H
trending
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

The Breakdown | Chile coach Pablo Lemoine: ‘Rugby is in trouble, even in countries like Wales’

about 15 hours ago
A picture


How did Pablo Lemoine, Chile’s head coach, react when they were drawn with Australia and New Zealand for the 2027 Rugby World Cup? The answer is perceptive and somewhat surprising.“When countries like Chile play in a World Cup, you need a general vision,” he says.“Thinking only of sport it’s fantastic, it’s awesome.But thinking of the real impact Chile needs: development programmes, political impact, social impact … for our fans, it’s much more difficult to find tickets when you play the All Blacks or Australia.”Speaking on Zoom from Chile’s Parque Mahuida training base in Santiago, the 50-year-old sits in front of a whiteboard crammed with densely packed handwritten text, neatly illustrating his attention to detail.

He explains they are situated 1,000m above sea level, so no local internet provider is willing to install a fibre connection,“Now we’re trying Elon Musk internet,” Lemoine says,Mercifully the connection holds,The former Uruguay prop who played for Bristol and Stade Français at the dawn of the professional era, has steered Chile to a second straight Rugby World Cup after their 2023 debut in France,In 2027, the enlarged format will mean pools of four rather than five and Los Cóndores will naturally target victory against the debutants Hong Kong.

“We have a chance to win our first game [at a World Cup],” says Lemoine.“Hong Kong have the same chance.It will be huge.We will try to qualify for the next stage, but it will be difficult to find bonus points against Australia and New Zealand.Our final is Hong Kong.

”Lemoine praises the new format that gives tier 2 nations more hope: four third-placed teams will qualify for the last 16,The Hong Kong encounter is likely to be hard-fought: when they met in Talca last year it finished 22-17 to the hosts,“To have a chance to qualify by winning one game … half a chance is already magic,” he says,“It’s a huge difference to the old format,“I participated in two World Cups as a player and two as a coach.

Your tournament was [in effect] one game.Now you could win one game and qualify.That’s a huge difference in the minds of tier 2 countries: something different, something positive.”Mustering a bonus point against Pool A’s heavyweights may prove an impossibility but Lemoine says the revised format will definitely change his approach against the Wallabies and All Blacks.He is realistic, however, on the prospect of a positive result against them.

“My ambition is not to beat the All Blacks,” Lemoine says,“In high performance, when you give a message to the players, they have to believe you,Everybody knows the reality against New Zealand or Australia,”The New Zealander Mark Cross, Lemoine’s predecessor, describes the changes he has made since 2018,“Pablo brought a professional outlook, a high‑performance outlook.

He’s demanding and knows what he wants.He’s changed the rugby landscape in Chile for ever.”Lemoine has blazed a trail in more ways than one.He was the first Uruguayan to play professionally in Europe, signed by Bob Dwyer at Bristol in 1998.Simplicity was key.

“I didn’t speak English.There were many difficulties,” Lemoine says.“But the only thing I needed was a chance.Bob gave me two or three ideas to understand the lineouts.He said: ‘Man, you run straight with the ball and tackle straight.

The rest, don’t worry.’ I started like this as a professional.After that it was my attitude.“Bristol was a great start for me.Bob was a really good coach.

It was a difficult thing coaching a guy like me.I was young, confused about my attitude, aggressive – not easy.But it was a great experience.”What values did Lemoine learn during his career that he now tries to instil in players? “Honesty,” he says.“I’m a really honest coach, I was an honest player.

I know my strengths and my weaknesses.I always had a low profile because I am a simple guy: I don’t like to talk about me.My teams have three clear values: humility, respect and ambition.I was a professional, but in all my Uruguay career, I never earned one dollar.”When Chile qualified for Australia 2027 by beating Samoa in a playoff, Lemoine made pointed remarks about funding, or lack thereof.

He does not feel supported by World Rugby.“Chilean rugby received the same money for the high-performance system for the last three years.The money’s not enough.But worse than that, the demand is bigger because we are preparing for a World Cup.“I understand there are financial problems for World Rugby, but I don’t think it’s right to go against a country that is working hard, in a professional way, as they demand.

I’m not happy with that but we will keep fighting,We accept the reality,”Lemoine wonders how nations such as Chile are expected to improve by normally playing only tier 2 opposition, but also, rightly, identifies problems in the game’s traditional heartlands,“We need to discuss how rugby can grow,” he says,“It’s clearly in trouble even in countries like Wales – famous rugby countries.

“It doesn’t work.The biggest countries in the world don’t play rugby.In China, India and Pakistan there are billions of potential fans.That’s why I like [his former Bristol teammate] Agustín Pichot’s vision.”In 2003, Lemoine scored against England in Brisbane, rumbling straight through Danny Grewcock during a 111-13 defeat.

