Marc Jones swaps Sale Sharks for Scarlets

The Scarlets have announced that they have acquired the services of experienced hooker Marc Jones from Premiership outfit Sale Sharks.

Jones, 31, has played nearly 200 games for Sale Sharks since making his debut in the 2005/06 season.

The Sharks stalwart, and cornerstone of their pack for nearly a decade, made a move to then Championship side Bristol for the 2015/16 season before returning to the North West for the 2017/18 season.

Pontypridd born Jones moved north to pursue his rugby dream, opting to settle in the Salford area with his young family.

Jones’ acquisition is an exciting one for the Scarlets with the highly experienced player likely to challenge both Ken Owens and Ryan Elias as well as help the development of young hookers Taylor Davies and Dafydd Hughes.

Scarlets head coach Wayne Pivac said: “We’re extremely pleased to be in a position to officially confirm Marc’s signing.

“We have two international hookers in Ken and Ryan and two very exciting prospects in Taylor and Daf. Marc is a very experienced player who will challenge our international hookers in Ken and Ryan but will also be an important asset to us during the international windows.”

Jones added: “This opportunity to join the Scarlets is one that I’m particularly excited by and can’t wait to get started this week. I was born and bred in Wales and have always harboured ambitions of playing my rugby at home.

“I’m extremely proud to have represented Sale Sharks for the best part of a decade but this new opportunity is one that I’m looking forward to and we’re excited by as a family.

“The Scarlets have led the way in recent seasons and I’m looking forward to playing part in the seasons to come.”


Argentina make four changes to squad

Argentina head coach Mario Ledesma has made four changes to his squad for their upcoming Rugby Championship games in New Zealand and Australia.

Three of the alterations are amongst the forwards with front-row Gaston Cortes, veteran back-row Juan Manuel Leguizamon and hooker Julian Montoya recalled to the squad.

Montoya was ruled out of Los Pumas’ first two Tests against the Springboks due to injury and returns to the squad at the expense of Facundo Bosch.

The only other change is in the back-line where centre Matias Orlando is back in the fold after recovering from injury.

Argentina face a daunting task against tournament pace-setters New Zealand in Nelson on September 8 but Ledesma and his charges will be in a condfident mood after beating South Africa 32-19 in Mendoza at the weekend.

That result was only Los Pumas’ fourth Rugby Championship win since they joined the tournament in 2012 and ended an 11-match winless run.

Argentina squad:

Forwards: Matias Alemanno, Gaston Cortes, Agustin Creevy (c), Diego Fortuny, Santiago Garcia Botta, Marcos Kremer, Tomas Lavanini, Juan Manuel Leguizamon, Tomas Lezana, Pablo Matera, Santiago Medrano, Julian Montoya, Javier Ortega Desio, Guido Petti, Nahuel Tetaz Chaparro, Juan Zeiss

Backs: Santiago Alvarez, Gonzalo Bertranou, Emiliano Boffelli, Tomas Cubelli, Jeronimo de la Fuente, Bautista Delguy, Bautista Ezcurra, Santiago Gonzalez Iglesias, Martin Landajo, Juan Cruz Mallia, Matias Moroni, Ramiro Moyano, Matias Orlando, Nicolas Sanchez


Trevor Nyakane pens new Bulls deal

The Bulls have announced that Springbok prop Trevor Nyakane has re-committed to the Pretoria-based outfit after signing a new contract.

Nyakane, who joined the three-time Super Rugby champions from the Cheetahs in 2015, has re-pledged his allegiance to the Bulls until October 2019.

Nyakane is widely regarded as one if the toughest guys in the business, and probably also known to have one of the biggest smiles and personalities to go with. He has played in 91 Super Rugby matches, 42 for the Cheetahs and 49 for the Bulls, and has also donned the green and gold of the Springboks on 37 occasions.

Blue Bulls High Performance Manager, Xander Janse van Rensburg, said: “Trevor’s contribution to the Bulls family is more than just his amazing on field abilities.

“He is an absolute team-man, and an inspiration to us all. We are privileged to have an athlete of his calibre.”


