
Steve Tandy backed to get Wales competing with top nations again
Cardiff coach Matt Sherratt has been in interim charge since and oversaw the end of Wales' 18-game losing streak – a record for a Tier One nation – in Japan earlier this month with a second Test victory over the Brave Blossoms.
But Wales have turned to 45-year-old Tandy, who previously coached at Ospreys and Australian Super Rugby side Waratahs, to arrest a slide that has seen them finish bottom of the last two Six Nations Championships and plummet down the world rankings to 12th.
🚨 𝘾𝙧𝙤𝙚𝙨𝙤 𝙎𝙩𝙚𝙫𝙚 𝙏𝙖𝙣𝙙𝙮 🏴
The WRU is delighted to announce the appointment of Steve Tandy as the new Head Coach of the men's senior national side. 🤝#CymruAmByth
— Welsh Rugby Union 🏴 (@WelshRugbyUnion) July 21, 2025
'Steve is an outstanding coach,' said Welsh Rugby Union director of rugby Dave Reddin, who revealed the interview process had initially mapped out around 130 coaches worldwide before being filtered down.
'I think his coaching journey shows someone that has been unafraid to really push himself into some uncomfortable experiences and really challenge the way that he was operating as a coach and develop as a result.
'As a proud Welshman it's the job he's wanted to move for. I know he'll be very missed by Scotland, he was a valued member of staff there and I'm delighted we've managed to secure his services.
'Are Wales going to be consistently ranked as the number one team in the world for the next 10 years? No, I don't think so.
'But can we be a real, genuine, top five nation who are constantly competing for Six Nations titles, who are capable of mixing it with the best in the world? 100 per cent.
'Otherwise, I wouldn't be here. I don't think anybody gets inspired by a team that says, 'well, we're going to rock up and do our best'.
'Especially a passionate rugby nation like Wales, I think we've got to be more ambitious than that.'
Tandy, from Tonmawr between Neath and Port Talbot, becomes the first Welsh head coach of the men's national team since Gareth Jenkins nearly two decades ago.
New Zealanders Gatland and Wayne Pivac have held the reins on a permanent basis since 2007 – and Reddin believes Tandy's background is a 'bonus'.
He said: 'It will make a difference in how he's perceived – positive and negative. I'm conscious as a proud Welshman he's going to feel the responsibility of that.
🏴 Hear from Director of Rugby & Elite Performance Dave Reddin on today's appointment of Steve Tandy as the new Wales Head Coach 🤝👇 #CymruAmByth pic.twitter.com/ywLUkN5516
— Welsh Rugby Union 🏴 (@WelshRugbyUnion) July 21, 2025
'That wasn't part of the decision making process. It's a bonus that he's Welsh and I hope everyone will be kind to him because of that.
'On the surface it's great to have someone who has a natural affinity with their country. Ultimately that only goes so far, as it's about performances and the philosophy matching the expectations of the national public and what they want to see from their rugby team.
'They are the things that matter most and the Welsh side of things come after that.
'But if you looked at something that was ideal, to find the best coach and that they are Welsh, that's a perfect answer.'
Tandy begins his tenure on September 1 and is set to lead Wales into the 2027 World Cup in Australia.
