England coach Eddie Jones has indicated his intention to move to a different sport on achieving his ultimate goal of winning the Rugby World Cup.
The 56-year-old coached the Wallabies to the 2003 World Cup final after defeating the All Blacks in the semi-finals. However, Jones' dreams were shattered when they lost to the eventual champions England in the final. In the 2015 World Cup, Jones coached Japan to a historic win over the Springboks.
Having taken over from Stuart Lancaster, Jones has now set his sight on winning the 2019 World Cup in Japan with the red rose team.
"I want to win the World Cup but once you've won the World Cup I think there's other projects you could be involved in to make the game better," Jones told BBC Radio Five Live's Sportsweek.
"I'm lucky to be involved in a great sport like rugby and having done something with Japan that people thought you couldn't do, I'd love to do that in another country.
"Who knows - we'll wait until end of the World Cup then we'll take it from there."
Jones' current contract with the England team will end with the 2019 World Cup and the Rugby Football Union chief executive Ian Ritchie has already expressed his interest on extending his contract.
Jones believes better communication with players is essential for the success of the team.
He added: "I don't think they (the players) are frightened but in any high-performance environment you need a certain level of discomfort.
"As a coach the players are never your friends. You have a great deal of respect for them but you've got to have a certain level of emotional distance because you're in a working situation and half the week you're telling them you love them, and then there's some parts of the week you're telling players they're not going to play."
Currently, England are on a nine-match unbeaten streak under Jones and the former New South Wales hooker has challenged his team to maintain the record until the end of the year.
England's autumn internationals will kick-off against Springboks on 12th November at Twickenham followed by Tests against Australia, Argentina and Fiji.
"That (remaining unbeaten all year) is the target," added Jones. "We've put ourselves in a great position to achieve that but that would be the icing on the cake.
"What's more important is that the players keep growing, the team keeps developing, because ultimately we want to win the World Cup in 2019."