Get Newsletter

Gatland predicts 'spicy' rematch with Boks

SPOTLIGHT: The Springboks’ World Cup success in Japan has teed up a mouthwatering prospect for British and Irish Lions coach Warren Gatland, who will lead the side to South Africa on their 2021 tour.

“If I was going to be selfish, I think for the Lions it puts an extra edge on it because now we’re going to South Africa to play against the world champions,” the 56-year-old said, according to the Telegraph.

“There would have been more expectation to pick those [England] players to be part of the Lions [starting side], and people saying, ‘If England can beat South Africa in the World Cup then the Lions should win that comfortably’.”

Continue reading below…

Video Spacer

Gatland finds himself in a unique situation where he will join the Chiefs as the Super Rugby franchise’s head coach in the coming months as he starts his four-year deal with the club, but will step away next June to take a year-long sabbatical and focus on his commitments with the Lions.

ADVERTISEMENT

Having commitments with both teams could prove to be a difficult balancing act, but the departing Wales boss believes he is in a strong position as he prepares to travel to the Republic in two years’ time.

“The great thing from a Super Rugby point of view is that we’re playing South African teams, so it will be two weeks in South Africa for matches,” he said.

After ceasing work with the Chiefs, he will then “look at the home unions on summer tours, look at who South Africa are playing, recce out there to look at hotels and training venues”.

“The time frame is perfect for me, coaching against those South African teams and tapping into some of the knowledge from a New Zealand perspective, with people who’ve been involved with the South African teams. It’s a great position to be in.”

Following his side’s drawn series against the All Blacks two years ago, Gatland has learned from the experience, where jet lag contributed to their slow start to the tour.

Four days after arriving in New Zealand, the Lions spluttered to a scratchy 13-7 win over the New Zealand Barbarians, and suffered defeats to the Blues and Highlanders in their opening four matches.

Another problem Gatland faced was the wavering commitment of some of his supporting staff, so he endeavours to take a different approach to his staff recruitment process for the South Africa tour.

Video Spacer

“A couple of people I spoke to last time indicated they were available, and when it came to it they weren’t. I don’t think that was a brilliant look from both sides, and I learnt from that,” he said.

“Part of what I need to do, before any announcements, is to get round to the four home unions and the chief executives – talk to the coaches about who is in their set-up; coaching and analysts and medical staff wouldn’t be available for the Lions, so we don’t make those approaches.

“Logistically, South Africa is easier because the time difference and not having to deal with the jet lag issue we had in New Zealand, where we arrived on the Wednesday and the first game was on the Saturday.

“There were a lot of people in New Zealand who were surprised the Lions agreed to that schedule because it was very, very tough. The cooperation between South Africa and the Lions has been excellent.”

Sources: The Telegraph & RugbyPass

Related articles

Gatland wants ‘Super’ challenge
Gatland has ‘unfinished business’
Gatland to coach B&I Lions to SA 2021
How the Springboks broke the mould
Siya: Let’s put South Africa first
Irish critic spits the dummy over Boks

ADVERTISEMENT

In other news:

Video Spacer

Join free

Yokohama Canon Eagles vs Toshiba Brave Lupus Tokyo | Japan Rugby League One 2024/25 | Full Match Replay

Edinburgh vs Glasgow | Celtic Challenge 2024/25 | Match Highlights

Boks Office | Episode 31 | Investec Champions Cup Review

Global Schools Challenge | Day 2 Replay

The Backyard Bunch | The USA's Belmont Shore

AUSTRALIA vs USA behind the scenes | HSBC SVNS Embedded | E04

South Africa v France | HSBC SVNS Cape Town 2024 | Men's Final Match Highlights

Two Sides - Behind the scenes with the British & Irish Lions in South Africa | E01

Write A Comment