WALES HEAD COACH Warren Gatland basked in the glow of getting the better of England’s Eddie Jones for the first time in the Six Nations, lauding his “pretty special group” of players after their 21-13 win in Cardiff on Saturday.
The 55-year-old New Zealander’s side remain on course for the Grand Slam – which would be the third during his tenure – after dashing England’s hopes with a national record 12th successive win, and are the only team left in the competition capable of winning all five of their matches.
“It is nice and pretty special,” Gatland told the BBC.
“We created lots of problems for ourselves in the first-half but we were much better in the second.
“All that pain and hard work last week [in training] paid dividends, in the second half tactically we were really good.
Wales’ Josh Adams catches the ball and goes on to score his side’s winning try. Source: Paul Harding
Second-half tries by Cory Hill and Josh Adams saw the hosts storm back from a 10-3 half-time deficit and get the better of Jones for the first time in four Six Nations clashes.
Gatland will step down after this year’s World Cup in Japan and there was a knowing smile on his face when asked if his team could provide a fairytale finish to his reign.
Small Margins
Jones was philosophical in the immediate aftermath of the defeat.
“It was one of those nip and tuck games decided by small margins,” the 59-year-old Australian told the BBC.