Wales coach Warren Gatland has denied he was under extra pressure as his team sought an elusive win over a Southern Hemisphere side when they clash with South Africa on Saturday.
Gatland’s record against the SANZAR sides of Australia, New Zealand and the Springboks since taking charge in 2007 does not make for pleasant reading: played 27, won one, lost 26.
That solitary win was against the Wallabies, 21-18, back in 2008, but Gatland on Thursday played down reports in the media that he was under extra pressure, 10 months away from the World Cup in England.
After opening their November campaign with a 28-33 defeat by Australia, an experimental Wales side scraped past Fiji 17-13 before rebounding against New Zealand, leading after 69 minutes before leaking three late tries to go down 16-34.
rugby365
“You’re always under pressure in sport and it’s more about the pressure you put on yourself as much as anything, the external pressure to perform,” Gatland said.
“The year-end [Tests] is not a competition, it’s about using it to play against the best teams in the world who have come off really strong campaigns to prepare potentially for the Six Nations, which is our competition, and the World Cup.”
Gatland denied a complaint had been made to broadcaster BBC over a post-match interview, instead stressing that his team’s World Cup draw in a pool that includes England, Australia and Fiji was his focus.
“It was an unbelievable Test match last week. We pushed the All Blacks for 69 minutes and played some great rugby,” the Kiwi coach said.
“We’re just concentrating on this weekend.
“I’m happy at where we are at the moment. At the start of the campaign, I stressed that we were looking at the long term.
“What we’re going to be judged on is our performance in the World Cup and our whole focus is on getting out of that pool in the World Cup.
“That’s been the whole emphasis of this campaign and it’ll be the same with the Six Nations.”
Gatland added: “We’ve pushed two of the best teams in the world pretty close, we’ve been in front, the disappointing thing is that we haven’t been able to finish those games on in the last 10-15 minutes and that’s what we have to work on as coaches and a team.
“The whole emphasis is making sure we finish off and play the full 80 minutes. And to be in front against these top sides with 10 or 20 minutes to go is not enough.
“You’ve got to keep raising the tempo and be prepared to play the full 80 minutes.”
That didn’t happen the last time Wales played South Africa, the Springboks mounting a stunning comeback to beat Wales 31-30 in Nelspruit in June after the Welsh had led 17-0 and 30-17 going into the final quarter.
A Wales victory would also be only the second in the history between the two nations, the sole win coming under Graham Henry in the first-ever match at the Millennium Stadium in 1999.
Otherwise, the Springboks have won 27, with one drawn (1970).
“We’re expecting another tough encounter against one of the best teams in the world,” Gatland said.
You know what pisses me off no end?
There are only 2 International Tests this weekend of considerable importance, namely the Wales / Springboks and England / Wallabies matches… yet they still manage to fark it all up for us, by playing both games at EXACTLY THE SAME TIME!
1 @ grootblousmile:
IRB / World Rugby!
What more do you expect?
Users Online
Total 136 users including 0 member, 136 guests, 0 bot online
Most users ever online were 3735, on 31 August 2022 @ 6:23 pm