Eddie Jones fronts the media in Sydney for the first time since the World Cup.

Eddie Jones fronts the media in Sydney for the first time since the World Cup.Credit:Steven Siewert

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Jones repeatedly denied having spoken to any Japanese officials,including the Japan Rugby Football Union president Masato Tsuchida,regarding their vacant head coach role.

“I haven’t been speaking to anyone,mate,” said Jones when questioned about the interview with Japan.

On whether he would be staying on as Wallabies coach,Jones said he was committed,but that it wasn’t completely up to him.

“I’m staying,mate. I’ve always been committed to Australian rugby. I want to leave it in a better place,and that’s still the job,” he said.

“It’s not absolutely my decision. We’ve got a review going forward,and we’ll see what happens at the end of the review.”

Jones was asked whether he had a break clause in his contract that would allow him to leave the position early for a particular reason.

“Well,that’s not really for you to discuss,mate,is it?” Jones answered.

“That’s a private discussion between Rugby Australia and myself which I’d be breaking confidentiality if I said that.”

But when asked about the Wallabies’ disastrous World Cup campaign,where they sufferedback-to-back losses to Fiji and Wales that left themneeding a miracle to progress,Jones rejected suggestions he had erred in picking such an inexperienced team.

“I went to the World Cup,came in[with] a short period of time,had to make a decision on the team,made a decision we needed to go with youth. And,while the results at the World Cup weren’t the results we wanted,I think I’ve left the Australian team in a great position to go on to 2027. That judgment will be decided by the 2027 World Cup.”

When it came to the Wallabies’ results in France,Jones said the team hadn’t been up to scratch.

Eddie Jones on his old Coogee Oval stomping ground with Rugby Australia’s head of communications,Mark McCartney.

Eddie Jones on his old Coogee Oval stomping ground with Rugby Australia’s head of communications,Mark McCartney.Credit:AP

“We just weren’t good enough,mate,” he said. “You’ve just got to watchthe quarter-finals on the weekend. We’re not at that level,and we can’t pretend to be at that level,but can we be at that level by 2027? Yes,we can.”

But despite the criticism and scrutiny that has followed Jones since hisfirst team selection in August,Jones said he still had a desire to coach for Australia.

“I love the game,I love working with young players,I love seeing some of the young players maturing during the World Cup,and some of them[will] struggle,and that’s all part of it,” he said.

Jones said he understood the frustration of Australian rugby fans,but insisted he remained the right man for the job.

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“I think I’ve got the foresight to see where we need to go,” he said. “I’ve got the experience of being in difficult situations before. This is not an unusual situation. You’ve got a team that was struggling for a period of time,you’ve got underneath it a system that’s not supporting it and at some stage you bottom out. This is the opportunity now to change the team,as we’ve started with picking younger players with bright futures,and then we’ve got to look at the development system underneath as well.”

An independent review into the Wallabies’ World Cup campaign will now be conducted,looking at factors such as how well-prepared the team was and whether they maximised the resources they had.

Asked whether he would consider quitting if the Wallabies didn’t improve,Jones said he had taken the job knowing it wouldn’t be easy.

“We get judged by our results,mate. I chose to be coach. We know we get judged by our results … all I can do is coach as well as I can,” Jones said. “There are other people who make those judgments[whether he’ll be coach],not me.”

Asked if he had reflected on his comments at a press conference before flying out for the World Cup,where he suggested the media needed to give themselves an uppercut for their line of questioning,he replied:“Probably need to give myself an uppercut,don’t I?

“I didn’t like the way that media conference was portrayed,and I am allowed to say that. It probably wasn’t the wisest thing to say,but sometimes you say things in the heat of the moment that you regret.”

Watch all the action fromRugby World Cup 2023 on the Home of Rugby,Stan Sport. Every match streaming ad-free,live and in 4K UHD with replays,mini matches and highlights available on demand.

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