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EXCLUSIVE: Eddie Jones insists ‘no one’s jeering me in the street’

Everyone with an interest in Australian rugby and countless others within the sport at large want to know, definitively, what Eddie Jones’s plans are – and he is adamant that he is not moving on. Whether he is moved on is another matter, although his bosses have expressed their backing for now. But as the Wallabies tick along at their secluded base camp, doing weights in a marquee next to the hotel and waiting for Fiji to extinguish their faint hope of World Cup salvation, there was no escaping the elephant in the room – or, more accurately, on the brasserie terrace.

summer 2017Jones broke off from a series of meetings with players and staff there to speak to Mail Sport and the thorny issue of what comes next for him after this tournament was unavoidably high on the agenda. The Rugby Australia hierarchy; chairman Hamish McLennan and chief executive Phil Waugh, have offered public support for their embattled head coach, after defeat to Fiji and a 40-6 capitulation at the hands of Wales left the green-and-gold campaign here in disarray.

Now, amid a fierce backlash and renewed doubt Down Under about what lies ahead for the national team and the man who returned for a second stint in charge at the start of the year, after his sacking by England last December, the ball appears to be in Jones’s court. So what is his outlook? ‘I have signed a five-year contract,’ said the 63-year-old. ‘Like any job, coaches are in an employer-employee relationship, and we are in a game of winning.

Whenever you’re not winning, the coach is vulnerable, so I am vulnerable. Does that cause extra noise? It probably does. There’s been this noise about Japan, but nothing has happened. So that’s just added a bit more noise to it.’ Eddie Jones revealed exclusively to Mail Sport that he has no intentions of stepping down from his role as the manager of the Australian rugby team  The Wallabies have suffered a disappointing campaign after defeats to Fiji and Wales Jones was referring to a report by a leading, respected Australian newspaper which firmly stated that he had held talks with Japan, about going back there as head coach of the Brave Blossoms.

He sought to dismiss it after the Welsh ordeal and when asked again whether he had spoken to either the Japanese union, or any organisation or individuals acting on their behalf, he said: ‘No,’ before adding: ‘Whenever there is any noise; that creates uncertainty. ‘I came into this job with the approach that it was going to be a long-term job, but Rugby Australia could change. If you beloved this short article and you would like to acquire extra facts with regards to praca za granica magazynier kindly visit our web site. If there’s a change in the wind then things can happen, but my commitment was always long-term and there’s no reason why that won’t happen.’ Australia great Tim Horan joined the fanfare of speculation about Jones’s intentions when he asked earlier this week: ‘Does Eddie Jones actually want to coach the Wallabies?

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