logo
EXCLUSIVE Dwayne Peel reflects on 20 years since battling the All Blacks with the British & Irish Lions - and reveals why coaching in Welsh rugby is his toughest task yet

EXCLUSIVE Dwayne Peel reflects on 20 years since battling the All Blacks with the British & Irish Lions - and reveals why coaching in Welsh rugby is his toughest task yet

Daily Mail​26-06-2025
It has been 20 years since Dwayne Peel took on the toughest challenge of his career as a player, battling the All Blacks with the British & Irish Lions.
'Blimey, has it been that long?' Peel asks, his mind wandering back to facing the likes of New Zealand superstars Dan Carter and Tana Umaga. 'That makes me feel a bit old.'
Two decades on from starting all three Tests in a 3-0 series defeat in the southern hemisphere, Peel is now in the midst of the hardest job he's had since moving into coaching. As the man in charge of Welsh side Scarlets, he is bidding for success against a backdrop of financial cuts and political wrangling.
The off-field uncertainty is such that currently, the Llanelli-based side does not have complete certainty over their long-term future.
'I don't think anybody's had assurances,' Peel adds matter-of-factly.
Welcome to the madcap world of the game in Wales.
Peel says the job is the hardest he's had in coaching after previous stints with Bristol and Ulster
Peel is working through the carnage and his team punched above their weight in the campaign just finished.
The Scarlets ran eventual United Rugby Championship winners Leinster close in their quarter-final clash in Dublin and secured qualification for next season's Investec Champions Cup, the draw for which will be made on July 1.
These achievements might not seem worthy of champagne popping. But they must also be analysed with the current state of the broader Welsh rugby ecosystem in mind. In Peel's own words, Wales' four domestic sides have 'undoubtedly' been hamstrung by the multitude of problems the game in the country is facing.
'It's been difficult to manage,' the decorated former scrum-half says. 'That's the reality of where we are with what's going on off the field and finances getting cut.
'I don't need to spell out what's happened. It's made things tough. But you have to work in the parameters you have and make the best of them.
'We competed hard this season with a young squad, most of whom have come through our system. There's a lot to be proud of. If you look at the end of the URC, Leinster ran away with games. But even to the last minute of ours with them, I thought we were right in it.
'We've laid a good foundation. Now, our challenge is to build on that.'
Wales' four domestic sides operated off playing budgets of just £4.5million in 2024/25 due to financial problems.
All four teams – Dragons, Cardiff, Ospreys and Peel's Scarlets – have had to cut the size of their squads as a result. For contrast, while Leinster's annual squad spend is undisclosed, it is thought to be near to £15m. To that end, when they took on the Irish giants in Dublin, Peel was essentially bringing a knife to a gun fight.
But his young Scarlets still caused some damage, albeit in a narrow defeat.
'We wanted to strive for the play-offs so to do that and get Champions Cup off the back of that was fantastic,' Peel says. 'The pedigree of this club has been built on the European Cup since its inception. We haven't played Champions Cup rugby for a good few years now, so that's something to look forward to.
'We've lost a lot of world-class Lions experience and a lot of leadership, but that's led us to rapidly bringing through a lot of exciting, young talent over the past season and they have been brilliant for us. It's been well-documented playing budgets have gone down. Last year was painful because we were really in transition.
'We had to do it. But the key was to get through that and build. We've got some quality young players, particularly in the back-line. The foundation has taken a long time to bed in here, but I think we're at a point where we've got that now.
'The Champions Cup will be another level up. It's the next challenge. As much as that brings excitement, we've got a small squad. That does put stress on the group.
'I've got some concerns around that in terms of player numbers but we've left the club at the end of this season in a better position than when we started.'
There is never a dull moment in Welsh rugby.
And as things stand, both the Ospreys and Scarlets are in a standoff with the country's governing body – the Welsh Rugby Union.
The two west Wales regions opted not to sign up to the WRU's new Professional Rugby Agreement. They did so, they say, because of a lack of clarity on how the four clubs would be funded fairly and equitably going forward, following the WRU's takeover of Cardiff, which they felt could lead to the capital club being favoured.
