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Nigel Walker leaves WRU in wake of contracting scandal

Now departed as Wales executive director of rugby


Now departed as Wales executive director of rugby

Nigel Walker has left the Welsh Rugby Union after mounting pressure over the past few months – PA/David Davies

Nigel Walker has resigned from his role as executive director of rugby at the Welsh Rugby Union, weeks after he was implicated in a scandal involving Wales women’s team.

Huw Bevan, the interim performance director, and community director, Geraint John, will assume Walker’s executive duties in the short-term. A new director of rugby will be named in the New Year.

Walker was under mounting pressure to leave his post for the fateful part he played in botched contract negotiations with the women’s team, which escalated over the summer.

The 61-year-old told players if they did not sign contracts put in front of them last August, the WRU would forfeit the team’s place at next year’s World Cup in England.

The entire contracting process left many players feeling “emotionally unwell” and some were even allegedly victims of bullying tactics used by members of the women’s coaching team and senior management, including him.

Walker becomes the second high-profile casualty to leave the organisation as a result of the contracting saga. Ioan Cunningham, the former head coach of the women’s team, left his role after the revelations were made public by Telegraph Sport last month.

The WRU apologised for the way it handled the convoluted and messy negotiations. The body had intended to publish a review at the end of November, but that has been delayed.

Walker joined the WRU in 2021 as performance director and oversaw the introduction of the union’s first central contracts for the women’s team that year. He is, however, understood to have become deeply disliked by players for issuing the threat to pull the team from next year’s women’s rugby showpiece in England.

When asked last month whether Walker’s position was untenable, Abi Tierney, the WRU chief executive, said: “Nigel acknowledges that we needed to have done things better.”

Walker said of his departure: “This decision has not been made lightly as I have cherished my time at the Welsh Rugby Union immensely, but it’s time for a new leader for the performance department.

“My tenure has not been without its challenges and we have achieved a great amount but, ultimately, it is right that I am judged on performances on the pitch and both of our senior teams have found the last 12 months extremely difficult and therefore I believe now is the right time for me to step down.

“These are fast moving times, we have launched a new headline strategy for Welsh rugby which is inextricably linked to a new Professional Rugby Agreement to be signed imminently between the WRU and our four regional clubs.

“We are changing the management structure in our high performance team with respect to our senior Wales Women squad, with a new head coach to be appointed soon. In the senior men’s game there is much scrutiny of the role of our high performance department and how its systems and structures can best enable success for all of our professional teams.”

Meanwhile, Warren Gatland will continue as Wales head coach for the 2025 Six Nations even after Tierney said his position had been “on the line”.

New Zealander Gatland, 61, has overseen Wales’ record 12 successive Test match defeats, ending with autumn losses against Fiji, Australia and South Africa.

Tierney presented the review’s findings to a WRU board meeting this week.

While Gatland remains in post, the New Zealander has been warned there will be a further review of performances after the tournament.

“I have had a number of honest conversations with Warren and I will make no secret of the fact his position was on the line as we undertook our review,” said Tierney.

“Further than that, like any head coach in any sport, he knows the security of his position is directly related to the performances of the team and this is a situation that will continue to intensify.

“There is a tough challenge ahead but Warren is more than up for that challenge. We also believe he is equal to it.”



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