SCRUM Magazine – September 2019

(Barré) #1
1987: Third Place
1991: Pool Stage

1995: Pool Stage
1999: Quarter Finals

2003: Quarter Finals
2007: Pool Stage

2011: Fourth Place
2015: Quarter Finals

GRAND SLAM HEROES SET SIGHTS


ON WORLD CUP GLORY


ales are riding the crest of a
wave going into the 2019 Rugby
World Cup, having won the
Grand Slam in the most recent Guinness
Six Nations, and with a squad full of world
class talent to pick from. Warren Gatland,
who will end his 11-year tenure at the end
of the tournament, will have his sights
set on repeating their feat of 2011 and
reaching the semi-finals, at least.
Since they last suffered defeat, to Ireland
in the penultimate round of the 2018
Six Nations, Wales have put together a
13-match unbeaten run that includes a
2-0 series win in Argentina, two victories
over the Springboks and a triumph over
Australia, as well as their Six Nations
clean sweep.
It is quite the run of form, and outgoing
boss Gatland - who is returning home to
coach the Gallagher Chiefs in 2020 Super
Rugby before becoming Head Coach of
the 2021 British and Irish Lions - will
hope it can continue through the Rugby
World Cup.


A lot has been made in some quarters
of Wales’ low try-scoring count during
their Six Nations victory - they managed
only 10, level with bottom-place Italy


  • but it shows that their game is built
    around a defensive resilience that forces
    opponents into making errors.
    Their win over England, for example, was
    a close-fought encounter before Cory
    Hill and Josh Adams both crossed in the
    final quarter. That epitomises how the
    Wales ‘class of 2019’ will look to play
    in Japan - do not expect them to play a
    hugely expansive style, running the ball
    from all quarters; but defence guru Shaun
    Edwards will ensure they are tough to
    break down without the ball, and when
    they’ve got it, they’ll use their kicking
    game to squeeze the opposition.
    Their tournament begins with a clash
    against Georgia - perhaps an opportunity
    for Gatland to use some of his squad
    players and rest the front-line stars for
    game two, a meeting with the Wallabies


that could go a long way to deciding the
winners of Pool D.
Then comes a potential banana skin, and
fans of Welsh rugby will have flashbacks
to 2007, when the Flying Fijians dumped
them out of the Rugby World Cup in
France with a mesmeric counter-attacking
display. Gatland will likely need most, if
not all, of his first-choice XV to play two
games in a row to see off Bill Mata, Leone
Nakarawa and the current, increasingly
impressive, Fijian squad.
Wales’ final pool game is perhaps their
most straightforward, against minnows
Uruguay, who they will be expected to
dispatch with relative ease and notch a
big score.
From there, one of Argentina, England
or France is their likely opposition in
the quarter-finals - a tough ask, but one
Gatland will be confident that his side is
capable of overcoming.

W


WALES


Warren Gatland will
end his 11-year tenure
as Wales boss after the
World Cup

COACH:
WARREN GATLAND

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RUGBY WORLD CUP - TOP 10


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