5 Apr 2019

All Blacks coach off to Japan - report

3:46 pm on 5 April 2019

The All Blacks coach Steve Hansen will head to Japan after the Rugby World Cup according to an Australian newspaper report.

Hansen in December said he would be stepping down as All Blacks coach after this year's World Cup.

The Daily Telegraph is reporting Hansen will take up the role of director of rugby at the Toyota Verblitz club after the World Cup.

"I am a totally different man to when I first started coaching," said Steve Hansen.

"I am a totally different man to when I first started coaching," said Steve Hansen. Photo: Photosport

Last month All Blacks captain Kieran Read announced he had signed a one-year contract with Toyota club.

Meanwhile, England coach Eddie Jones has ruled himself out of replacing Australia boss Michael Cheika after the Rugby World Cup, saying the Wallabies need a "generational change" in culture.

Jones, who guided the Wallabies to the 2003 World Cup final before his acrimonious departure two years later, is reported to be on Rugby Australia's short-list of candidates.

England rugby coach Eddie Jones

England coach Eddie Jones. Photo: PHOTOSPORT

Cheika has said he would quit if Australia failed to win the 20 September - 2 November World Cup in Japan.

"I am happy in Europe," Jones told the Sydney Morning Herald.

"The Wallabies need a generational change in culture."

Australia, ranked sixth in the world, won only four of 13 tests in 2018, their worst season in decades.

Jones is contracted to England until 2021 but his deal features a break clause if the team flops in Japan.

Jones's comments come two weeks after New Zealander Dave Rennie said he was unlikely to take over the Australia job while contracted to Glasgow Warriors until 2020.

New Zealander Warren Gatland, the Wales and British and Irish Lions coach, has also been reported to be on RA's short-list.

Gatland is leaving Wales after the World Cup and has also been linked with taking over at defending champions New Zealand once Steve Hansen leaves the role after Japan.