Wayne Pivac 'confident' Wales will be Six Nations contenders in 2021 despite underwhelming start to his reign
Wayne Pivac insists Wales will be Six Nations contenders in 2021 despite an underwhelming start to his reign.
Pivac managed only three Test wins in 2020, with his first year in charge culminating in Saturday's 38-18 Autumn Nations Cup win over Italy in Llanelli.
Italy twice and Georgia were the only sides Wales have beaten this year, but New Zealander Pivac believes he can win over the doubters in his adopted homeland by launching a Six Nations title challenge in 2021.
"If we go pre-lockdown you would say we're not too far off, the French game at home and the game with England," Pivac said.
"Obviously we selected a different type of squad for this Autumn series, which has been discussed quite a bit.
"But combining the two squads and our learnings, I'd like to think we'll have a good crack at it (2021 Six Nations).
"No doubt others will be thinking England, France and Ireland."
Wales had not lost to Italy since 2007 and won 14 consecutive games against the Azzurri before their trip to Parc y Scarlets.
But Wales were in danger of being embarrassed when Italy took an 18-17 lead at the start of the second half.
Pivac's side, however, regrouped and in the end ran in five tries. There were first Test scores for Kieran Hardy and Sam Parry, while Gareth Davies, George North and Justin Tipuric crossed in the second half.
"It wasn't the 80-minute performance we were after, but it was heading in the right direction," Pivac said.
"We asked a few questions of a few players and we got some answers. It was what we wanted to get out of the game, as well as the result clearly.
"We weren't happy conceding 18 points and there were too many penalties before half-time.
"Going down to 14 men (Josh Adams was yellow carded just before half-time) wasn't in the script, but once we got our composure back and were back to 15 we finished the game quite strongly.
"We've had 11 debutants since the start of the Six Nations, that's a huge number.
"We've learned a lot about those players and they've learned a lot. You can't buy that, you've got to go out in those games and learn from them."
Having lost to England and Ireland, Wales finished fifth in the Autumn Nations Cup but Pivac insisted it was a valuable campaign.
"There were more positives than negatives," he said. "We'll take that away and go look at the squad for the Six Nations and factor in all the learnings.
"We'll do a ranking by position and we're in a better place in our depth and rankings than we were a couple of months ago."