Worcester dealt blow to midfield stocks

Worcester Warriors‘ promising centre Will Butler has been ruled out until December with a recurrence of an elbow injury sustained at the end of last season.

Butler suffered the original injury after scoring two tries in Worcester’s end-of-season defeat at Northampton Saints in May. He has now had a recurrence of the same injury while featuring for the Warriors in the Premiership Rugby Sevens in late July and will undergo surgery.

“If you remember Will went off in the Northampton game,” Solomons told Worcester News.

“That was treated conservatively.

“He got through the world championship but in the sevens at Northampton he injured it again.

“It was felt that it was prudent to have the operation so he will be out for a period of about three months and hopefully he will return to play in December.”


Junior Wallabies star joins Brumbies

The Brumbies have announced the signing of Junior Wallabies star Bayley Kuenzle after the exciting back signed a two-year contract with the club.

Kuenzle, who was part of the junior Wallabies squad that played in the World U20 Championships in France earlier this year, represented NSW Schools in 2016 where a series of outstanding performances earned him a call-up to the Australian Schools Barbarians squad.

Promoted to NSW U20 team, and selected for the Junior Wallabies World Cup campaign, Kuenzle impressed in France with his direct running and playmaking skills, bringing him a try against Italy as the team eventually finished the tournament in fifth place.

“I am very excited about the prospect of joining up with the Brumbies ahead of the 2019 Super Rugby season,” Kuenzle said of his addition to the Brumbies wider training squad.

“The Brumbies are a quality rugby team and play an exciting, fast-paced style of game which I believe will suit my own playing style. They are a young and talented group in Canberra and I am looking forward to joining up.

“I expect to learn a lot off the coaching staff at the club, and from the experienced players that the team has. I have heard good things about the culture and the Brumbies family and am looking forward continuing my development as a player.”

Brumbies head coach Dan McKellar was enthusiastic about the signing of the talented playmaker ahead of the club’s 2019 Super Rugby season with Kuenzle joining the Brumbies at the end of the national Rugby Championship.

“Bayley is an Australia under-20s player and has played first grade for Souths in the Shute Shield in Sydney,” McKellar said of the new signing.

“He’s got a good size for the position, and a temperament that fits as well. He can run, can organise, and just has an excellent all-round skill set. Bayley has shown that he can direct things on the park. He doesn’t get overexcited and is never flustered.

“He runs nice and square to the line and is direct and, when he does run, he’s very good at it. He’s another young player who has an opportunity to forge a career with us.“


Delon Armitage suffers season-ending injury

Lyon have suffered a setback with the news that full-back Delon Armitage has been ruled out for the rest of the season due to injury.

The former England international will be sidelined for at least 10 months after damaging the anterior cruciate ligaments in his left knee during Lyon’s 16-16 draw with Toulouse in their Top 14 opener at Matmut Stadium de Gerland at the weekend.

Lyon revealed that the 34-year-old, who joined them from Toulon in 2016, will undergo surgery on the injury on Friday.

Meanwhile, Lyon captain and flanker Juilen Puricelli will also be sidelined for up to eight weeks due to a shoulder injury sustained against Toulouse.


Loose Pass: Brilliance, idiocy and uncertainty

This week we will mostly be concerning ourselves with individual brilliance, individual idiocy and collective uncertainty…

There is probably only one performance in modern times to match Beauden Barrett’s on Saturday: that haul by Dan Carter in the second Test of the 2005 British & Irish Lions tour.

That’s a sentence that might naturally spark inquiries as to which was the best, but to do that would be to do one fly-half or the other an immense disservice. Arguments about the supine nature of either opposition are irrelevant; both Carter and Barrett were good enough to render their opposition supine, not the other way round.

There’s no doubt now in anyone I have spoken to’s mind that Barrett is well on his way to carving out a place in All Black history books either, nor is there any doubt that he is now shuffling off any notion of being merely the ‘new DC’.

He’s better on the hoof and gets around the field more, also showing perhaps more of a long burn of pace than his illustrious predecessor. Yet Carter is likely to remain the one who was always able to steer a game towards whatever outcome he felt it needed. Barrett can inspire more, but can he dig in as well? You feel perhaps not.

