The Welsh Rugby Union has appointed Dave Reddin as its new director of rugby, confirming the move on Friday. The role hands Reddin oversight of both the men’s and women’s programmes — and the pressure is already immense.
Dave Reddin Takes Charge as Wales Director of Rugby
Reddin arrives with serious credentials. He has held high-level fitness and performance positions at England rugby, the English Football Association, and Team GB, making him one of the most experienced performance operators in British sport. Now, though, he faces arguably his toughest brief yet — halting a 17-match losing streak that has been bleeding Welsh rugby dry since the 2023 Rugby World Cup.
His immediate priority is securing a new men’s head coach following Warren Gatland’s departure. Gatland stepped down as that run of defeats mounted, and Wales need a replacement fast. According to sources, Scotland defence coach Steve Tandy is currently the frontrunner for the job. However, securing Tandy won’t be straightforward — a compensation agreement must first be struck with the Scottish Rugby Union, and realistically, he is unlikely to be in position ahead of Wales’ summer tour of Japan.
Women’s Rugby World Cup Looms Large in Reddin’s First Season
Beyond the men’s crisis, Reddin must also steer the women’s side through a pivotal summer. The Women’s Rugby World Cup takes place in England later this year, and it represents his first major tournament as director. That said, Wales’ Women’s Six Nations campaign has done little to inspire confidence — they face the very real prospect of finishing bottom, with a final-round clash against Italy on Sunday standing between them and the wooden spoon.
Consequently, Reddin walks into a programme under pressure on two fronts simultaneously. Both squads need a rebuild, results need to turn, and public faith in Welsh rugby is fragile. The appointment signals the WRU’s intent to bring in a performance-focused operator who has worked at the very top of British sport. Whether that pedigree translates to results on the pitch — and quickly — is the only question that matters in Wales right now.

























