Exclusive: Eddie opts for former England assistant to join Wallabies ahead of World Cup

By Christy Doran / Editor

Slowly but surely Eddie Jones is putting the pieces of the puzzle together. The latest, The Roar can reveal, is reuniting with his former England scrum coach, Neal Hatley, who worked alongside Jones up until the 2019 World Cup.

Weeks after former NRL star Brett Hodgson joined as Jones’ defence coach, The Roar understands Hatley will link up with the Wallabies following the English Premiership season in May.

It’s also believed Hatley will work closely with burgeoning Brumbies forwards coach Dan Palmer, who is likely to join the Wallabies throughout the year too.

But who coaches the lineout and attack remains to be seen.

Eddie Jones’ former scrum coach Neal Hatley (2nd left) at England will join the Wallabies ahead of The Rugby Championship. Photo: David Rogers/Getty Images

Hatley worked closely with Jones during the previous World Cup cycle before joining Bath, where he is currently the English club’s forwards coach but was previously their head coach too.

The 53-year-old was widely respected by the English playing group and helped nurture the development of Jamie George, Kyle Sinckler and Ellis Genge.

He is known to have an insatiable appetite for work. Indeed, his former boss at Bath, Mike Ford, said before he joined England in 2016 that he would have to urge him to leave work on a nightly basis.

“I have to tell him to go home at times because he’s a real grafter but the players all love him,” Ford said.

“He can socialise with them and at the same time tell them they’re not being selected. I’ve never seen anything like the amount of detail he puts on scrums but he’s also worked on our contact area and defence. He’s quite an asset to lose.”

On working with Jones and coaching at the international level, Hatley said at the start of his tenure he was “under no illusion as to how tough it is going to be.”

“If coaching at that level was easy everyone would be doing it,” he said. “I expect to be pushed and pulled all over to get the best from the players.”

Scrum guru Neal Hatley will join the Wallabies. Photo: Zac Goodwin/PA Images via Getty Images

While England’s scrum was well-beaten in the World Cup final loss to the Springboks, for the most part Jones’ set-piece fired.

The early loss of Sinckler in the opening minutes against the Springboks in Yokohama also seemed to be a destabilising loss for England.

(L-R) England front-rowers Dan Cole, Dylan Hartley, scrum coach Neal Hatley, and Mako Vunipola celebrate their series victory over the Wallabies on June 18, 2016 in Melbourne. Photo: David Rogers/Getty Images

Nonetheless, Hatley will be excited about the prop stocks he has to work with.

While Taniela Tupou and Angus Bell have worrying injuries, the scrum functioned well without being dominant last year.

Hatley’s technical prowess, along with Palmer’s, could prove to be what is needed to make it a force.

Palmer was recently described by Allan Alaalatoa and Stephen Larkham as one of the “world’s best” and the former Wallaby spent time with Jones at Suntory late last year.

The former front-rower also spent time with the Wallabies during last year’s Rugby Championship and his technical nous was highly rated by the team.

Brumbies forwards coach and former Wallaby Dan Palmer is set to join Eddie Jones during the 2023 World Cup campaign. Picture: Lachlan Lawson/Brumbies Media

Meanwhile, it’s believed Jones is on the hunt for a lineout specialist.

While former England lock Geoff Parling has the Rebels’ lineout firing, the former Lions lineout specialist isn’t thought to be on Jones’ list.

The issue is there are very few lineout specialists in Australian rugby, which could in part explain the nation’s struggles to continually hit the mark for years.

Ben Mowen and Stephen Hoiles are considered fine coaches in the making, but some believe Dave Dennis, who played alongside Parling at Exeter and is excellent in the lineout and maul, would be a good fit.

While Dennis would be inexperienced from a coaching perspective, Jones has shown he has no issues in bringing in people from left-field.

Mowen, meanwhile, will join the Brumbies next year.

RUPA President Justin Harrison is another left-field option. Mitch Chapman, Australia’s referees head coach and former respected second-rower, is also another out-of-the-box option.

As for the attack, it’s understood Jones has yet to find an available candidate that fits the bill and could coach the attack, just as Dave Rennie intended this year, if a better option doesn’t leap out.

The Wallabies coach told his own podcast Eddie last month that he wants to have his coaching team assembled by May 1.

The Crowd Says:

2023-03-16T12:45:12+00:00

Doctordbx

Roar Rookie


He dresses like a clown just like LF so probably.