Reddin said Tandy's backroom team would be finalised over the coming weeks and has not ruled retaining some current staff members.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Wales Online
2 hours ago
- Wales Online
What the 2029 Lions team could look like as Louis Rees-Zammit joins Jac Morgan
What the 2029 Lions team could look like as Louis Rees-Zammit joins Jac Morgan With the 2025 series now done and dusted, attention is already turning to the tour of New Zealand in four years time Morgan and Rees-Zammit could both feature for the Lions in 2029 (Image: Adam Pretty - World Rugby/World Rugby via Getty Images) The 2025 British & Irish Lions tour is done and dusted, with Andy Farrell's squad heading home from Australia as series winners. It wasn't always easy, with only a last-gasp Hugo Keenan try in the second Test separating them from a series defeat in the end, but Farrell's men still managed to win all but one of their games Down Under, becoming the first triumphant touring side since 2013. However, while the action has only just come to an end, focus is already switching to the next tour in four years' time. The scheduled 2029 tour will see the Lions head back to New Zealand, where they tied the series with the All Blacks on their last visit back in 2017. Sign up to Inside Welsh rugby on Substack to get exclusive news stories and insight from behind the scenes in Welsh rugby. Just days after the third and final Test of this year's tour in Brisbane, there is already debate over who will be involved next time around. Head coach Farrell has received backing to lead the squad again in 2029, but what about the players? Many of this year's tourists will be out of contention by the time the next tour comes around, while there is also likely to be some currently-unknown talents who will put themselves in the mix over the next four years. That said, we've had a go at predicting what the Lions team may look like come 2029, with Jac Morgan no longer the only Welsh player involved. Article continues below Of course, four years is a very long time in rugby, so this could well end up being completely wrong. However, on the off-chance that I could look like a genius, let's take a look into the crystal ball. Back three: Two past tourists and one debutant in this pacey back-three, with Kinghorn making it on to successive tours and Rees-Zammit making a return to a Lions squad eight years on from being a bolter for the 2021 tour of South Africa. Scotland star Kinghorn is a class act who added dynamism to the Lions attack Down Under, proving a threat with his pace, aerial ability and impressive boot. While he will be 32 by the time the next tour rolls around, the versatile Toulouse back has improved with age and if he can continue to follow that trajectory, he will be hard to shift from the starting side. Rees-Zammit's inclusion here may well raise a few eyebrows given his 18-month break from rugby to try to crack the NFL. But the Welshman has now announced his return and there are very few players in world rugby that can match him for athletic ability and star factor. Four years - by which time he'll be 28 - is more than enough time for him to work his way into contention for a Lions starting spot. Last year, it looked as though Cardiff-born Feyi-Waboso was destined to make it into Andy Farrell's squad for this summer's tour, but a lengthy layoff with a shoulder injury scuppered his chances. However, if he can stay injury-free, his outstanding pace and power should make him another potential starter. There are plenty of honourable mentions to be made here, however, with the likes of Mack Hansen, Freddie Steward and Henry Arundell among the names that will also be pushing to be involved. From a Welsh perspective, Blair Murray and Tom Rogers could well be in a position to challenge for a place four years down the line too. Centres: Tommy Freeman, Sione Tuipulotu While has played most of his rugby to date on the wing, Freeman admits that a more permanent transition to centre "is on the cards" for England and he will have likely become assured in the position at Test level by 2029. With impressive athleticism and a powerful carry, he is a formidable attacking option on his day and should be at his peak when the tour of New Zealand comes around. There may well be a few more question marks over Tuipulotu's involvement, but the Scotland star - who will be 32 in 2029 - is an explosive carrier with strong footwork and distribution skills and, at the moment at least, is the best option that the Lions have going into the next tour. Of course, though, four years is an awful long time in rugby and some new stars may well force their way into the conversation before the next tour. In Wales, it is hoped that the highly-rated 20-year-old Macs Page will light up the international stage in the coming years, while Mason Grady will also be entering his peak if he can stay injury-free. England's Ollie Lawrence is also very unlucky not to get the nod here, while Scotland's Tom Jordan and Ireland's Jamie Osborne are also contenders. Meanwhile, Osborne's experienced international team-mate Garry Ringrose could well be picked for successive tours at the age of 34. Half-backs: Fin Smith, Ben White Northampton Saints star Smith went straight into the Lions starting XV for the warm-up against Argentina and he is the leading