Dan Biggar Alun Wyn Jones Justin Tipuric Leigh Halfpenny Gareth Anscombe Warren Gatland Joe Hawkins Owen Williams Scotland county Hawkins Rugby Dan Biggar Alun Wyn Jones Justin Tipuric Leigh Halfpenny Gareth Anscombe Warren Gatland Joe Hawkins Owen Williams Scotland county Hawkins

Gatland has no concerns over players' mentality ahead of England clash

channelnewsasia.com

Wales' players have returned to training full of fight and eager to reverse their recent poor run after a torrid week according to coach Warren Gatland as they prepare to face England in the Six Nations in Cardiff on Saturday.It has been a difficult few days for all involved in Welsh rugby, not least the players, who contemplated a strike over contract disputes with the Professional Rugby Board, which runs the professional game in the country, before an 11th hour agreement to play was reached."I’m just happy things have been sorted," Gatland told reporters on Thursday. "The guys are good this morning.

We had a meeting to announce the team and it was an opportunity to draw a line in the sand and move forward."Gatland has made nine changes to the side that lost 35-7 last time out away to Scotland, including recalls for number eight Taulupe Faletau, loose-forward Justin Tipuric, lock Alun Wyn Jones and fullback Leigh Halfpenny."In fairness to the guys, they’ve trained the house down.

They deserve their spots, then there’s some youngsters who will benefit."One of those youngsters is centre Mason Grady, who earns a first cap alongside fellow rookie Joe Hawkins in the midfield."We’ve been impressed by him (Grady).

He’s young and quick, brings some physicality. His biggest work-on is being more vocal, but he’s got some fantastic attributes.

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W hatever else is wrong with Welsh rugby, they’ve never lacked heart. You could hear it in Katherine Jenkins’ singing, which must have shattered windows in Aberystwyth, and feel it in the heat of the fireworks that spiralled into the bright blue sky beyond the open roof. For all their failings, the Welsh Rugby Union still know how to organise a show at the Principality Stadium. And you could see what it all meant, too, in the faces of those two old friends and teammates, Alun Wyn Jones, 37, and Ken Owens, 36, as they roared the final words of the anthem, their arms wrapped tight around each other’s shoulders.

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