Which is, to an extent, what sets the two display apart. Carter’s was an all-round show of game management, iced with one mesmerising solo try. Barrett – helped somewhat by what seemed to be a slightly more expansive game-plan – was more prominent with his hands and running lines, but less so with management, for which New Zealand appear to have assumed a much more collective responsibility over the past four years anyway.

Two different displays, different oppositions, different eras even. But New Zealand are still the best in the world, regardless of who pulls the strings.

Meanwhile, in England…

Eddie Jones was down at Harlequins this week, chatting to Poland’s national coach Duaine Lindsay and passing on some nuggets of wisdom. One wonders whether the Irishman plucked up the courage to ask the question on how to deal with wayward genius.

As if Jones has not been let down enough by some of his players this year, two of the players he might have felt he was going to come to look on as some of his greatest achievements in terms of patiently waiting for maturity have shot themselves firmly in the foot.

If Danny Cipriani was perhaps predictable though, Chris Ashton was certainly not. A whole season in the relative volatility of France passed not only trouble-free but with try-scoring records broken and ambition still burning brightly.

And then all it took was Rory Kockott’s hand holding Ashton down and ‘boom!’ Up went Ashton’s designs on the England jersey in smoke, as did Jones’ willingness to forgive – already dealing with the hammer blow of Cipriani’s Jersey indiscretions.

If ever a week displayed the depth of difference between the state of England and New Zealand ahead of their clash in November, it was this one.

Troubled times

But then the club game in England is not exactly in rude health either. While the Premiership is certainly improving on the pitch, off it there are storm clouds gathering.

The losses among the twelve clubs in the 2016/17 season, announced in total to have been an eyebrow-raising GBP 28.5m, do not add credibility to rugby’s image of a game working its way into professionalism with moderation, nor does the excuse of spiralling wages display a healthy relationship between players and employers – not least when the wage costs are roundly blamed for the parlous state of the clubs’ collective finances.

But as this column has previously pointed out, that relationship was hardly healthy anyway, given that the players are paying more handsome a physical toll for their trade than might otherwise be either necessary or reasonable.

It’s very laudable of the clubs to now get together and decide to trim things down collectively but that spirit will be facing a stiff test of resolve if English clubs continue to struggle in Europe and the national team continues its decline, while players may toe the line for a while, but may also find their heads quickly turned by the riches continuing to be on offer across the channel.

At least Exeter, and to a lesser extent Leicester Tigers, have shown the way to sustainability, but as the example of Northampton, whose troubles have culminated them in making a loss where before there had been none, shows, even a sustainable team can be hostage to performance on the pitch, while an unsustainable model, like Worcester‘s currently or that of Wasps pre-Coventry, is one rarely far from disaster.

These are currently days of decent credit conditions and there’s no shortage of rich city types willing to stick a pile into a well-known rugby club.

But while players demand more money, owners and clubs are going to demand more games and revenue-generating activities, meaning more injury crises and probably more demands for compensatory wage levels from players, leading to the clubs needing more games and revenue-generating activities, causing… you see where I am going here.

A few weeks ago, this column wondered aloud how long it was before the club game in England suffered its next political meltdown. This financial report makes us think it really won’t be all that long at all.

Loose Pass compiled by Lawrence Nolan


Saints bring in Paul Grayson

Northampton have confirmed that Paul Grayson will join Chris Boyd’s coaching staff for the 2018/19 season as a consultant kicking coach.

Grayson, 47, made 259 appearances in Black, Green and Gold, becoming the Saints leading all-time points scorer in the process, notching 2,786 points in total. He made his England debut in 1995, making 32 appearances and scoring 400 points.

“We are delighted to make this appointment,” said new director of rugby, Boyd.

“Paul was an exceptional kicker during his career, both out of hand and when kicking for goal.

“Tactical kicking, when to kick, how to kick, and of course converting points through penalties and conversions is an imperative part of the modern game. Paul’s extensive technical knowledge in this area will benefit the squad greatly.