But the reality of that outcome is that the money Peel has to play with moving forward could be even less.
The WRU is actively exploring the possibility of cutting its number of professional teams from four to three or perhaps even two. No-one, as Peel points out, can currently be sure of their position. It makes running a rugby team close to impossible.
Welsh rugby's problems have been shown by the current 17-Test winless run of their senior men's side. The WRU remain on the lookout for a new head coach too.
And yet the Scarlets have still shown promise. In the likes of Blair Murray and Tom Rogers, they have talented young players. Centre Macs Page is one to watch out for too and looks likely to win his first Wales cap in Japan in the weeks to come.
'We've done a good job of making it about the rugby and not worrying about what's going on above us,' Peel says. 'We've got 150 years of history here and produced some great teams. We have to represent that history as best we can. If you look at our metrics in terms of number of international players and where we finished the season, I feel we're in a good position. The club means so much to the whole of west Wales.
'In the next couple of seasons in Welsh rugby, the academies are going to be extremely important. We've had the likes of Tom and Macs come through and play very well.
'They're the future of the club and we've got to keep bringing those players through. There is a romantic side to this for me in terms of understanding what we represent.
'I came through the door here at 15. I played for 10 seasons. I grew up as a supporter and I've been so all my life. At some point, that has to provide an extra layer of drive.'
Peel has Scarlets blood running through his veins. He had a brilliant playing career – the fact he was such a key man for the Lions in 2005 reflective of his talent.
Playing at that level showed Peel rugby's elite. It is at that highest level that he hopes soon the Scarlets and Wales will return to. 'It was a dream of mine to play for the Lions,' he says. 'It was a tough tour on the playing side, but what an experience. We came up against a bloody good All Blacks team who were almost untouchable in the Tests.
'People look back on 2005 now and talk a lot about Sir Clive Woodward and Alastair Campbell. Clive was always innovating. That tour was very different to what I was used to with Wales. It was far bigger. For example, with Wales at the time we weren't used to having a chef travelling with us. Ultimately, it was about the rugby and we were well beaten. Alastair couldn't go out there and pass or kick for us.'
Peel was a television pundit for the 2025 Lions' tour-opening defeat by Argentina in Dublin but expects Andy Farrell's side to have success in Australia.
He pinpoints the pace of three outstanding No 9's in Jamison Gibson-Park, Alex Mitchell and Tomos Williams as key to the Lions game plan.
But Peel's focus is already turning to next season, once a family holiday and clearing out the family's garden pond have been taken care of.
'From an international point of view, the structure in Wales has to be right for the game to flourish,' he says. 'We need to find a DNA as our national sport.
'When I look at other sports in Wales, like the football team, I think they've got an identity behind them and a feelgood factor about who they represent. That can be a big driver. There is good talent in Wales.
'We always produce good rugby players. The next Wales coach will have an opportunity to bring those players through. The regions have a role to play in that.
'I do get frustrated at what is happening. But I do see positivity and there is an opportunity to get things right. We're a proud country. Over the last 20 or so years, Wales has been a successful rugby nation.
'We're on a bit of a blip currently, but we need to keep striving to get back to where we belong. A high-speed tempo suits Welsh rugby and always has.
'Wales were in a quarter-final of a World Cup three years ago. Sometimes, you have to go through bad periods. As a proud Welshman, I'm sad when Wales lose.
'But I don't think we're at a dead loss from any perspective. There is opportunity out there, we just have to get it right.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Power Maxed owner vows to rebuild racing car firm destroyed by fire
Power Maxed owner vows to rebuild racing car firm destroyed by fire

BBC News

time16 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Power Maxed owner vows to rebuild racing car firm destroyed by fire