contender to take the No.10 jersey on the next tour. The Englishman has already proven himself to be an assured, reliable match-winner and this tour will have been invaluable to his development. Scotland scrum-half Ben White should also be at the top of his game by the time 2029 comes around, with the likes of Jamison Gibson-Park and Tomos Williams set to be either retired or reaching the tail-end of their careers. Marcus Smith, Sam Prendergast and Jack Crowley are all likely to be in the picture at fly-half, with the former - the more experienced of the Smiths - potentially aggrieved to not be starting. Meanwhile, England duo Alex Mitchell and Jack van Poortvliet are also set to be scrum-half candidates. Front row: Asher Opoku-Fordjour, Dan Sheehan, Will Stuart Into the forwards, and there is a degree of familiarity with Sheehan and Stuart both making the cut. Ireland hooker Sheehan was a real contender for the player of the tour this summer, and is currently one of the best in the world, combining the power of a forward with a pace of a back and scoring a bucketload of tries at the same time. He could even be a candidate for captain in four years' time. Stuart, meanwhile, had a quieter tour than the Irishman but got better as the summer went on. The Bath tighthead is now the cornerstone of England's scrum and, at 33, will be a highly-experienced Test veteran by the time of the New Zealand tour. At the other end of the front row, Opoku-Fordjour is set to be one of the youngest members of the next Lions tour, having already got a flavour for it at the age of 20 after being called in to train with Farrell's squad this summer. While he currently has a solitary cap for England, the Sale man has massive potential and is a powerful scrummager who can play at both loosehead and tighthead. Honourable mentions for the props go to 2025 tourists Ellis Genge and Andrew Porter, as well as the likes of Fin Baxter, Zander Fagerson and Afolabi Fasogbon. Wales star Dewi Lake is also expected to provide competition at hooker, while Theo Dan will also be in the mix. Second row: Maro Itoje, Joe McCarthy Not much change here as the lock combination for the opening Test against the Wallabies returns to the engine room four years later. Itoje led Farrell's men admirably Down Under and while, at 34, he will be reaching the tail end of his career by the time the New Zealand tour comes around, there are few better operators in world rugby and he will be an experienced, dependable presence at the heart of the pack. His absence in the second half of the final Test against the Wallabies was very noticeable. McCarthy, meanwhile, was one of the form players this summer, before a plantar fasciitis issue robbed him of further involvement in the second and third Tests. Boasting immense physicality, he will be 28 and at the peak of his powers in New Zealand, which should make him one of the first names on the teamsheet. However, England's Ollie Chessum will also fancy his chances of making successive tours, while Wales star Dafydd Jenkins has also been tipped to push for a Lions place in four years' time. By that time, highly-rated English teenager Junior Kpoku could also be an option. Back row: Henry Pollock, Jac Morgan, Caelan Doris (capt) Another familiar feel to the back row, with Pollock and Morgan both making the cut for a second tour. While he may have been the bolter for this year's tour, Pollock would be 24 in New Zealand and, if he can keep his remarkable trajectory going, could well be one of the best back row players in the world by that time. Morgan, meanwhile, did Wales proud this summer as the nation's only representative for much of the tour following Tomos Williams' early departure. While, hopefully, the Ospreys man will not be so outnumbered in four years' time, he will likely still be the standout Welsh talent at the Lions coach's disposal and should take the starting jersey that he missed out on during this year's Test series. Finally, while it will come four years later than he would have hoped, Doris should become a Test Lion, having missed this summer's tour due to a cruel injury blow just days before Farrell named his squad. The Irish talisman was the favourite to be named captain for the tour Down Under before that setback, but will be older (31) and wiser in four years' time and should have the honour bestowed on him then. Article continues below As for honourable mentions, Tom Curry was one of the standout performers of the 2025 tour, but whether his body will be able to sustain four more years of high-level rugby remains to be seen. Ben Earl will also be right in the mix for the 2029 tour, while the very highly-rated Morgan Morse could be an outside bet if he breaks on to the international stage with Wales. Potential Lions 2029 XV: 15. Blair Kinghorn; 14. Immanuel Feyi-Waboso, 13. Tommy Freeman, 12. Sione Tuipulotu, 11. Louis Rees-Zammit; 10. Fin Smith, 9. Ben White; 1. Asher Opoku-Fordjour, 2. Dan Sheehan, 3. Will Stuart; 4. Maro Itoje, 5. Joe McCarthy; 6. Henry Pollock, 7. Jac Morgan, 8. Caelan Doris (capt) (7 x England, 3 x Scotland, 3 x Ireland, 2 x Wales)


Daily Mirror
2 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Rio Ngumoha sends Arne Slot message he can't ignore as Liverpool wonderkid makes Kop impact
