Shaun Edwards to coach Wigan Warriors after RWC

Wales assistant coach (defence) Shaun Edwards will leave the Welsh Rugby Union (WRU) post the 2019 Rugby World Cup, at the conclusion of his contract, to take over as head coach of rugby league giants Wigan Warriors.

Edwards, who joined the WRU in 2008, has been part of one of Wales’ most successful coaching teams over the last decade securing two Grand Slams and a Six Nations title in that time.

He will continue in his role with the national squad through to the conclusion of the Rugby World Cup in Japan after which he will return to Rugby League and to Wigan Warriors.

WRU chairman Gareth Davies said: “We would like to congratulate Shaun on his appointment at Wigan Warriors.

“He is a rugby league legend and particularly so at Wigan and we know he will be welcomed back there with open arms.

“Shaun has and continues to be a great servant to Welsh Rugby. He has been part of a hugely successful coaching team over the past ten years and we would like to thank him for all of his efforts.

“From a Wales perspective entering a crucial Rugby World Cup year it is great that Shaun has committed to seeing out his contract with the WRU and to continue to help lead Wales into the RWC.

“He will take up the role at Wigan post Japan 2019 and I am sure I speak on behalf of the whole game in Wales when I say I wish him all the best for his future.”


VIDEO: Richie Mo’unga shows his quality in Super Rugby Final

Richie Mo’unga was named man of the match in the Super Rugby final and this demonstrates why after instigating David Havili’s crucial score.

The Crusaders pivot has been in exceptional form throughout 2018 and is putting pressure on Beauden Barrett for the starting All Blacks jersey in the Rugby Championship.


Gonzalo Quesada takes over at the Jaguares

Former Stade Francais boss Gonzalo Quesada has been announced as the Jaguares’ new head coach following the departure of Mario Ledesma.

Ledesma will lead Argentina into the 2019 World Cup in Japan after a successful year in charge of the franchise and Quesada has been confirmed as his replacement.

The 44-year-old, who played as a fly-half, featured 38 times for Los Pumas before hanging up his boots in 2008 to focus on coaching.

He had stints with France and Racing Metro, but it was at Stade where the ex-pivot enjoyed success, leading them to the Top 14 title in 2015 and the Challenge Cup in 2017.

“It was time to go back to my country and bring Argentine rugby all my experience,” Quesada said.

“My biggest challenge is to have more players, improve the preparation and contribute to Argentine rugby as it continues to grow. If we only think of the results we are going to make a mistake. We want this process to move forward.”

Bienvenido Gonzalo Quesada.#JugamosTodos ?@SanzarTRC pic.twitter.com/uMYkeYd2Pa

— JaguaresARG (@JaguaresARG) August 8, 2018


Gavin Henson aiming to prolong professional career

Former Wales international Gavin Henson is looking to continue his playing career beyond the current campaign with the Newport-based Dragons.

The utility back, who has garnered 33 caps for his country, will be 37 by the end of his current deal at the Welsh region which runs out in June 2019.

Henson was a regular in the first part of last season but was dropped following a Boxing Day defeat to Cardiff Blues. He started once more before a hamstring injury ruled him out of the rest of the campaign.

“For the last however many years I have always treated it as my last but hope that is not the case,” he told WalesOnline. “I would love to go one more year professionally.

“I’m hoping to get another contract but there’s a lot to do yet. That’s a big drive for me to get that next year. I’m always looking for perfection, even at my age. I’m still dreaming of that perfect game, that’s what keeps my drive in training. As soon as I lose that I will finish.”

Despite Henson’s experience and quality, the 36-year-old is initially expecting to be down the pecking order when their PRO14 season starts in September.

He added: “I think I have got to take a little bit of a back-seat to start, to see if those boys take their chance. I’m covering 10, 12 and 15, wherever they need me, but hopefully I can force my way in the team. When I get my chance I have got to take it and put pressure on the other boys.

“Obviously, the management is under pressure because of how we finished last year so we need wins. This year is going to be much more serious. There’s going to be no messing around; (head coach) Bernard (Jackman) is probably going to pick his strongest team every week.

“That’s what we want as players and hopefully I will get in that. At the moment, with the way pre-season is, my goal is to try and get that starting spot and be first choice, which is going to be tough. But it’s a nice challenge for me.”


Newcastle Falcons sign Portuguese star

Newcastle Falcons have completed the signing of Portuguese outside centre Pedro Bettencourt from French club Carcassonne ahead of the new season.

A Portugese international at both 7s and 15s, the 23-year-old spent two seasons in the academy of French giants Clermont and has been a regular starter for Carcassonne in France’s Pro D2 for the past two years.

Standing at 6 foot 1 and weighing 94kg, Bettencourt is renowned for his hard-hitting defence, piercing attacking runs and offloading game, director of rugby Dean Richards welcoming him on board as his eighth senior signing of the summer.

“Pedro was initially recommended to us by a well-respected contact of ours on the continent, and on the strength of that endorsement we decided to take a much closer look at him over a period of time,” said the Falcons boss.