The boss of a motorsport team has vowed to "fight and rebuild" after its base was destroyed by a wildfire that swept through fields in rural and other equipment belonging to Power Maxed Racing and parent company Automotive Brands were wiped out in the blaze near Bretforton on Adam Weaver described how he watched 20 years of his working life "pretty much burn to nothing within 20 minutes".He said the race team base was destroyed, alongside the manufacturing and stock warehouse, adding that the heat was so intense it melted gearbox casings and reduced engines to molten metal. Mr Weaver said he got calls on Saturday to say there was a wildfire close to the warehouse, but when he got there he saw that the building itself was on fire. Power Maxed Racing competes in the British Touring Car Championship and Mr Weaver said the fire came days before a race at told BBC Hereford & Worcester that he had since been offered the loan of two cars and they had been prepared in just three days, adding that the weekend's race offered the team "something positive to focus on"."Anybody that's struggling with anything in their life right now whether it's personal, whether it's work, it just shows that you get the right people around you and look what can happen," he said."It's going to be an emotional moment seeing those cars go out." Mr Weaver, who posted a video on social media on the day of the fire, said the site now had burnt-out containers where doors had popped open, twisted and contorted from the said concrete slabs had been reduced to gravel, adding: "There's just a tremendous amount of destruction - warehouses completely melted and twisted and fallen down, no sign of the products that were actually inside."You'd almost think the shelves were empty. The racking's all twisted and bent with nothing on it. It's horrible to see."He said the fire damaged a "massive amount of touring car history" and Power Maxed Racing touring cars had gone as well as trophies. The businessman who has appealed for support said: "Our factory may be gone, but our spirit is very much alive." Follow BBC Hereford & Worcester on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.

Eddie Howe's friends run Liverpool and that is why Alexander Isak saga is personal
Eddie Howe's friends run Liverpool and that is why Alexander Isak saga is personal

Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Telegraph

Eddie Howe's friends run Liverpool and that is why Alexander Isak saga is personal

