Rugby Australia set to announce Les Kiss as next Wallabies coach | Australia rugby union team

The protracted process to secure Les Kiss as the next Wallabies coach has been finalised with the Queensland Reds mentor to be the fifth man to fill the seat in six years. Kiss is expected to front the media in Sydney on Wednesday before flying to Suva to join the Reds squad ahead of Saturday’s crucial Super Rugby Pacific encounter with Fiji.

He is contracted until the end of next year at the Reds, who sit fourth and are eyeing a title push this season. But it is understood the Queensland Rugby Union and Rugby Australia have negotiated a release for the former representative rugby league winger, who arrived at Ballymore last year after two decades in Europe.

He will replace Joe Schmidt, who decided in February that he would vacate the role for family reasons after the Rugby Championship ends in October. New Zealand media have reported that Schmidt would be open to a consultancy role once he departs but only if asked by his successor.

The appointment comes ahead of the 2027 World Cup in Australia and with the Wallabies, still ranked No 8 in the world, slowly gaining traction after a horror 2023 World Cup campaign under Eddie Jones when they were knocked out at the group stage for the first time.

Kiss was a Queensland State of Origin and Kangaroos winger, who played 100 games for the North Sydney Bears in the 1980s and 1990s.

After a brief stint coaching rugby league he fell into a role as the Springboks’ defence coach, before assisting the NSW Waratahs and then heading to Europe. There he had success alongside Schmidt with Ireland before becoming director of rugby at Irish province Ulster.

A move to England to coach London Irish was swiftly ended when the club hit financial issues in 2023, with Kiss swooping when Brad Thorn left his post at the Reds.

Kiss’s resume has prompted widespread endorsement and he will inherit a solid core of Wallabies who have committed until at least the 2027 showpiece.

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Jones, signed to a five-year deal, lasted just nine months after Dave Rennie was sensationally axed ahead of the 2023 World Cup. New Zealander Rennie coached the side during the Covid-19 period, stepping into the role after Michael Cheika quit following their heavy 2019 World Cup quarter-final loss to England.

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