Warren Gatland outlines ambitious plan to take Wales to Rugby World Cup final
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Warren Gatland has underlined Walesâ desire to go one better than in three previous Rugby World Cup campaigns and reach the final.
They were semi-finalists in 1987, and then twice under Gatland â 2011 and 2019 â bowing out at that stage on each occasion.
A bonus-point victory over Pool C rivals Fiji last weekend sent Wales off and running, and if they repeat the feat against Portugal on Saturday it would further strengthen quarter-final ambitions.
Australia and Georgia still await, before a possible last-eight appointment with England or Argentina in Marseille next month.
âWe have always been confident in the past about World Cups and the opportunity to get the team together for an extended period,â Wales head coach Gatland said.
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âWe think that we have done well in previous World Cups and would like to get to a final of a World Cup.
âI stated beforehand donât write us off and that this team is capable of doing something special, and I still believe that.
âPart of the key themes and key message before this World Cup was to make sure we are a hard team to beat, and if we are a hard team to beat then things can happen for you.
âThe first priority is to be a really tough team to beat, and if we do that and get things right and our preparation is good and we donât pick up too many injuries, then there is no reason why we canât continue to progress a long way into this tournament. That is the plan.â
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Portugal are next up, with Gatland making 13 changes to the team that started against Fiji, retaining only wing Louis Rees-Zammit and number eight Taulupe Faletau.
The countries have met just once before â a World Cup qualifier in Lisbon 29 years ago that Wales won 102-11 â with Portugal making a first appearance in the tournamentâs pool stage since 2007.
Gatland added: âFrom past experience with Taulupe, he is a player that gets better with more game-time.
âHe hasnât had a lot of rugby, didnât play any warm-up games, so itâs just backing him up.
âWith Louis, itâs the same sort of situation. He has been fantastic in the last five or six weeks, and I just want to keep him playing as well.
âThey (Portugal) are kind of a similar version of Fiji. They play a lot of rugby, theyâve got some exciting players, they like to move the ball around, so we are kind of prepared almost in the same way we prepared against Fiji.
It is a great opportunity for players on Saturday to stake a claim
âI thought from a neutral last week if you were watching the games, it (Wales against Fiji) was probably the most exciting game of the weekend in terms of the rugby that was played.
âIt wasnât great being a coach sitting in the box in the last 10 minutes, I can promise you that, but hopefully we can produce another great game of rugby.â
Fiji almost wiped out an 18-point deficit during a frantic final quarter in Bordeaux, while centre Semi Radradra couldnât gather a pass in the dying seconds that might have led to him scoring a match-winning try.
Wales, though, held on in nerve-shredding fashion to claim a victory that has installed them in many quarters as favourites to win their group.
âWe were delighted with the win, delighted with the preparation, everything was going brilliantly for 60-odd minutes with the scoreline. And typical Fiji, they get a bit of a sniff and they came back at us really strong in the last period,â Gatland said.
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âThat game is done and dealt with, it is past us now and the focus is on Portugal. Hopefully we will do a good job on Saturday and then move on to Australia next week.
âIt is a great opportunity for players on Saturday to stake a claim, and if they go out there and someone has a great performance then they are definitely in contention. Thatâs the way I look at it.â
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