As unlikely as it may seem, the relationships at the heart of the transfer saga that has dominated the summer can be traced all the way back to Portsmouth in the early 2000s, when Alexander Isak was just a toddler. The friendship forged between Newcastle United manager Eddie Howe, Fenway Sports Group's chief executive of football Michael Edwards, who effectively runs Liverpool, and the club's sporting director Richard Hughes, may go back two decades, but it appears to have been put under severe strain over Isak's future. More on that later, but let us first rewind to December 2008. A friendship forms There is a photograph taken at Portsmouth's training ground in which shows a smiling Sean Davis driving a Reliant Robin that has been modified in the livery of the popular 1980s TV show The A-Team. In the background are a bunch of his laughing team-mates at the then Premier League club including Peter Crouch, Nwankwo Kanu and Hermann Hreidarsson. The latter once drove the same vehicle around the car park with the horn changed to a chicken sound. To the left of the photo, also grinning is then Portsmouth midfielder Hughes. At the time it was reported that the stunt – which included having to modify and drive the car, hence the Mr T-inspired theme – was the forfeit for being the worst in training. That was not an unusual jape at a football club and upped the ante from having to wear the 'yellow jersey of shame' for a week. But at Portsmouth it had nothing to do with training. What was unusual is that it was the booby prize for who finished bottom of a predictor league for Champions League matches in a contest organised by 'Prozone Eddie', as he was known at the club. That was Edwards, who is still known by the nickname 'Eddie', although the 'Prozone' bit has long been dropped. Edwards is now one of the most powerful executives in football as the person who effectively runs the Premier League champions. He has clearly moved on to bigger and better things than being regarded merely as the stats geek, a young guy in the background, who initially became popular because of the game. Also involved at Portsmouth was David Woodfine, who would succeed Edwards as the club's head of performance analysis, when he left to join Tottenham Hotspur, and who eventually organised for the Reliant Robin to be sold off to charity when the predictor game came to an end. The careers of Edwards, Hughes and Woodfine have been intertwined ever since, with all three now extremely important at Liverpool. Edwards returned in March last year having previously been the club's sporting director and immediately recruited Hughes from Bournemouth into that role. A year after he left, Woodfine was also persuaded by Edwards to go back to Liverpool, within weeks of he himself returning, as assistant sporting director and No 2 to Hughes, who was serving his notice at Bournemouth. During his time in between leaving Liverpool in 2022 and going back, and after a year off, Edwards worked as a consultant at Ludonautics – a sports advisory business set up by Liverpool's former director of research Ian Graham – and recommended Hughes to several leading clubs. They did not act but he did on his return, declaring he 'trusted him completely'. To add to the extraordinary Portsmouth link, Hughes also hired Mark Burchill, who was Bournemouth's chief scout. He was also a former team-mate and friend going back to the Portsmouth days – and, like Hughes, a Scot. But there is also another, significant character in this story: Howe. The Newcastle manager and former defender is not in the photograph because he had long left Portsmouth by then with his two years at the club – from 2002-04 – plagued by injury after he was one of Harry Redknapp's first signings along with Hughes and the Bulgarian striker Svetoslav Todorov. Edwards joined Portsmouth the year after, sent there by Prozone, then a pioneering data analysis company, as the stats business started to take off. Partly because he was out injured and had time, Howe was one of the first to take interest in Edwards's work – which included analysing performances and looking at the opposition – and would spend hours in the analysts' first-floor office at the Wellington Sports Ground where Portsmouth trained. Hughes was also drawn there. Some of the younger players at Portsmouth had that thirst for knowledge and Edwards was at the vanguard of a new approach and players would often go and see what he was doing on a Monday, after the weekend's match. Soon they were also going the day before games. It helped that Edwards was young, too – the trio are all roughly the same age, now in their mid-forties– and had played football to a good level, although he was released by Peterborough United without making a first-team appearance. It meant Edwards, who has a sharp tongue and good sense of humour, could speak their language, knew the game from a player's point of view and also did not hold back on his opinions when it came to the 'banter'. He was confident, even if he was regarded with suspicion by some of the older staff – although not assistant manager Jim Smith and first-team coach Joe Jordan – at Portsmouth and by Redknapp himself before he became a convert. It is a long-lasting friendship, between Howe and Hughes in particular, with the pair having even lived together with another former player Warren Cummings (and another Scot), who was on loan from Chelsea, when they were all teenagers making their way at Bournemouth. Howe and Hughes ended up playing 102 times together for the club. Howe joined Portsmouth in March 2002 for a club-record £400,000, with Hughes following that summer for a more modest £72,000. Indeed there was a point when it looked like Hughes and Howe would also be following each other to another club and both be sold together, as a package, to Wigan Athletic, who were then on the up and managed by Paul Jewell. No room for sentiment as Isak tug-of-war unfolds But it is a friendship now under strain thanks to the Isak transfer saga. When news first broke it was assumed that the friendship would mean that it would all be conducted cordially and that those in charge of Liverpool – Edwards and Hughes – would try to work with Newcastle. It was even claimed that they would try to keep the deal confidential until Newcastle