Wales must not be âchewed upâ by losing run

Jac Morgan has been one of Walesâ leading lights in a winless Six Nations campaign
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Menâs Six Nations: Wales v England
Venue: Principality Stadium, Cardiff Date: Saturday, 15 March Kick-off: 16:45 GMT
Coverage: Watch on BBC One, BBC Sport website and app and S4C. Text commentary and highlights on BBC Sport website and app. Listen live on BBC Radio Wales, BBC Radio Cymru, BBC Radio 5 & BBC Radio 5 Sports Extra.
Interim head coach Matt Sherratt says Wales can not fixate on breaking their record 16-game losing sequence after a 35-29 Six Nations defeat by Scotland.
The loss in Edinburgh was also a 10th consecutive Six Nations failure during a winless run that began in October 2023.
Wales launched a spirited Murrayfield comeback to claim two losing bonus points after Scotland had taken their foot of the pedal when leading 35-8 after an hour.
The stark reality now is Wales have now joined Italy as another tier-one team to have lost 16 successive internationals in the professional era.
England visit Cardiff next Saturday with Wales bidding to avoid losing all their matches for a second Six Nations tournament in a row.
âThereâs no point hanging on to the past at all,â said Sherratt.
âIt [the losing run] is not something Iâm going to talk about, itâs there in the background.
âEveryone knows that, but if you start taking the pitch with desperation and anxiety and worrying where the next win comes from, itâs just going to chew you up.
âWhat I can promise the players next week is Iâll do my best to make them a better team. So Iâll be positive and weâll have a plan for England.â
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Published6 hours ago
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Published6 hours ago
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Scotland dominate opening half
Wales defended like it was a one-point game â Sherratt
Wales had run Ireland close in Sherrattâs first game in charge, but could not replicate that intensity in the opening exchanges against Scotland.
Gregor Townsendâs side ran in four tries before the break to lead by 20 points as they outclassed Wales.
âWe knew two things were going to be important,â said Sherratt.
âThey edged the contestable kicking game and their defence at the contact area was so good.
âThatâs what happened in the first 40 minutes as we gave their back three some run ups and they are dangerous.â
Sherratt has insisted it was those technical problems rather than any emotional issues.
âThe easy thing is to say there was a drop off emotionally, but I donât think that was the case,â said Sherratt.
âThey are a good Scotland team and weâve got to remember that. Theyâve been together a long time and we ran into them on a good day.
âThere was no lack of passion out there. There was a hell of a lot of effort from our boys in that last 20 minutes.
âIt was nice to get that four-try bonus point, but what was more pleasing was seeing the desperation of them defending our line.
âThe amount of tackles some of our forwards put into those sets was outstanding.â
Keeping the structure
Scotland survive late Wales comeback to win
Wales, who had scored in the first half through full-back Blair Murray, made the scoreline far more respectable with tries from Ben Thomas, Teddy Williams and Max Llewellyn as replacement fly-half Jarrod Evans helped orchestrate the second-half comeback.
Wales also had a late Taulupe Faletau try disallowed for Murray illegally hurdling a tackle in the build-up, a decision Sherratt described as âcorrectâ.
âThe game had run its course so when the bench came on it was pretty clear what we had to do,â said Sherratt.
âUltimately the first 20 minutes was always going to dictate where the game went.
âIt was a brave effort to come back and get two points, but Iâve seen enough of those games where the reality is they probably thought theyâd done enough and dropped off 5%.
âThe most pleasing thing was you could sense just before half-time, if we started chasing the game and getting unstructured, weâd hurt ourselves.
âThere was an element of maturity in the second half where we werenât reckless.
âIt gave us something to build on and some green shoots going into the England game.â
England waiting in the wings
Russell frustrated as sleepy Scotland took their âfoot off the gasâ
After they host Italy on Sunday, England will travel to Principality Stadium next Saturday for Sherrattâs final game in charge before he returns to Cardiff.
Gloucester-born Sherratt is looking forward to plotting the downfall of his fellow countrymen, who could still be in contention for the Six Nations title when they take the field in the Welsh capital.
âI canât wait,â said Sherratt.
âStraight away after the game, the players said in the huddle that itâs not a week to lick your wounds for too long.
âThereâs no greater challenge than England in Cardiff. I know itâs something the boys canât wait for and personally for me, it should be a great occasion.â
Sherratt also stated he was unsure whether Josh Adams would be fit to face England after the Cardiff wing missed the past two games because of a hamstring injury.
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