Les Kiss to be named Wallabies coach
Kiss helped Ireland win a Six Nations title in 2009 (and the first Grand Slam in 61 years) and again with Schmidt in 2014-15. Kiss also went to two World Cups, and in 2011 helped derailed the Wallabies tournament with an upset win, in no small part due to a masterful tactic he created: the choke-tackle.
Kiss always held an aspiration to become a head coach in rugby, however, and after a successful interim stint coaching Ireland between the Kidney and Schmidt eras, the Australian was appointed as director of rugby at Irish province Ulster.
After three years in Belfast, Kiss moved to England and became head coach of London Irish, where he continued to coach against the best teams in Europe until the club went belly-up in 2023.
The Queensland job became vacant at the same time, leading Kiss to make a return home.
Kiss had amply proved his coaching credentials at the Reds, finishing fifth last year and having the team well-positioned in fourth spot this season.
'I played rugby league as a kid but I am 25 years now in rugby, and that's far longer than I ever played or coached at the highest level in league,' Kiss said last year.
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'The league got me here and I love the game still, but I am fortunate to have a history and a life in both. There has definitely been a lot of water under the bridge, between leaving and coming back here.'
'I guess I was hungry to make sure I made it in union. It was a project for me. It was a personal drive and ambition to make sure I nail this down.
'My journey, you always felt like you had to earn your stripes, as a leaguie. Coming into union, I was very diligent. I researched the game and I became a student of the game. I was patient and I knew I had, not so much to learn, but I knew I had to gain the experiences I needed.'
Former Wallabies coach Eddie Jones endorsed Kiss as a Test calibre coach last week.
'He's done a great apprenticeship,' Jones said.
'He coached in Ulster, did great job at London Irish, and had a number of good mentors around him. He seems to have done a pretty good job at the Reds, so it's a good opportunity for him. He's definitely done a lot of good hard work, so I hope it goes well for him.'
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The opening 40 minutes on Friday night was a pure rugby league clinic as the home side rocketed to a 28-2 halftime lead at Suncorp Stadium. The second half was just as good. The forwards and backs were punishing in defence, halves Kodi Nikorima and Katoa combined in a masterclass and to a man the Dolphins played scintillating attacking rugby league. The diabolical Dragons simply had no answer. "It just wasn't up to standard," Dragons coach Shane Flanagan said. The Dolphins had their previous biggest winning margin over St George Illawarra in a 38-0 victory last year but this record breaker was another level, surpassing the 44 points they had notched on two previous occasions. When second-rower Connelly Lemuelu stormed over for his second try four minutes after the break Nikorima and Katoa had two try assists each. Fullback Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow then put the nail in the Dragons' coffin for a runaway try in combination with centre Jake Averillo, who was brilliant with three try assists. 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