devotion to detail will banish any doubts over his coaching credential­s.

At 32, former Wasps, Northampto­n and Newcastle centre Waldouck, right, became one of the Premiershi­p’s youngest ever coaches when he joined forces with George Skivington and Alex King over the summer – a seismic revolution still in its formative stages amid mixed results.

Atkinson has no doubts about Waldouck’s potential, however. “I had a year playing with Dom at Wasps and know him well because I’m actually married to his sister, Lydia,” Atkinson said.

“You can’t expect him to have all the answers, but one thing he’s done particular­ly brilliantl­y so far is being thoroughly prepared – coaching is to the point of an obsession with him.

“His presentati­ons to the squad are very well thought out, there’s a theme to every week and these are the things that count. I know he spent the majority of lockdown on ten-hour zoom calls every day, just learning about people and sharing experience­s with coaches.

“Nobody can expect a young coach to know everything but if they’re well prepared and have got sound reasoning behind what they do, which is what we’ve seen, that’s all you can ask.

“Dom’s been really good and along with George and Alex, everything’s just clicked within the squad. Not many people here knew them but there’s now great excitement and a big expectatio­n around the place, which is what a club like Gloucester wants to feel.”

Gloucester head to Bath on Tuesday after successive losses to Exeter and Harlequins, knowing they must win their last two games to have a chance of a top-six finish.

Atkinson said: “Losing to Quins put a huge dent in our target because seeing how the seedings will work in next season’s Champions Cup, you’d rather be in the top six and playing against third or fourth placed teams than big top-two sides from around Europe.

“We want to qualify as high as possible, but we also want to finish this season with a bit of pride and put building blocks in place for next season. We’ll only get six weeks between seasons so it’s not like you can park a season and come back, it’s pretty continuous.”

Having gifted Harlequins three tries in last week’s 28-15 loss, Atkinson knows any repeat will prove costly against a Bath side with designs on the title.

Atkinson added: “We made a number of silly decisions against Quins at the back and we’ve held our hands up. There’s no magic cure, we must stop gifting silly points because we’re up against a Bath team who are flying.

“They’ve got a dominant pack and Ben Spencer has been a great signing for them. They’ve got threats across the board in Jonathan Joseph, Anthony Watson and Semesa Rokoduguni and they’re getting front-foot ball as well.

“It’s a big challenge – we have to match them up front, defend well and then use our own attacking threats.”

 ??  ?? Aiming high: Gloucester centre Mark Atkinson
Aiming high: Gloucester centre Mark Atkinson
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