“He will complement the rest of the coaching team well, and we all look forward to welcoming him back to the Gardens.”

In 2005 Grayson retired from his 12-year playing career and was made head coach at Franklin’s Gardens, guiding the team to a top six finish the following season and a Heineken Cup semi-final in 2007.

“This is a very exciting time to be re-joining the Saints set-up,” commented Grayson.

“Northampton Saints is in my blood so I am delighted to accept this opportunity.

“I have clear ideas of what I would like to contribute, and I cannot wait to get out on to the training ground and get started.”


John Afoa – ‘We’re raring to go’

John Afoa says Bristol Bears are ready and raring to go ahead of Friday’s West Country derby against Bath at Ashton Gate.

The prop, who knows a thing or two about West Country derbies having spent three seasons at Gloucester, says the players are relishing the Ashton Gate atmosphere, as excitement builds for the start of the Premiership campaign.

“We’ve had a couple of good hit outs against Hartpury, Scarlets and then Connacht last week, so everyone is in a good place,” he said.

“We’ve got a lot of boys available and a lot of competition throughout the squad, so whoever gets the nod Friday night is just looking to do a job for the club.

“The squad has gelled together well and we’re really excited about this Friday and the season as a whole. It’s great to see so many supporters getting behind us and we’re raring to go.

“The build-up has been great, and you can tell by the excitement in the club and the community. Pat has already spoken about the responsibility the players have on Friday night, making sure we turn up in the right frame of mind, don’t get overwhelmed by the occasion and just look to play the game that we want.

“We feel like we’ve got a good squad, we’ve trained well over the last few weeks and we’re looking forward to Friday night. The season isn’t won and lost in one game, but we want to make sure we’re putting things in place to build on for the rest of the season.

“Pre-season was really good and I’m feeling fit – as good as you can be after 12 weeks of pre-season – but everyone looks forward to the games and Bath on a Friday night at Ashton Gate is a great start for us.

“There’s a lot of excitement at the club and we can’t wait to get started.”


Bok duo start for Western Province

Damian de Allende and Wilco Louw will start for Western Province in their Currie Cup encounter against the Pumas in Nelspruit on Friday.

Centre De Allende and prop Louw have both been released from the Springbok squad for the clash at the Mbombela Stadium.

Dillyn Leyds will continue as captain and shifts to full-back, with two new wings in SP Marais and Sergeal Petersen and De Allende in midfield alongside Ruhan Nel.

Craig Barry and Dan du Plessis join Herschel Jantjies as backline cover on the replacements bench.

In the forward pack Ernst van Rhyn comes into the starting line-up at lock with Chris van Zyl among the replacements on his return from injury, while Louw’s inclusion sees Michael Kumbirai move to the replacements bench as well.

Western Province head coach John Dobson said that his team is focused on delivering an accurate performance in Nelspruit.

“We know very well how tough it can be to play in Nelspruit, which is a challenge that we are looking to embrace,” he said.

“It has been a short week, but preparations have gone well and we are ready for a big effort away from home.”

Western Province: 15 Dillyn Leyds (c), 14 Sergeal Petersen, 13 Ruhan Nel, 12 Damian de Allende, 11 SP Marais, 10 Josh Stander, 9 Jano Vermaak, 8 Juarno Augustus, 7 Kobus van Dyk, 6 Sikhumbuzo Notshe, 5 JD Schickerling, 4 Ernst van Rhyn, 3 Wilco Louw, 2 Scarra Ntubeni, 1 Ali Vermaak
Replacements: 16 Chad Solomon, 17 Caylib Oosthuizen, 18 Michael Kumbirai, 19 Chris van Zyl, 20 Herschel Jantjies, 21 Dan du Plessis, 22 Craig Barry

Date: Friday, August 31
Venue: Mbombela Stadium, Nelspruit
Kick-off: 18:30 local (17:30 BST, 16:30 GMT)
Referee: Marius van der Westhuizen
Assistant referees: Des van Wyk, Alex Jonker
Television match official: Christie du Preez