had signed the two replacement forwards they needed – and still need – if Isak goes. But that never happened and was indeed blown out of the water when Liverpool gazumped Newcastle's move for Eintracht Frankfurt forward Hugo Ekitike in a deal worth up to £79m. Suddenly everything was being played out in public. Hughes also knows how it feels to be on the other end. When he was at Bournemouth he identified Andy Robertson, Harvey Elliott and Joe Gomez as potential signings and lost out to Liverpool each time. He even tried for Virgil van Dijk before he signed for Southampton. But it was still suggested the Howe-Hughes relationship might help smooth the Isak deal over. They worked so long and successfully as manager and sporting director for eight years at Bournemouth, partly on the back of Howe's recommendation after he persuaded Hughes not to concentrate on becoming a TV pundit and running a restaurant he co-owned with his brother. Instead it has become increasingly fraught and acrimonious and as much as sources want to blame Isak and, in particular, his agent Vlado Lemic with how messy it has become, he has hardly acted alone to try to force the move. Liverpool maintain they have acted appropriately and there was even a briefing that their only bid so far – the £110m that was rejected by Newcastle, who value Isak at £150m – would not be followed up. But no one believes that and while an exasperated Howe has remained diplomatic, he has said that Newcastle 'try and do things the right way'. That felt pointed. It is understood that Howe is disappointed with Liverpool's behaviour, and not least because of his relationship with Hughes, and to a lesser extent Edwards, and those relationships have inevitably become tense. All three could be at Liverpool If true then it is a shame and not least because, had things fallen differently, and such is their admiration for each other, then the trio could all be working at the same club together again – 22 years after Portsmouth. Howe was on the three-strong shortlist with Jürgen Klopp and Carlo Ancelotti to replace Brendan Rodgers when Liverpool considered making a change in the summer of 2015, before sacking him in October. That was despite the fact that Howe, at that time, had not yet managed in the Premier League, having only just gained promotion with Bournemouth, who he took through the divisions. But that is how highly regarded he was by Edwards, who was instrumental in the search which ended with Klopp agreeing to join. It was not the only time Howe was on the radar with Edwards, aided by Hughes, leading the managerial search again last summer when Klopp left and Arne Slot was hired. Once more, Howe was on the shortlist, scoring highly in Liverpool's analysis. He has an undoubted ability to improve players and Isak, perhaps, is the finest example. Conversely it is believed Howe was keen to take Hughes with him to Celtic in 2021, before he pulled out of that move because the club would not give him the staff that he wanted. Howe is indisputably the most highly rated British manager at present and, as their interest over such a long period of time shows, is much admired by Edwards and Hughes, who have a strong track record of being good judges. To this point it has been mutual. But this is football at the highest level and competition trumps everything, it seems. Even so Hughes, in particular, is regarded as the kind of character who, while extremely professional and good at his job, would not enjoy the cut-throat element of it. Indeed Hughes, who was so amenable as a player that he had a column in the local newspaper, the Portsmouth News, called 'Look Hughes Talking', even lost the tip of the third finger on his right hand when he was a player after the door he was courteously trying not to slam shut swung back in a gust of wind at the training ground and sliced it off. Traumatised Hughes walked back into the treatment room, ignoring Burchill who greeted him, and told the physio Gary Sadler what had happened. Despite going to hospital, they could not sew the finger back on. In saying that Hughes can be ruthless. A cultured midfielder he reinvented himself under Redknapp as being far more combative so that he could get into the team. It was a sign of Hughes's intelligence that he realised that. He even boasted that one of his career highlights was provoking Cristiano Ronaldo into butting him in a league game against Manchester United in 2007 – therefore evening the teams up a 10 men each after Sulley Muntari had been sent off two minutes earlier – which ended in a 1-1 draw.

Decision due on Oxford United new stadium plans
Decision due on Oxford United new stadium plans

BBC News

timean hour ago

  • BBC News

Decision due on Oxford United new stadium plans

Council planners are due to make a decision on Oxford United's proposed new District Council's planning committee is set to meet at 16:00 BST to discuss plans for a new purpose-built 16,000-seater ground on land known as the Triangle, near football club has warned that if the proposals are not approved by the local authority then it would have no home stadium after June five-hectare (12-acre) site is located south of Kidlington roundabout, west of Banbury Road, east of Frieze Way and near Oxford Parkway Station. The club currently play at the Kassam Stadium and its owner, Firoka Group, has agreed the U's can play there for two more seasons. There will be an option to extend the deal for another year, which will be conditional on planning permission for the club's proposed new stadium being parties have said that no further extensions or new lease agreements for the Kassam will be possible. The council received about 4,900 responses from the public about the application and its planning report contained details of objections from local U's new complex could include a 180-bed hotel, restaurant, conference centre and community were concerns that the proposed stadium would be built near ancient woodland but Natural England concluded that would not be the the council backs the application then it will be referred to the Secretary of State, which is a standard procedure for such large-scale applications. You can follow BBC Oxfordshire on Facebook, X, or Instagram.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store