Is that a favourite playing memory? “The game wasn’t very good,” he says,“They scored 100 points,In 2015, I met Danny in a pub and we finished our discussion with a good pint of beer,”Lemoine’s increasingly impressive career exemplifies how the game has changed, and is changing,But some rugby traditions will never die.

This is an extract taken from our weekly rugby union email, the Breakdown.To sign up, just visit this page and follow the instructions.
recentSee all
A picture

Bitcoin’s buzz is gone. Investors chose real gold in 2025 | Nils Pratley

Another week, another record high for the price of gold. And another blow to the bitcoin fan club’s hopeful thesis about owning “digital gold”. This year has been hard for the bitcoin brigade: while real gold soared in value, their cryptocurrency didn’t. Correlation went out of the window. Gold is up 70% so far in dollar terms; bitcoin is down 6%

about 8 hours ago
A picture

Bet365 boss receives at least £280m in pay and dividends despite profit slump

Denise Coates, the billionaire boss of Bet365, a self-described “ultimate gambler” and Britain’s highest-paid woman, took home at least £280m in pay and dividends in 2025 despite a slump in pre-tax profits.Coates’s Stoke-based gambling empire recorded turnover of £4bn in the year to March 2025, up from £3.7bn the year before. Pre-tax profits fell to £349m, from £627m in the previous year.Bet365 incurred a £325m increase in expenses as it reshaped its global footprint, expanding its presence in the US and South America while giving up its sometimes controversial presence in China, where online betting is illegal

about 9 hours ago
A picture

Elon Musk, AI and the antichrist: the biggest tech stories of 2025

Hello, and welcome to TechScape. I’m your host, Blake Montgomery, wishing you a happy and healthy end of the year. I myself have a cold.Today, we are looking back at the biggest stories in tech of 2025 – Elon Musk’s political rise, burst and fall; artificial intelligence’s subsumption of the global economy, all other technology, and even the Earth’s topography; Australia’s remarkable social media ban; the tech industry’s new Trumpian politics; and, as a treat, a glimpse of the apocalypse offered by one of Silicon Valley’s savviest and strangest billionaires.At the close of 2024, I wrote that Elon Musk’s support of Donald Trump had made him the world’s most powerful unelected man

about 9 hours ago
A picture

Activist group says it has scraped 86m music files from Spotify

An activist group has claimed to have scraped millions of tracks from Spotify and is preparing to release them online.Observers said the apparent leak could boost AI companies looking for material to develop their technology.A group called Anna’s Archive said it had scraped 86m music files from Spotify and 256m rows of metadata such as artist and album names. Spotify, which hosts more than 100m tracks, confirmed that the leak did not represent its entire inventory.The Stockholm-based company, which has more than 700 million users worldwide, said it had “identified and disabled the nefarious user accounts that engaged in unlawful scraping”

1 day ago
A picture

Wounded England must salvage more than pride in MCG Boxing Day Ashes Test

The world famous Boxing Day Test awaits England’s beaten cricketers and we are about to discover whether the mighty coliseum that is the Melbourne Cricket Ground becomes their arena of the unwell; whether pride can be salvaged or it is just another stepping stone for Australia in their pursuit of an Ashes whitewash.Last year a record 373,691 spectators passed through the turnstiles across five days as Australia overcame India in a slow-burn thriller. This fourth Ashes Test was tipped to top that remarkable figure potentially but that will hinge on it similarly going the distance. It also needs the locals to be energised still by a series that has already been won by their team – even if simply beating the old enemy is usually enough.England lasted just seven sessions here four years ago, the match settled before lunch on day three when Scott Boland ran through them on debut like a bull down the streets of Pamplona

about 8 hours ago
A picture

English cricket meets Spinal Tap as Rob Key delivers latest Ashes autopsy | Barney Ronay

“It’s such a fine line between stupid and clever.” David St Hubbins, lead vocalist, Spinal Tap.“There’s a real difference between aggressive and dumb.” Rob Key, managing director, England cricket.Listening to Rob Key deliver the latest four‑yearly Ashes autopsy deep in the grey concrete underworld of the Melbourne Cricket Ground, it was tempting at first to conclude that what we have here is a basic category mistake

about 13 hours ago
sportSee all
A picture

Pat Cummins out of rest of Ashes series as Australia make two changes for MCG Test

about 23 hours ago
A picture

Rob Key to investigate England’s ‘stag do’ drinking habits on Noosa mid-Ashes break

about 23 hours ago
A picture

Sport stars ‘deeply concerned’ playing fields will be lost under planning reforms

1 day ago
A picture

Enchantingly old-school Mr Vango can thrill with Welsh Grand National win

1 day ago
A picture

McCullum admitting failure of his methods was gobsmacking but England are learning | Mark Ramprakash

1 day ago
A picture

Six balls in Perth to Harry Brook’s drop: 10 moments that decided the Ashes

1 day ago