“Contract negotiations have been held privately behind the scenes and preparations are under way for his first return since the 2015 World Cup, at which he led [Japan] to a historic three wins.”
The Telegraph reports from sources with knowledge of discussions that Jones was due at the JRFU headquarters originally on Sunday, November 5 to interview for the role for a second time, but this was postponed due to his involvement with the Barbarians’ fixture against Wales in Cardiff a day earlier. The Australian was coaching the invitational side alongside New Zealander Scott Robertson.
Jones, Rugby Australia and the JRFU all either refused to comment on the Herald’s initial story, and when approached by the Telegraph this week all three maintained that position.
The claims out of Japan come as a further blow to Rugby Australia chairman, Hamish McLennan, who sacked New Zealander Dave Rennie and hired Jones just eight months out from a World Cup. Under Jones’s tutelage, the Wallabies finished third in Pool C, with Wales and Fiji progressing to the quarter-finals.
The Telegraph reported last month that Jones had denied to McLennan “on a number of occasions” that he had interviewed with the Japanese, prompting the chairman to back the head coach to see out his tenure, which would incorporate both the 2025 British and Irish Lions tour and a World Cup on home soil two years later.
“My understanding all along is that wherever he is in the world, Japan would take him back in some capacity in a heartbeat so there is a standing offer there to take him,” McLennan told the Telegraph. “We have asked him if he interviewed with Japan, and he has categorically denied it on a number of occasions, so we take him at his word.”
In the aftermath of the Herald’s report, McLennan added that he would be “surprised and disappointed” if the Wallabies head coach departed.
Reports out of Japan also suggested that the JRFU had enlisted the help of a recruitment and consultancy firm to hire their next head coach after the highs of a 2019 quarter-final were followed by an early exit this year.
Jones, whose mother was Japanese, has had a long association with the country, beginning as an assistant at Tokai University, Suntory Sungoliath and the Japan national team in the mid to late 1990s.
The Australian was at the helm on the Brave Blossoms’ most famous day, the 2015 World Cup victory over South Africa, during his three-year stint as head coach. Jones would later return to Suntory as director of rugby, a role he infamously held during his time as England head coach.