The Breakdown | Warren Gatland bids for one last miracle before 150th game with Wales

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The coach whose enduring belief that the next match is always winnable is not ready to abandon all hope just yet

The lyrics of that old Kenny Rogers favourite The Gambler sprang to mind as Warren Gatland sat down in Wales's team hotel this week to explain his desire to stay on as head coach. "You've got to know when to hold 'em, know when to fold 'em, know when to walk away …" Approaching his 18th Six Nations campaign – he has been involved in 13 previous ones with Wales and four with Ireland – Gatland is clearly not ready to abandon all hope just yet.

There is a fair amount of professional pride involved too. Plus the enduring stubbornness of a competitor who, unlike Tyson Fury, still feels he has some unfinished business. While Wales may have lost 12 consecutive games, the key to Gatland's coaching longevity remains his enduring belief that the next game is always winnable. Even if it involves a pumped-up France in Paris on the opening night of the 2025 Six Nations. "If we can go out there, play well and get a little bit of luck …"

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