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AAP
AAP
Melissa Woods

Coach Jones says he deserves brickbats and baguettes

Wallabies coach Eddie Jones has taken full responsibility for the shock World Cup loss to Fiji. (Andrew Cornaga/AAP PHOTOS)

Eddie Jones says he deserved jeers from the Saint-Etienne crowd and more after the Wallabies served up a stinker in their Rugby World Cup loss to Fiji.

The polarising coach was roundly booed by the full house at Stade Geoffroy-Guichard and he accepted blame for the historic 22-15 defeat which threatens Australia's quarter-final plans.

"After that I probably deserved more," Jones said when asked about the crowd.

"They should be throwing baguettes, croissants at me, I deserve whatever I get.

"I apologise, it's my fault and I take full responsibility for it."

The Wallabies have the youngest squad at the World Cup, with Jones overlooking the likes of long-time captain Michael Hooper and veteran playmakers Quade Cooper and Bernard Foley.

Their game plan fell apart without injured heavy-hitters, lock and skipper Will Skelton and prop Taniela Tupou with a telling 18-7 penalty count as the team struggled at the breakdown.

Rookie five-eighth Carter Gordon looked out of his depth and after some costly errors was replaced after 49 minutes.

With a home World Cup looming in 2027, Jones said the pain was necessary for any gain, although that's not the news Wallabies fans who have made the trip to France want to hear.

The loss is their sixth from seven games since he took over for a second stint as coach.

"We've gone with a young team but I've got no regrets at all," Jones said.

"We are building a team for the future and we are going to go through some pain.

"I made the decision to go for a younger team and if that's the wrong decision then I will be held accountable for that but I think Australian rugby needs to move on to a younger team.

"I am prepared to go through some pain to leave Australia with a team capable of doing really well in a World Cup and that's not to say we can't do it, we've had a bit of a setback today but that's all part of being in a World Cup. 

"I do remember South Africa lost a game and won a World Cup, so funny things have happened."

The Wallabies' hopes hang on defeating Pool C leaders Wales in Lyon next Sunday (Monday AEST) with bonus points and points differential from the two remaining rounds likely to come into play.

He gave no hints about what line-up changes he might make for the unbeaten Welsh, although said both Skelton (calf) and Tupou (hamstring) would not play.

As well as their first World Cup loss to Fiji, Australia hadn't been beaten by the Pacific Islanders in 69 years and Jones said it "hurt" to see such a record broken on his watch.

"It definitely hurts me personally, 100 per cent, and as I said, I'm 100 per cent responsible for it," he said.

"We had a bad day, which can happen, and we've got to be better next week so that's my responsibility too."

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