Italy heap pressure on Warren Gatland as Wales lose 14th match in a row

Andrew Baldock, PA Rugby Union Correspondent, Rome
Warren Gatland’s position as Wales head coach was left hanging by a thread after his team lost 22-15 against Italy at Stadio Olimpico and lurched towards a second successive Six Nations wooden spoon.
Wales’ 14th successive Test match defeat could be the final straw for Gatland’s Welsh Rugby Union bosses.
They have promised a detailed review of Wales’ Six Nations performances after the tournament and matters are hardly likely to improve given that remaining fixtures are against Ireland, Scotland and England.
It was Gatland’s 20th loss in 26 Tests since returning for a second stint at the helm, an eighth Six Nations reversal in a row and the first time Wales have suffered back-to-back defeats against Italy.
They also slumped to a new world ranking low of 12th, with Georgia climbing above them following their Rugby Europe Championship victory over the Netherlands in Tbilisi.
Rainswept Rome provided a suitably miserable back-drop for a Wales team undone by Italy wing Ange Capuozzo’s first-half try, plus five penalties and a conversion from full-back Tommaso Allan.

Wales managed an Aaron Wainwright try and late penalty try, plus a Ben Thomas penalty as Italy had forwards Marco Riccioni and Dino Lamb yellow-carded during the closing minutes.
There was no reprieve for Wales, though, with only a losing bonus-point collected and the inquest will be long and hard ahead of them resuming Six Nations action against Ireland in Cardiff on February 22.
Wales suffered a double blow ahead of the game with full-back Liam Williams and lock Dafydd Jenkins both being ruled out.
Saracens player Williams, who has won 93 caps, was replaced by Blair Murray, with Freddie Thomas making a first Wales start in the second-row after illness sidelined Jenkins. Gloucester wing Josh Hathaway and Cardiff lock Teddy Williams joined the replacements.
Wales made a bright start in dismal conditions, with scrum-half Tomos Williams’ kick into space almost being gathered by wing Josh Adams before the ball slid away into touch.
But Italy took the lead after seven minutes when Allan booted an angled 35-metre penalty, which was followed by an inevitable aerial battle as both sides employed kicking strategies, given the weather.
Thomas hauled Wales level through a penalty, yet not before the visitors saw centre Nick Tompkins depart for a head injury assessment as Hathaway took over from him.
Prop Gareth Thomas then required treatment after taking a blow to his knee, before Wales’ defence was unlocked by fly-half Paolo Garbisi’s deft kick and Capuozzo finished brilliantly under pressure from a chasing Welsh defence.
Allan added the touchline conversion and Wales were in trouble as Tompkins rejoined the action, playing way too laterally, while Italy had impressive control of their basics.
Wales had a flood of problems on the back of a dominant second quarter by Italy and two Allan penalties during a four-minute spell opened up a healthy lead for the Azzurri.

Wales desperately needed something before the interval, with Adams and hooker Evan Lloyd going close but there was no way through and Italy took an emphatic lead into the break.
Gatland changed the entire front-row just five minutes after the restart and Murray provided a glimmer of hope when he broke from deep inside his own half to give Wales some much-needed territory.
Dan Edwards also replaced fly-half Ben Thomas midway through the third quarter as Gatland sought a spark of inspiration that might give his team an opportunity to turn things around.
Allan missed two penalties in quick succession, yet Wales could find no way into the contest, being pinned on the back foot as they almost fell further behind when Martin Page-Relo’s long-range penalty hit the crossbar.
Adams then received a yellow card following a head-on-head collision with Garbisi and, although Wainwright breached Italy’s defence 11 minutes from time and a penalty try followed soon afterwards, Wales could find no way back despite a frenzied finale.
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If this was a premier football club there would be a caretaker in several matches ago.
Not good enough. Gatland and his coaching team sadly must go and the players take responsibility not only for the results but their own work ethic. So-called professional players who cannot pass a ball of have the motivation to at least perform. To date we’ve lost 14 games. And have we learnt from our past mistakes made. No. They cannot blame the wet conditions as Italy experienced the rain too. I fact, the advantage was with us being from a rain rich nation. We were like headless chickens at times running around aimlessly. This is not only a selection problem… Read more »
The WRU have rotted the rugby landscape for decades. You can sack Gatland and blame the players. But WRU decisions from creating the failed regions to restricting players playing their club rugby elsewhere are a problem. Rugby is no longer on everyone’s mind. Even 10 yrs ago you knew when the rugby was on, roads would go silent around here. Every pub would be awash with jerseys. Today seen one jersey, not official and the winner is bad pub chains who don’t put money back into rugby, for those who do watch it out. Car traffic fairly normal too
I know this is a very counter-intuitive argument to make right now but the Six Nations should have promotion and relegation, give the likes of Georgia, Romania, Portugal or Spain the opportunity to take part. The threat of relegation is the only thing that would keep the WRU on its toes.