LIVERPOOL 4-1 ATHLETIC BILBAO: Rio Ngumoha was the star of the show as a second-string Reds side saw off their La Liga opponents in the first of two Anfield friendlies Mark is the Sports Features Editor for Mirror Online. Having started out at the Liverpool Echo he began working for the Mirror in London in 2016 following previous stints working for likes of the Premier League, Bleacher Report and several betting companies. After moving back to Liverpool in 2024 he specialises in Merseyside, Manchester and Welsh football, cricket and knowing for too many useless answers to trivia questions. Anfield was a little more sparse than usual as Liverpool's first friendly of the evening against Athletic Bilbao kicked off due to an earlier evacuation, but even amongst the reduced numbers there would have been those who didn't know who Rio Ngumoha was. If they got in in time, they do now. Just 81 seconds were on the clock when Ngumoha, who won't turn 17 until the end of this month, picked up the ball inside his own half and drove at the visiting defenders in much the same way he had against Yokohama F Marinos in Japan last week. Only this was at the Kop end. A touch of nerves for the teen as he bore down on goal then? Not a bit of it. Ngumoha opened his body up and caressed an effort into the far corner that a player twice his age his would be proud of. It was yet another example of why Arne Slot can't ignore the talents of the former Chelsea youngster when selecting his first-team squads this season. And you're starting to suspect he won't. Ngumoha's sole taste of first-team action in the last campaign came in an FA Cup third round tie against Accrington Stanley, but after scoring what is already his third goal of this pre-season then there are many calling for Slot to throw him into the meaningful matches soon and more often. The Reds have sold Luis Diaz after all, and so there is a vacancy on their left wing, and everyone has to start somewhere. Lamine Yamal recently turned 18 and has 106 games for Barcelona under his belt, and... well we should probably stop there shouldn't we. But while Liverpool are still determined to treat the young Ngumoha with kid gloves, but he is being treated like a first-team player. He was interviewed by club media in Japan, and notably now sports his first name on the back of his shirt rather than his surname - clearly something he felt emboldened enough to request. After his goal to get the Anfield crowd on their feet he was soon turning provider when he nodded down for Darwin Nunez to apply a simple finishing touch. In celebration the name Rio was bellowed down from the Kop and not Darwin. Ngumoha would remain pivotal to how Liverpool attacked, with his stepovers and rolling of the ball under his feet delighting the crowd until his 66th minute replacement to a standing ovation. The Reds were 4-0 up by that point thanks to further goals from Ben Doak and Harvey Elliott, eventually winning 4-1, but none of those strikes were as special as the opener nor the player who scored it. Join our new WhatsApp community and receive your daily dose of Mirror Football content. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice.
.jpeg%3Fwidth%3D1200%26auto%3Dwebp%26quality%3D75%26crop%3D3%3A2%2Csmart%26trim%3D&w=3840&q=100)

Scotsman
2 hours ago
- Scotsman
Hibs edge closer to Grant Hanley deal after 'significant' piece of transfer business
Scotland internationalist could replace Miller after deal with Blackburn Rovers Sign up to our Football newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Hibs are edging closer to the signing of Scotland centre-half Grant Hanley after confirming that fellow defender Lewis Miller has joined Blackburn Rovers for a 'significant fee'. Australian internationalist Miller was entering the final 12 months of his contract at Easter Road after an extension earlier this summer and was wanted by a clutch of English Championship sides. The Scotsman understands that Blackburn have paid in the region of £1 million for the 24-year-old, who can play as a right-back as well as a centre-half. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Miller's departure leaves a void in the Hibs squad and discussions are ongoing with experienced centre-half Grant Hanley. The 33-year-old has been capped 62 times by Scotland and remains part of Steve Clarke's current squad. Lewis Miller has packed his bags and left Hibs for Blackburn Rovers. | SNS Group Formerly of Blackburn, Newcastle, Norwich and Birmingham City, Hanley is now a free agent after being part of the Blues' League One title-winning squad and attended Hibs' 2-1 Europa League defeat by Midtjylland last week. On Miller's departure, Hibs head coach David Gray said: 'I'd like to start by thanking Millsy for all his efforts during his time with us. 'Since making the move to Scotland, he's been coachable, willing to learn, and has relentlessly worked on his game. He's certainly seen the rewards for that both at club level and internationally. We know he can go a long way and wish him all the best in England with Blackburn.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Hibs sporting director Malky Mackay added: 'We triggered Lewis Miller's contract extension back in April, knowing there was a lot of interest in him from the UK and abroad. It's been widely reported that we rejected bids for him earlier in the window and have worked hard to get a fee that reflects his true value.