2023-03-16T10:06:39+00:00

Perthstayer

Roar Rookie


Spot on. England scrum was good enough not to leak penalties. That alone counts for a lot.

2023-03-16T10:01:47+00:00

Perthstayer

Roar Rookie


Not ahead of Marler.

2023-03-16T09:59:39+00:00

Perthstayer

Roar Rookie


The RWC winners is an unrealistic bar. SA were outstanding, aided by Eddie doing a terrible job in preparing them and not selecting the world class Marler. Slipper contributed heavily to several NH losses with his prolific scrum penalty count. New coach needs to sort that out as WBs have cattle for a strong scrum.

2023-03-16T09:52:55+00:00

Just Nuisance

Roar Rookie


I'm a huge fan of the Netflix F1 series , Drive to Survive ....Its so abundantly obvious that if you dont have the car , no matter who the team Principle or driver is or the quality of the pit crew , you not only will struggle to win , you cannot win . Eddie Jones went through some very good scrum coaches with England . But , If you don't have the car ?

2023-03-16T04:17:52+00:00

LBJ

Roar Rookie


I disagree - Bell, TT & AAA would be picked in any international squad.

2023-03-16T01:39:23+00:00

Khun Phil

Roar Rookie


I don't think AAA is known for his after dinner speaking.Just like "a credit to the boys",a cliched response.

2023-03-16T00:22:31+00:00

tsuru

Roar Rookie


I don’t want to sound like Debbie Downer (or certain other naysayers on here) but the expectation of the Wallabies making the final is beyond me. I’d be stunned and thrilled if they got that far this year.

2023-03-16T00:10:12+00:00

tsuru

Roar Rookie


If you like that kind of comparison, Qualify, have a look at the last time the Wallabies and England played France.

2023-03-15T21:04:50+00:00

Malo

Guest


How many coaches do we need to make the qtr finals and get the chop. The cost of 10 coaches is it really worth it to then get punted in the qtrs. Surely this money would be better spent on player pathways than on coaches and league players. RA know how to waste the grassroots increase subscriptions fees so less kids play the game. Who needs local players when you can spend it all on foreign and league coaches.

2023-03-15T20:24:53+00:00

K.F.T.D.

Roar Rookie


Caused McKenzie to walk. Bobby if you haven’t heard it find ‘Bloke in a bar’ interview of Quade when he talks about McKenzie’s strategies against other super teams and how it opened Quade’s eyes to how to play the game.

2023-03-15T19:42:42+00:00

K.F.T.D.

Roar Rookie


I don’t know why the move to Canberra, I thought it was job related.

2023-03-15T19:41:54+00:00

K.F.T.D.

Roar Rookie


We’ll never know the real story. But I think they “the guilty party”really broke the agreed curfew by a long margin in that pub.

2023-03-15T18:32:50+00:00

Bobby

Roar Rookie


Wasnt he the captain that lost a lot of player respect when he was the dubber dobber over in Ireland (I think)? Bur he did well at East's!

2023-03-15T18:29:42+00:00

Bobby

Roar Rookie


Isn't he Fishers understudy?

2023-03-15T15:36:17+00:00

Faithful

Roar Rookie


Interesting how many comments there about the 2019 WC SA destroying Eng scrum. It’s not the SA scrum the wallabies need to worry about, since the last WC the Wallaby scrum has had their measure. Just watch tbe SA WB games in the last few years. The scrums the WBs need to worry about are the English, Irish, ABs, France and Argentina. The WBs have struggled in the set piece against these teams in the last few years. Thr WBs will likey meet Eng or Arg in a QF, France in the SF. If they can’t sort out their scrum for those games forget about the final.

2023-03-15T12:51:17+00:00

Derek Murray

Roar Rookie


Nobody in the Bath coaching crew is covered in glory right now but he's got pedigree and both he and Eddie know what they're getting. I'm just glad we're getting the team together

2023-03-15T12:18:00+00:00

JD Kiwi

Roar Rookie


Yes, England definitely has a better player pool than Australia. They were in the U20 world final six years in a row 2013-18, winning three, you've had just had one runners up medal in 2019. So it would be unfair to expect too much too soon of Eddie, especially if your best players keep on being unavailable. Should be able to beat 38% though!

2023-03-15T11:34:41+00:00

Nobody

Roar Rookie


Wasn’t the English scrum destroyed by the Boks at the 19WC? I sure hope that doesn’t happen to us….

2023-03-15T10:51:07+00:00

Check-side for the boundary

Roar Rookie


He'd certainly have the hookers throwing properly.

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