Northern Edition
Select Edition
Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

Warren Gatland reveals Taulupe Faletau injury return timeline

By PA
Wales' Taulupe Faletau during the pre match warm up ahead of his 100th cap for Wales during the Autumn International match between Wales and Australia at Principality Stadium on November 26, 2022 in Cardiff, Wales. (Photo by Ian Cook - CameraSport via Getty Images)

Wales are hoping No. 8 Taulupe Faletau will be fit for the Guinness Six Nations clash against Italy in Rome.

ADVERTISEMENT

Faletau had been widely expected to make his return after almost 16 months out of Test rugby in Friday’s opening Six Nations appointment with France.

But Wales head coach Warren Gatland says the 104-cap forward feels he is “not quite ready” for selection and made that call himself this week.

“He made the call on Tuesday to say he is not quite ready for selection,” Gatland said.

Fixture
Six Nations
France
43 - 0
Full-time
Wales
All Stats and Data

“He is still part of the squad and he will still come with us. We are hoping he will be right for Italy (on February 8).”

Faletau has not played at Test level since Wales’ last win – a 2023 World Cup pool victory over Georgia – after breaking his arm in that game, then suffering a fractured shoulder when he returned for Cardiff six months later.

Gatland has selected a starting back row in Paris of Aaron Wainwright at number eight alongside James Botham and captain Jac Morgan.

Asked if 34-year-old British and Irish Lion Faletau will be available for the tournament remainder, Gatland added: “That’s the plan.

ADVERTISEMENT

“He made the call and said, ‘I’ve got to put the team first’.

“His knee is a bit sore at the moment. He didn’t feel he would be 100 per cent for Friday, so he wanted some more time for Italy.”

Former England prop Henry Thomas will make his first Wales start on Friday. The ex-Sale and Bath tighthead has won four caps as a replacement since switching allegiance to Wales in 2023.

Thomas, whose father is from Swansea, was able to make the move under World Rugby regulations because his last England appearance had been more than three years earlier.

ADVERTISEMENT

Gatland has also handed a full Test bow to 23-year-old Cardiff hooker Evan Lloyd, who steps up, with Dewi Lake and Ryan Elias both injured, against a juggernaut French pack.

Full-back Liam Williams and wing Josh Adams – with 151 caps between them – also feature, while Saracens centre Nick Tompkins is recalled, partnering Owen Watkin in midfield.

Cardiff’s Ben Thomas fills the fly-half role, uncapped Ospreys number 10 Dan Edwards is on the bench and Exeter lock Dafydd Jenkins makes a first Wales appearance for almost 11 months after undergoing knee and shoulder operations.

There are only four survivors in the Wales starting line-up from the side beaten by South Africa last time out – Ben Thomas, Will Rowlands, Botham and Morgan.

Wales have been written off as a 20-1 chance against France, which reflects a record run of 12 successive Test defeats and the opposition’s strength, underlined by them beating New Zealand in November and teams like Toulouse and Bordeaux-Begles dominating this season’s Investec Champions Cup.

Related

Gatland added: “We’ve spoken about the fact that ironically there is probably more pressure and expectation on them (France).

“There is expectation from their fans. They expect their team to throw the ball around and score tries.

“From experience and my point of view, teams can try a bit too much early on and throw the ball around and that gives you opportunities.

“We haven’t spoken about the negativity. You try to create a little bit of your own siege mentality where you build that up in your own environment and you try and not take too much note of the stuff that’s going on outside.

“We want to go out there and play some good rugby. We want to go out there and do some things that potentially France aren’t going to expect us to do.

“We have talked about being really positive in terms of the way that we play against them, to see that there are opportunities to attack them as well.”

Related


To be first in line for Rugby World Cup 2027 Australia tickets, register your interest here 

ADVERTISEMENT
LIVE

{{item.title}}

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

0 Comments
Be the first to comment...

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Features

Comments on RugbyPass

I
IkeaBoy 51 minutes ago
How Leinster bullied the Bulls at Croke Park

Expert coaches exist across the land and the IRFU already funds plenty. Ulster own their academy and who owns Ulster?