“He is a player who ticks all the boxes in terms of what we want from an outside centre, he speaks good English and we think he can make a mark here. He is over here already training with the boys, and we look forward to seeing the impact he can make.”

Bettencourt’s arrival comes on the back of the previously-announced signings of George McGuigan (Leicester Tigers), Logovi’i Mulipola (Leicester Tigers), Guy Graham (Hawick), Tom Arscott (Rouen), Connor Collett (North Harbour), Nemani Nagusa (Aurillac) and Johnny Williams (London Irish), as well as senior academy promotions for England Under-18s stars Cameron Nordli-Kelemeti, Morgan Passman, Will Montgomery, Tom Marshall, Josh Hodge and Rob Farrar.


‘Crusaders experience life changing’ – Ronan O’Gara

Former Ireland and British & Irish Lions fly-half Ronan O’Gara said his experience as an assistant coach with the Super Rugby-winning Crusaders has ‘entirely altered’ his thought processes.

O’Gara said a comment made before the Crusaders’ second game against the Hurricanes by coach Scott Robertson had been significant in his change of approach.

“We were ravaged by injuries, facing our biggest New Zealand rivals with a team of largely untried talents,” he told the Irish Examiner.

“Losing to them would have provided the ‘Canes with a massive fillip for the last third of the campaign, irrespective of what we had on the field.”

Robertson was one of the most upbeat men he had worked with.

“He blew me away that week when I ventured that if the Hurricanes were going to beat us, it was then,” said O’Gara.

“‘Razor’ (Robertson’s nickname) fixed me with a death stare. ‘I don’t see it like that. Anybody who has come into my team has performed and taken their chance. I can’t wait to see these young fellas tomorrow’,” he said.

The next evening the Crusaders duly beat the Hurricanes.

“Razor showers you in his positivity,” added O’Gara.

“I would always have been looking to see what could go wrong in a game; he looks to see what will go right. Scott’s glass is never less than half-full. Mine’s now the same, largely because of him.”

The Crusaders’ campaign had been the most intensely focused he had been involved in.

“It’s almost weird being a sidecar passenger on your own development, knowing it’s happening but being too focused to stop and admire it,” he said.

“We practise clinical and ruthless. The coaching and teaching element of the job is fundamental but the icing on the top is the development of the individual player, their self-development. The trick for the coaching staff is knowing when to be part of that and knowing when to get out of the way. Helping the players help each other too. That’s been the really fascinating part to observe.

“Nobody here has reinvented the wheel, and I’m certainly not the smartest kid in the class all of a sudden. Each and every experience is a development opportunity. It just seems that coaching in New Zealand is a master’s course in itself.”

O’Gara said during his experience with Racing 92 in Paris the language barrier had been an issue in player uptake as everything happened slower.

But in Christchurch the players’ game intelligence was off the charts, he said, and the uptake was so quick by comparison.

Leadership was an important area, and it was carefully planned with programmes in place to ensure a next tier of leaders was being catered for.

“In the midst of all this, you are continually reinforcing the benefits of what knowledge does for a coaching ticket, for a playing group, for team ambition, and for making the difference in the championship moments and games,” he explained.

“It makes for an interesting (and at times sobering) retrospective on things, on moments, and on careers. I look back now at key games, key battles we hoped to win. It was all a bit random at times,” he said of his playing career.

“These guys expect to win, and not because they are New Zealanders.”

The experience with the Crusaders had given him more confidence about delivering his message in every different facet of the game.

“There’s nothing special, there’s no mystery to these Crusader winners, but living with them clarifies in its purest terms the fundamentals of that oft-misused and misunderstood value – culture – and how you back it up. How you put into practice what culture is, and what trying to get better every day looks like,” he said.


Ben Hyne extends Brumbies stay

Brumbies back-row Ben Hyne has signed a new one-year contract to remain with the Canberra club for the duration of the 2019 Super Rugby season.

Following a truncated 2018 campaign, in which an early season injury curtailed his involvement in the club’s Super Rugby campaign, Hyne recovered to play for the Tuggeranong Vikings in the Griffin Legal John I Dent Cup and is expected to be a part of the Canberra Vikings squad for the National Rugby Championship.

Hyne, who is also capable of playing at lock, made his Super Rugby debut for the Brumbies in 2016 against the Reds in Canberra, becoming Brumby  number 185, and has since gone on to make five appearances.

“I am very happy to have re-signed with the club,” Hyne told the Brumbies’ official website.

“The last 12 months recovering from knee surgery has been frustrating but thanks to the professionalism of the Brumbies support staff and a lot of hard work I am ready to go.

“The Brumbies are building a strong squad for 2019 and I will be making the most of every opportunity between now then to press my claims for a position in the team.”

Brumbies head coach Dan McKellar was enthused about the prospect of the bustling backrower returning to the paddock to bolster the club’s stocks in both that area, and the second row.

“The most impressive thing about Ben is how he has handled and dealt with the adversity of a serious injury,” McKellar said when looking back on 2018.

“He has worked extremely hard to get back to full fitness and has stayed engaged with the playing group, contributing to meetings and watching vision. He hasn’t dwelt on the injury and that says a lot about his character.

