Gatland’s Glass Half Full
Warren Gatland has always had an ability to turn water into wine at this time of year and this season he will need that talent more than ever.
The Wales coach is due to name his Wales squad for the Six Nations on Tuesday and it comes after another testing weekend for the Welsh regions – both on the pitch and in the treatment room.
Chief among his injury worries at present is Taulupe Faletau, who has not played since breaking a bone in his arm during last year’s World Cup.
Also not playing at present are Jac Morgan, Taine Plumtree, Chris Tshiunza, Morgan Morris, Rhys Davies and Callum Sheedy.
Added to that are fresh injury problems picked up at the weekend for Dewi Lake and Sam Costelow, plus a likely lengthy suspension coming the way of Johhny Williams following his red card for a dangerous tackle, playing for the Scarlets.
Lake’s hamstring injury was suffered early on in the Ospreys’ win over Perpignan on Friday night – the only victory among the four Welsh sides and achieved in the European Challenge Cup.
It means Gatland could find himself needing to pick a new captain after both Lake and Morgan shared the job during the World Cup in France.
If Lake is unavailable – at least for the opening match against Scotland – then the most likely choice to replace him as skipper will be his Ospreys clubmate, Adam Beard.
Gatland has got used in the past to making the most of meagre resources, particularly after the Welsh regions have been exposed in European competition in the weeks leading into the Six Nations.
Cardiff crushed
But this season will be a big test of his coaching abilities as the problems were spelled out by Cardiff coach Matt Sherratt after his side had been hammered 54-14 at home to Harlequins in the Investec Champions Cup.
“We weren’t in the Champions Cup to win it,” said Sherratt.
“We qualified in the last game of the season as the bottom seeds and then had the equivalent of Real Madrid, Manchester City and Barcelona in our group,” said Sherratt.
“We’re playing against well-established clubs, not just with bigger budgets, but clubs that have spent years developing their squad, academies, staff, and the result of that is what you see now.
“We’re at the start of that process, but it’s in its infancy and it’s going to take time and if people are sat waiting for a quick fix, there isn’t one.
“We are going to have more nights like this and I’d be depressed if we didn’t know what the club was doing, but there’s a plan to develop youngsters, grow the facilities and the club.”
Two other Welsh regions also suffered defeat on a weekend when only the Ospreys were successful.
Dragons denied
Cai Evans kicked the Dragons into a 12-point lead in Parma but the Welsh region was unable to build on their advantage before falling to a 20-17 defeat to Zebre in the EPCR Challenge Cup.
It means their chances of qualifying for the Round of 16 will depend on their Round 4 performance against another URC side, the Sharks back at Rodney Parade.
Head coach Dai Flanagan said: “Next week is massive. We’ve won our last three at home but now we have the Sharks coming to town, with some World Cup winners, so it’s a great opportunity to improve in front of our fans.”
Scarlets suffer
The Scarlets’ thin hopes of making the Round of 16 in the EOPCR Challenge Cup were hit for six as Clermont Auvergne ran in half-a-dozen tries in their 38-17 home win.
To make matters worse for the visitors they had Wales centre Williams sent off in a third successive defeat for the Welsh region. It means they cannot qualify from their Pool with one more game to play.
Scarlets coach Dwayne Peel said: “It’s about having the guts to play and live up to what this club is all about.
“Injuries have plagued our season but we have one more game before everyone can take a break from rugby and get their bodies right because there’s plenty left in the URC.”