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MATTHEW WILKIE DESCRIBES himself as a “curious learner” and it’s an element of his personality that appears to make him ideally suited for his role as the IRFU’s head of coach development.

The Australian has been in the job since 2016 and works directly with professional coaches around the country, as well as overseeing the programmes that guide the development of coaches at grassroots levels.

Essentially, his job is to make coaches better at coaching.

Matt Wilkie at an IRFU coaching conference. Source: Irish Rugby TV

While we might instinctively think that involves Wilkie guiding coaches on a tactical and technical learning journey, he is more interested in how coaching is done, rather than the specific content.

“The key thing successful coaches have is probably off the field,” explains Wilkie. “It’s their ability to connect, the relationships they form with their players, and their ability to man-manage.

“I honestly don’t think it’s so much the technical, tactical, strategic – that’s a very small slice of the pie that maybe gives you a competitive edge at the very top level sometimes.

“But those interpersonal skills, communication, the emotional intelligence – those seem to be the key attributes of the successful coach.

“If you look at what drives them, most successful coaches at any level have a continual desire to learn. They never think they know it all.”

Throughout a thought-provoking discussion, Wilkie repeats the mantra that “context is king” and stresses that the attributes required to be a high-performance coach are different from those of a grassroots coach. But he firmly believes the “non-rugby elements” of the art are widely undervalued.

“People don’t know what they don’t know,” says Wilkie in highlighting that coaches can be unaware of how they’re communicating with players, although that doesn’t refer only to poor interaction.

“Even the really good coaches – and there are a lot of good coaches in Ireland – aren’t aware of how good they are in that relationships-connections piece. Working with them to acknowledge and appreciate that is important.”

Wilkie’s hands-on work is with the IRFU’s professional coaching staff – from the senior Ireland teams, through Munster, Leinster, Ulster and Connacht, the men’s and women’s 7s teams, the provincial academies, the Celtic Cup staffs, and national age-grade coaches.

Wilkie stresses that working with him is totally optional but the vast majority of coaches on the IRFU’s books have used him as a resource, mainly focusing on things like “leadership, communication, learning outcomes, and educational models.”

Wilkie works with individual coaches on a “bespoke basis” and the process starts with a one-on-one conversation, where the coach delivers self-evaluation to pinpoint their strengths and weaknesses.

“Even what they don’t say is really insightful because if a coach isn’t acknowledging certain areas that are important, it means they’re not aware of it and therefore not working on it.”

The scope of Wilkie’s role is large. Source: Irish Rugby TV

Once areas of development have been identified, Wilkie engages in video observation of the coach at team meetings and training sessions, as well as before, during and at half-time of games. Throughout this video observation, the coach wears a microphone to allow Wilkie to capture exactly what they’re saying.

The team meeting observation can be particularly revealing, with Wilkie having one camera on the coach and one directed at the players to note their levels of engagement. After the meeting, Wilkie will often grab a number of players and independently ask them about the three key things they’ve taken away from that meeting.

“Because if that’s not aligning to what the coach has said, then there’s something wrong there. If it is aligning, then we can identify what part of their delivery was effective so that they can keep doing that.”

At training sessions and during games, the coach will also be mic’d up and Wilkie will focus a camera directly on them, later syncing that footage with the video of the session or game itself. At half-time, Wilkie sets up two cameras in the changing room before getting out of the way.

“Coaches are often not conscious of how they behave and react and what they say. Most coaches reflect on training but very few will think about what they did and said during a game.”

After analysing the footage, Wilkie compiles a report and meets the coach, concluding with them putting in place a ‘learning and development plan.’

“For some that might be formal training and education around key aspects of high performance,” explains Wilkie.

“For others, it might be regularly throwing them journal articles, some podcasts, some books. It might be a second round of observation in a month’s time. That’s the bit that gets really individual.”

Wilkie is well qualified as a coaching expert, having started off as a P.E. teacher before joining the Australian Rugby Union in 2005 and spending over nine years there in a number of coach development roles, while also picking up a Master’s of Sports Coaching.

He worked with current IRFU performance director David Nucifora during that time and – following a one-year stint as the Queensland Reds’ team manager and another year heading up sports coaching at a third-level institute in Brisbane – accepted an offer from his ex-colleague to make the “big move” to Ireland with his young family in 2016.

Wilkie says his role with the IRFU is “pretty unique” within governing bodies and unions, and he has been pleased with the level of interest from professional coaches in using him as a resource.

