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‘They call me Grandpa Joe’: coach Schmidt in a hurry as clock ticks down on Wallabies reign

about 8 hours ago
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Joe Schmidt was in Melbourne’s west coaching Footscray RFC’s under-18s on Monday night, then conducting a 20-minute Q&A that ran to two hours.The next day he called together the Wallabies leaders and challenged them to set the standards at their Super Rugby clubs.By Wednesday he was deep in meetings with Queensland Reds boss Les Kiss, the coach who will take over the national side in July.Schmidt is just off another call with Kiss when he arrives to speak with Guardian Australia, biceps bulging after a workout and eyes gleaming ahead of another day spent dragging the Wallabies back to respectability and priming them for the 2027 World Cup on home soil.This relentless work ethic runs contrary to the title his grandchildren have given him.

“They call me Grandpa Joe and I don’t like it,” says Schmidt, 60,“Grandpa Joe is the old bloke in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory who never gets out of bed, whereas I never find enough hours in the day to get everything done that I want to,”This gentle gripe should be music to the ears of Wallabies fans,A golden ticket got old Joe Bucket dancing like David Campese,A gold jersey still does the same for Schmidt.

“Australian rugby has given me a great group of men who are totally invested and utterly determined to represent that jersey the best they can,” Schmidt says.“We haven’t got it right all the time but this side is hungry to earn the support of the country, so for me it’s about keeping those connections and growing the positives because we didn’t get the results in 2025 and we have to get some this season.”It says plenty for the high esteem Schmidt is held in at Rugby Australia that he avoided blame for the Wallabies’ fade to black last year: a 5-10 win-loss season that finished in November with four straight defeats on the first winless tour of Europe in 67 years.“But even at the back end of a long season we scored three tries against Ireland and five against France,” he says.“Eight tries against two of the world’s best sides.

”Australia are still ranked eighth in the world but Schmidt’s glass is defiantly half full.“Players are improving, performances are building and we’re developing real depth.If everyone’s fit, we’ve got a great side.Every game of that Northern Tour was still winnable at the 60-minute mark, but when we lost players and combinations we were vulnerable.We let teams off the hook and couldn’t find a ‘change-up’ in the final 20.

”Last year started brightly with a last-gasp victory over Fiji before a bumper British & Irish Lions series was lost 2-1 amid a controversial refereeing decision late in the second Test.“No one gave us a hope against the Lions, and in the end it was one point difference across three Tests,” says Schmidt.“Then we beat Argentina on the bell in Townsville and defied 62 years of history to beat South Africa at Ellis Park.”The latter result against the Springboks last August proves Schmidt’s belief that “you don’t have to be the best in the world, just the best on the day”.Recovering from 0-22 to score six straight tries and beat the world champions 38-22 is Schmidt’s crowning glory during his time with the Wallabies.

“But those victories are high points, not end points,” he says.“At the leaders meeting on Tuesday all the guys are very keen to make sure we hit the ground running in 2026.”Schmidt has three Tests left as Wallabies coach, against Ireland, France and Italy.His farewell lap starts in style with a clash against his old side in Sydney on 4 July.Ireland were No 9 in the world when Schmidt was appointed coach in 2013 and in six years he took them to No 1, winning three Six Nations championships.

“That’s not to say there’s an ambush coming, just a lot of hard work going on behind the scenes,” he says,A win-loss record as Wallabies coach (11-17, 43%) pales against his results with Ireland (55-22, 71%) but he and Kiss are plotting a boilover before a handover,“I won two Six Nations with Les – he ran our defence and did an outstanding job,” says Schmidt,“He was with us for meetings in Canberra last week and things are transitioning pretty seamlessly,He’ll spend the week with us before the Brisbane and Perth Tests too.

”Schmidt was hands-off in RA appointing his successor but safe to say he approves.“I wasn’t involved in that process,” he says.“But they’ve fallen upon a really good candidate so Wallabies fans should be excited.Les is 100% invested with very broad experience.We’re great mates and I’ll always be around to help him but when he takes over I’ll give him a degree of separation so Les can set his own agenda and forge ahead.

