Tandy pleased dispute resolved before Fiji opener

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Tandy pleased dispute resolved before Fiji opener

Wales head coach Steve Tandy is in his third campaign in chargeImage source, Huw Evans Picture Agency
ByGareth Griffiths

BBC Sport Wales
  • Published

Head coach Steve Tandy insists there will be no hangover from the latest pay dispute between Wales players and the Welsh Rugby Union (WRU).

Preparations for the Nations Championship have been disrupted by an issue for the squad with the WRU about match fees, that was resolved just three days before the Nations Championship opening fixture against Fiji on Saturday.

Talks were held between Welsh rugby’s governing body and the Welsh Rugby Players’ Association (WRPA), including Wales’ senior players, over “employment terms” with an agreement reached late on Wednesday afternoon.

Wales were due to have a press conference on Wednesday but the playing squad opted not to fulfil that appointment because of the dispute.

Tandy, who was not involved in discussions, stated no training sessions had been missed.

“In fairness, the players have been brilliant,” said Tandy.

“I’m grateful it is resolved and there’s no hangover from it.

“The preparation hasn’t been interrupted in terms of our training and how we’ve gone about it. We can get focused on the Fiji game.”

Was a players strike a possibility?

When asked whether there was the prospect of a strike and the Fiji match not being played, Tandy replied: “I just talk to the boys, it’s just about support.

“Lots of the negotiations, I’m not aware of.

“And the only thing that’s come out for me is that it’s been resolved, there’s been training as normal, the timings of the week have been great.

“The way the boys have been on the field and in the meetings has been impeccable.”

Tandy praised the senior players in how they had conducted themselves.

“People have gone through experiences, and nothing’s perfect,” added Tandy

“It’s how you deal with those things. There’s a group there that are connected, tight to each other, and I believe as a coaching staff as well we’re connected with them.

“They’re resilient and there’s lots of stuff that goes on. We will get there at some point where there’ll be a campaign where we just talk totally about rugby.”

Analysis

In February 2023, then Wales captain Ken Owens stood at the training base of the national team and stated Welsh rugby was a laughing stock and must not return to such days.

The scenario then was a much-wider pay dispute with the WRU, with players threatening to strike for the Six Nations game against England in Cardiff.

That situation was averted when a deal was struck before Owens and former director of rugby Nigel Walker infamously addressed the media in the gathering gloom.

Fast forward three and a half years and this most recent dispute was not nearly as dramatic and has also been resolved.

But you wonder if any lessons have been heeded as the issue was again sorted out just 72 hours before Wales were due to be running out in Cardiff, when the majority of this squad have been training together for a month.

The WRU again decided not to put up a senior figure like chief executive Abi Tierney or director of rugby Dave Reddin to discuss the issue. The governing body insist it was resolved and had been addressed in a statement.

This is Tandy’s third campaign in charge and it is the third occasion he has been left to field questions about off-the-field matters.

He was previously forced to address matters such as regions being cut and fears about players’ jobs.

The chaotic nature of Welsh rugby has again reared its head this week. Some would argue the chaos has never gone away.

The WRU had already missed a deadline this week in outlining a plan to reduce the amount of professional sides from four to three – something that was promised by the end of June.

The governing body is set to be without a permanent chair for the next few months as they look to replace Richard Collier-Keywood, already having an interim Professional Rugby Board (PRB) chair following the departure of Malcolm Wall.

The WRU will hope this controversy will not further alienate the weary Welsh rugby public.

Both national sides played in front of a pitiful crowd against the Barbarians last weekend at the 82,000 seater Allianz Stadium in south-west London.

No attendance was given but it could not have been much more than 15,000 with two of the three Twickenham tiers closed.

We await to see whether it will be a full house at the 33,000-capacity Cardiff City Stadium on Saturday against Fiji. If not, that alone would be an indictment on the state of Welsh rugby.

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