“Ben was in great form last year and was named man of the match in the first three or four NRC fixtures. He is tough and is a very good defensive player. He’s smart in attack, has good skills and runs good lines and he is excellent in the line-out both in attack and defence.

“We are hopeful that the injuries are behind him and that he can forge ahead with his career as he has the potential to play Super Rugby week in and week out.”


JRFU play down fresh Amanaki Mafi incident

The Japan Rugby Union has played down rumours of an altercation between Amanaki Mafi and a member of staff earlier this year.

Mafi is currently in Japan awaiting the outcome of criminal proceedings in New Zealand, where he allegedly assaulted Rebels team-mate Lopeti Timani.

And according to Fairfax Media, another incident has come to light where the number eight was apparently involved in a physical exchange with a member of Brave Blossoms’ backroom staff while on Test duty in June.

However, the JRFU released a statement insisting the argument was not physical and that the matter had been resolved.

“Amanaki Lelei Mafi had a disagreement with one of our staff, but clearly it was nothing violent,” a spokeswoman said. “Head coach Jamie Joseph was able to manage the situation and the case was shared and settled among the team members and staff.”


Michael Hooper pens new deal with Rugby Australia

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Wallabies and Waratahs flanker and captain Michael Hooper has given Australian rugby a massive boost, committing to a fresh five-year contract.

The new contract will take Hooper through the next two Rugby World Cups and to the end of 2023.

It’s not the first five-year contract in Australian rugby – Lote Tuqiri signed a five-year deal in 2007 but was sacked midway through that deal.

The length of the deal shows Hooper’s value to the Wallabies, with the flanker able to command far more than AUS$1 million a season in overseas markets.

Reports of a five-year contract for Hooper first emerged back in April and News Limited outlets reported on Thursday night the deal had been finalised and was worth close to AUS$6 million.

A Rugby Australia spokesman declined to comment but sources close to the Wallabies captain confirmed the new Hooper contract.

It is understood the deal will be officially unveiled on Friday.

First asked about the possibility of a long-term contract back in April, Hooper played his cards close to his chest.

“You can’t get caught up in looking too far down the track,” he said to News Limited at the time.

“You have to focus on the here and now. That’s where my head is at. These things take time (to finalise).

“There are a lot of things going on, as you can imagine. Whenever that time arrives, so be it.

“I love playing rugby in Australia. It is such a great place to play rugby.

“There is a great talent pool and we have a lot of players coming up who are hungry to win, and that’s something that is exciting.”


‘All Blacks braced for tough Wallabies Test’ – Ian Foster

All the debate over where the favouritism sits ahead of this year’s opening Bledisloe Cup encounter in Sydney next weekend is irrelevant.

That was the word from All Blacks assistant coach Ian Foster ahead of the All Blacks’ ‘Game of Three Halves’ in Christchurch on Friday.

“All I know is we’ve never had an easy game in Sydney and we’ve had a couple of games in my time when the score’s blown out a couple of times and we’ve also been on the back of a couple of losses, so I think that’s probably all we need to focus on,” he told the All Blacks’ official website.

“They’re building and they’re pretty energetic about this game and we need to be as well.”

The Australians would take some confidence from the way the Waratahs finished their Super Rugby campaign. There had been some special patches of rugby in the last two or three weeks but the All Blacks management felt there was more of a pointer from the way they played in a competitive series against Ireland in June and that was where most of their analysis was focused.

It had been a physical series with Ireland looking to take Australia on in close quarter play while Australia would have been happier playing with more width and it had developed into a close series which could just as easily have been 3-0 to Australia or 2-1 to either side.

So far as New Zealand’s dead rubber 23-18 loss to Australia in Brisbane last year was concerned it had been a poor Test from their point of view as the side did not have the edge it needed whereas Australia did and they had absorbed how much the win meant to them.

“What we have taken from last year is that they are a quality team and their ability to play at a level that can upset us is there and we’ve just got to make sure that we don’t go in expecting them to play poorly and go in at the top of our game,” said Foster.

As for Friday evening Foster said there were a number of players the selectors needed to see have a good hit out not having played for a little while and the game would also be a chance to see how everyone shaped after the campaigns they had been involved in.

They were keen that the Crusaders, as the last finishers in the Super Rugby competition have as few minutes as possible, if they played at all.

Foster said given where they were at in comparison to last season at the same time they felt they were in a good position but there was plenty of work to be done before Saturday next week.

“There are some things we want to get out of tomorrow,” he added.

“The primary thing is the physical side of the game to make sure the guys get used to getting tackled and running hard.

“There’ll be some things we’ll put out there with an eye to Sydney just to see what they look like and I guess there’re a couple of combinations we will try but I’d rather not document that at the moment.”

Ardie Savea, who missed the last part of the Super Rugby competition with the Hurricanes, had come through last week’s camp well and had another week under his belt this week.

There was still some understanding of their loose forward resources being sought by the selectors.

“Certainly from the loose forwards there’s a lot of learning from us as coaches about how they go and a lot of learning from them about how they fit in so that’s going to be an evolving beast throughout this campaign,” said Foster.