Gatland returns to struggling Wales

When Warren Gatland relinquished fulltime coaching duties with Wales mid-year, his side had just won the Six Nations and was still feasting on its run to the Rugby World Cup semifinals.

How things have changed.

The New Zealander resumed control on Monday with Welsh rugby on its knees and the national team in crisis after five straight losses, most recently to Argentina and Samoa over successive weekends.

And it’s set to get a whole lot tougher for Gatland and Wales, with New Zealand and Australia looming over the horizon to complete what is proving to be a chastening month of internationals.

The latest IRB rankings show just how far the Dragons have fallen – they are now No.8 and struggling to stay in the second band of seeds for the 2015 World Cup.

“It doesn’t just go with a flick of the fingers,” said Wales captain Sam Warburton, a star of the World Cup whose form has imploded along with many in the team.

“It is still the same players – it’s not as if it is a new squad or we’ve brought new guys in.

“I think the players are letting ourselves down.”

Barry John, the great Wales flyhalf from the 1960s and ’70s, summed up the mood in the small rugby-proud nation after the limp 26-19 loss to Samoa on Friday.

“Welsh rugby is in despair and disarray,” he said in his column in the Western Mail newspaper.

“I can’t remember anything as acute as the decline of this Welsh team in a matter of a few months.”

Gatland had to briefly stand aside for the series in Australia as he recovered from breaking both heels in a fall while cleaning windows at his beachhouse in New Zealand.

Assistant coach Rob Howley took over as Wales lost the series 3-0, although only by a combined margin of 11 points.

Howley stayed in charge for the Argentina and Samoa matches while Gatland carried out business duties relating to his recent appointment as British & Irish Lions coach for the 2013 tour of Australia, but a 26-12 loss to the Pumas was followed by the defeat by the South Sea Islanders.

Welsh regions are cash-strapped and have lost many of their top players to the lucrative French league.

Cardiff, the Scarlets and the Ospreys are also unlikely to make it out of the groups in the European Cup after winning just one of their combined six pool matches so far.

Of course, beating the All Blacks on Saturday would change everything – but that hasn’t happened in 60 years, stretching back 24 matches.

“There is every chance we can win next Saturday, I definitely believe that,” Warburton said.

“You have to believe that in every game you go into, but whether people think that is realistic or not is up to them.”

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