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Danny Wilson: Wales secondment will improve me as a coach

Harlequins head coach Danny Wilson before the Investec Champions Cup Round of 16 match between Leinster and Harlequins at Croke Park in Dublin. (Photo By Brendan Moran/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

Harlequins head coach Danny Wilson believes his four-week secondment with Wales this summer will benefit both himself and his club.

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Wilson has passed up the opportunity for any post-season downtime after accepting the role as forwards coach for the two-Test tour of Japan.

Instead of sunning himself on holiday, Wilson will be a member of Matt Sherratt’s backroom team and the 48-year-old from Somerset is relishing being involved with Wales again, having previously worked for the WRU and as Sherratt’s boss at Cardiff. Those roles have now been reversed.

“I left Wales and my role at Cardiff in 2018 and I have some really happy memories,” said Wilson, who has coached the Under-20 side in the past.

“I first worked with Matt at Bristol and then having seen how good he was, I was desperate to bring him to Cardiff.

“We had a pretty good time together and then went our separate ways into different projects after a pleasing end by winning a bit of silverware with Cardiff (2018 European Challenge Cup).

“We work well together and dovetail a fair amount, but we are responsible for different areas.

“I’m very respectful of who is in the head coaching role. He was very supportive of me in our period together at Cardiff, and likewise, me now.”

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Wilson left Wales to forge his career in Scotland, working as forwards coach for the national team between 2018 and 2020.

He then spent two years at Glasgow Warriors before moving on to Harlequins in 2023, a role he will resume “when I get off a flight from Japan”.

Instead of returning burnt out by the demands of coaching Wales on top of a long season with Harlequins, Wilson believes the experience will refresh him and improve him.

“It is a great opportunity for me, and I think I will come back a better coach for the experience of having another crack at international rugby.

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“It is the main holiday period, but I see it as a refreshing challenge for me. I won’t be head coaching, I’ll be assistant coaching, I’ll be assisting Matt, and me and him have worked very closely in the past. So some of the responsibilities are not quite as big.

“I get a chance to dive into some of the detail and depth that I have always dived into, but to another level, and I still get that balance. I think I will come back fresher for it, and there are other opportunities (for holidays).

“There are breaks in our pre-season where we all go on holiday later in the year anyway. We’ll be into block one of pre-season when I get back and then I’ll get a break and I will probably take a holiday then.”

It is a pivotal summer for Wales, who head to the Far East on the back of a record 17-match losing run. If things go badly, Japan will move above Wales in the world rankings, which could negatively impact their draw for the 2027 World Cup.

Wilson knows plenty about the challenges facing Wales in Japan after being part of the Scotland set-up at the 2019 Rugby World Cup. Scotland were eliminated at the group stage after suffering a shock 28-21 defeat to Japan in Yokohama.

“There are big challenges around the humidity and cultural differences,” said Wilson.

“We did a huge amount of work on the humidity side of things and that is already being done.

“Greasy balls is an obvious challenge. I remember going out there and in the first few training sessions, there were a lot of balls on the floor.

“There is a very passionate and hungry group of players here. In the short time I’ve got to know them, I’ve found them to be a very responsive group to coaching.”

Wales suffered a 17th straight Test defeat – a record for a Tier One nation – when hammered 68-14 at home by England in March.

They play Eddie Jones’ Japan in Kitakyushu on July 5, with the second Test in Kobe a week later.

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N
NH 3 hours ago
'The Wallabies need to convert much better - or Melbourne could be much worse'

Nice one as always Brett. I think the stats hide a bit of the dominance the lions had, and they would look alot worse in that first half when the game was more in the balance. You mention it here but I think it hasn’t been talked about enough was the lineout. The few times the wallabies managed to exit their half and get an opportunity to attack in the 1st half, the lineout was lost. This was huge in terms of lions keeping momentum and getting another chance to attack, rather than the wallabies getting their chance and to properly ‘exit’ their half. The other one you touch on re “the will jordan bounce of the ball” - is kick chase/receipt. I thought that the wallabies kicked relatively well (although were beaten in this area - Tom L rubbish penalty kicks for touch!), but our kick receipt and chase wasn’t good enough jorgenson try aside. In the 1st half there was a moment where russell kicked for a 50:22 and potter fumbled it into touch after been caught out of position, lynagh makes a similar kick off 1st phase soon after and keenan is good enough to predict the kick, catch it at his bootlaces and put a kick in. That kick happened to go out on the full but it was a demonstration on the difference in positioning etc. This meant that almost every contested kick that was spilled went the way of the lions, thats no accident, that is a better chase, more urgency, more players in the area. Wallabies need to be better in who fields their kicks getting maxy and wright under most of them and Lynagh under less, and the chase needs to be the responsibility of not just one winger but a whole group of players who pressure not just the catch but the tackle, ruck and following phase.

17 Go to comments
J
JW 3 hours ago
Competing interests and rotated squads: What the 'player welfare summer' is really telling us

Thanks for the further background to player welfare metrics Nick.


Back on the last article I noted that WR is now dedicating a whole section in their six-point business plan to this topic. It also noted that studies indicated 85-90% of workload falls outside of playing. So in respect to your point on the classification of ‘involvements’, needing to include even subs with a low volume of minutes, it actually goes further to the wider group of players that train as if they’re going to be required to start on the weekend. That makes even the 30-35 game borderline pale into insignificance.


No doubt it is one of the main reasons why France has a quota on the number of any one clubs amount of players in their International camps, where they rotate in other clubs players through the week (those not chosen in the 23 on Tues/Wed must be rotated out with players from another club for the remaining weeks prep). The number of ‘invisible’ games against a players season tally or predicted workload suggests the FFRs 25 game limit as more appropriate?


So if we take it at face value that Galthie and the FFR have got it right, only a dozen players from the last 60 international caps should have gone on this tour. More players from the ‘Scotland 23’ than the more recent 23 were eligible.


The only real pertinent question is what do players prefer more, health or money? There are lots of ethical decisions, like for instance whether France could make a market like Australia’s where their biggest rugby codes have yearly broadcast deals of 360 and 225 million euros. They do it by having a 7/8 month season, but ultimately if they don’t want it to change they can just play 11 months in the season instead.

70 Go to comments
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