If you go to school in the North and rugby/tag rugby isn’t even on the PE curriculum until 12/13 as opposed to 7 or 8 in Leinster, how is that the IRFU’s fault? Even then, it’s only certain schools in the North that will offer it. On what basis would they go up to the North (strictly speaking, another country in the eyes of some) and dictate their schools programme?


The ABs used to be light years ahead of the pack because their eventual test superstars had been playing structured, competitive rugby from an average age of 5/6! On top of kicking it around the yard from the age they could walk with their rugby mad parents and older siblings.


Have you somehow gotten the impression that the Leinster system is not working for Irish rugby? What is that based on? The SARU should just stop competing because despite their back to back RWC’s, all 4 of their URC teams aren’t contesting semi-finals every year?


A couple of mining towns basically provided a Welsh team in the 70’s that were unplayable. Queensland in the old Super 10 provided the spine of an Oz team that were the first to win multiple world cups and in the same decade. The ABs population density is well documented with 35% of the population living around one city.


Is England’s match day 23 equally represented by mid-counties players, tough as nails northerners, a couple from Cornwall, a pack of manc’s and a lone Geordie? Ever?

It’s cute they won’t relegate the Falcons but has a Geordie test player ever hit 50 caps?


It’s ok not to understand geography. It’s also ok not to understand sport. Not understanding the geography of sport is something different entirely.

265 Go to comments
f
fl 3 hours ago
Ex-Wallaby laughs off claims Bath are amongst the best in the world

I ultimately don’t care who the best club team in the world is, so yeah, lets agree to disagree on that.


I would appreciate clarity on a couple of things though:

Where did I contradict myself?

Saying “Trophies matter. They matter a lot. But so does winning games. So does making finals.” is entirely compatible with ranking a team as the best - over an extended period - when they have won more games and made more finals than other comparable teams. It would be contradictory for me to say “Trophies matter. They matter a lot. But so does winning games. So does making finals.” and then completely ignore Leinster record of winning games and making finals.


“You can get frustrated and say I am not reading what you write, but when you quote me, then your first line is to say thats true (what I wrote), but by the end of the paragraph have stated something different, thats where you contradict yourself.”

What you said (that I think trophies matter) is true, in that I said “Trophies matter. They matter a lot. But so does winning games. So does making finals.”. Do you understand that Leinster won more games and made more finals than any other (URC-based) team did under the period under consideration?


“Pointless comparison on Blackburn and Tottenham to this discussion as no-one includes them on a list of the best club. I would say that Blackburns title season was better than anything Tottenham have done in the Premier League. My reference to the league was that the team who finished second over two seasons are not better than the two other teams who did win the league each time. One of the best - of course, but not the best, which is relevant to my point here about Leinster, not comparing teams who won 30 years ago against a team that never won.”

I really don’t understand why you would think that this is irrelevant. You seem to be saying that winning trophies is the only thing that matters when assessing who is the best, but doesn’t matter at all when assessing who is 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, etc.


“What I referred to in my Leinster wouldn’t say the were the best is your post earlier where you said Leinster were the best overall. You said that in two separate posts. Seasons dont work like that, they are individual. Unless the same team keeps winning then you can say they were the best over a period of time and group them, but thats not the case here.”

Well then we’ve just been talking at cross purposes. In that my position (that Leinster were the best team overall in 2022-2024) was pretty clear, and you just decided to respond to a different point (whether Leinster were the best team individually in particular years) essentially making the entire discussion completely pointless. I guess if you think that trophies are the only thing that matters then it makes sense to see the season as an individual event that culminates in a trophy (or not), whereas because I believe that trophies matter a lot, but that so does winning matches and making finals, it makes it easier for me to consider quality over an extended period.

24 Go to comments
TRENDING
TRENDING Chiefs name 10 All Blacks in starting XV for Super Rugby Pacific final Chiefs name Super Rugby Pacific final team
Search