”Having refused to tender for the newly filled All Blacks job out of loyalty to Australia, RA remain confident they can yet keep Schmidt in the fold in some hands-on form,For now, after fulfilling duties to his Wallabies family he will return to his real kin: wife, Kellie, and their kids, Abby, Tim, Ella and youngest, Luke, whose serious epilepsy condition has made Schmidt’s service and sacrifice to the gold jersey all the greater,“I’ve got regrets about leaving,” he says,“I feel like a lot of unseen positives are about to become visible,” A few have been waving at Schmidt as they walk by: Mark Nawaquinatawase and Angus Crichton (returning to rugby in 2027) and golden boy Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii (one of 16 to whom he gave Wallabies debuts in 2024).

Then there’s NRL convert Zac Lomax (“great in the aerial battle, massively committed”).Schmidt’s eyes are starting to gleam as his devotion to the team he built is roused.But he snaps out of it.“The first thing my wife and I will do is fly to Ireland to see our new grandson so I’m saying no to everything at the moment … but if a window opens and my wife is sick of me being home and Luke is in a good place and still making progress, then who knows? One thing I’ve learned in this life is to never say never.”It’s a lesson the Wallabies must heed as they start life without their Grandpa Joe.

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Stephen Colbert on DHS pick Markwayne Mullin: ‘Has a history of being real dumb and real angry about it’

Late-night hosts recapped Markwayne Mullin’s risible confirmation hearing for homeland security secretary and Maga’s struggles to sell the war in Iran to sticker-shocked Americans.On Wednesday’s Late Show, Stephen Colbert looked into the resignation this week of Joe Kent, Donald Trump’s director of the national counterterrorism center, in protest of the administration’s war in Iran and the fact that “Iran posed no imminent threat to our nation”.“So the US is going to war in the Middle East without an imminent threat to our nation … AGAIN?” Colbert joked, sitcom-style.“Now, before anybody sends this guy an Edible Arrangement in the shape of the word ‘hero’, keep in mind: he sucks,” he continued, before reminding viewers that during his failed 2022 congressional bid, Kent paid Graham Jorgensen, a member of the Proud Boys, for consulting work, and worked closely with Joey Gibson, founder of the rightwing group Patriot Prayer. Kent has also blamed Israel for the 2003 US invasion of Iraq

1 day ago
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Seth Meyers on Trump’s Nato about-face: ‘This is just how Donald Trump does friendship’

Late-night hosts mocked Donald Trump’s rejection by Nato allies for help with the strait of Hormuz and a White House visit from the Irish prime minister for St Patrick’s Day.On Late Night, Seth Meyers recalled the many, many times that Trump insulted Nato, only to turn around and ask them this week for help with strait of Hormuz, blocked by his war with Iran. “You called them obsolete, sloppy and bad, and now you want their help?” Meyers marveled. “It’s like breaking up with someone and then immediately asking them for help moving – ‘I know I called you obsolete and sloppy, but I didn’t say you were bad at carrying things! Now hop to it, fatso, I gotta date tonight!’”The response from Nato members has been a resounding no, even from US allies like Germany and Britain. “You mean to tell me your genius plan of continually insulting them for 10-plus years and then begging them to help you out of a jam you got yourself into didn’t work?” Meyers laughed

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Banksy has been unmasked (again). But does this major Reuters investigation actually tell us something new?

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Arts Council England must change or face ‘disaster’, culture department is told

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Jimmy Kimmel on Trump: ‘He uses his bones to feel things instead of his brain’

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Carnivàle revisited: is this HBO’s strangest show?

Carnivàle premiered on HBO in 2003 and was cancelled after only two seasons. In the immediate aftermath, this decision was protested by the small but dedicated cult following the show had amassed (to the tune of 50,000 emails).But in the years since, as the television canon has expanded and the taste for mystery-box TV has waned, Carnivàle now seems little more than a minor curio in HBO’s ever-expanding back catalogue. So what is this curio about?Carnivàle follows the exploits of its titular carnival as they travel across the American dust bowl in the 1930s. At the beginning of the series, these nomadic showpeople pick up Ben Hawkins (Nick Stahl), an ex-con with a mysterious past (and inexplicable powers)

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Reform UK suspends Scottish candidate less than a day after announcing him

about 7 hours ago
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Starmer’s ministers look at new economic blueprint to quell voter anger

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Attorney general asks if Kemi Badenoch would object to Jewish public prayer

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Nigel Farage condemned over call to ban public prayer for Muslims in the UK

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Here’s what a reformed House of Lords could look like | Letters

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Harry Barnes obituary

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