“One thing I have learned is that coaches are looking for support. It’s very often an isolated life they lead because there aren’t too many people they can turn to.”

IRFU performance director David Nucifora worked at the ARU at the same time as Wilkie. Source: Dan Sheridan/INPHO

While much of his time is dedicated to helping the IRFU’s professional coaches to get better, Wilkie’s work overseeing the development of grassroots coaches in the clubs, schools, youths and all underage rugby is just as important.

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“That’s where the majority of our coaches sit, that’s where the majority of our players are,” says Wilkie.

“The impact they have on players and the health of the game far exceeds the impact the professional coaches have. They’re the ones responsible for winning the hearts and minds of players at all ages, then providing an environment where they start to develop.”

While Wilkie understands the temptation for youths and schools coaches to mimic starter plays and tactics they’ve seen Leinster or the All Blacks use, as well as focus purely on results, he stresses that the needs of the developing player have to be prioritised at these levels.

“If you take a schools player from that point of view, they’ve still got a lot of development and learning to do around understanding the game, their positional requirements, managing their recovery and all of that. It’s hard to measure that, it’s easier to measure the scoreboard each week.”

Wilkie has three IRFU staff underneath him centrally, while each province has four or five who are responsible for coach development and training in the grassroots game.

The IRFU has recently invested more heavily into online resources for coaches who can’t travel for face-to-face courses, while those in-person courses have been reshaped.

Interestingly, Wilkie is keen for underage coaches to get away from the traditional idea that they must progress up through the ranks in order to develop.

“We want to build what we call horizontal expertise, so getting rid of this idea that if you’re a good coach at U10s, you should keep moving up.

“Because Irish rugby needs the best U10s coaches that they can have. The role of that U10s coach is just as important as Leo Cullen’s role, for example. Because if they get that right at U10s and all the other bands are right, suddenly the health of the game gets better.”

Wilkie’s desk at the IRFU offices sits across from that of Nick Winkelman, the union’s director of athletic performance and science, and he has enjoyed bouncing ideas off the American, particularly with regards to their shared passion for the importance of language.

Listening to Wilkie in this area is engaging, as he details research that supports positive praise for players as a far more effective way to elicit behaviour change than negative error correction.

Wilkie has visited the Red Arrows to study their world-class review system. Source: Niall Carson

Winkelman and Wilkie teamed up to run a programme with a PhD student at the Cork Institute of Technology to study the effects of their coaching development workshops and interventions, with positive signs so far as the project moves into its third year.

To tie in with the various IRFU courses for coaches, Wilkie has been keen to bring in visiting experts to stimulate continuous learning.

He himself has visited the Royal Academy of Music and the Red Arrows in the UK to stimulate ideas, while he has an interest in the military and medicine industries for their expertise.

The likes of sports psychologist Bill Beswick, author Damian Hughes, self-determination theory expert Cliff Mallett, coaching figure Wayne Goldsmith, Google’s head of creativity Kirk Vallis and Wade Gilbert – who also met with the provinces and Joe Schmidt – have been among the visitors to IRFU conferences on Wilkie’s watch.

The Australian speaks with keen interest about these learning opportunities and other topics like games-based coaching – here, he stresses that “understanding the learning mechanisms that go in behind it” is essential.

It’s clear that he is brimming with energy to continue his work developing coaches at all levels in Ireland, and the same message crops up time and time again.

“Let’s focus on how we’re coaching, rather than what we’re coaching.”

Former England rugby star set for MMA stint

November 4, 2022 | News | No Comments

FORMER ENGLAND RUGBY star James Haskell is launching an MMA career, it has been announced.

The ex-Wasps man, who earned 77 caps for his country before announcing his retirement from the sport last May after a brief spell with Northampton Saints, has signed for leading mixed martial arts promotion Bellator MMA.

Haskell will compete in the heavyweight division and is expected to make his debut at a to-be-confirmed date in the first half of next year.

In 17 years as a professional rugby player, Haskell’s career highlights included English Premiership and European Heineken Cup success with Wasps.

His career also encompassed stints with Stade Francais in France, Ricoh Black Rams in Japan and Highlanders in New Zealand.

Making his England debut in 2007, the forward featured in squads for the 2011 and 2015 Rugby World Cups, and was a key player as his country won their first Six Nations Grand Slam for 13 years in 2016, while also helping them defend their title the following year.

The 6ft 4in athlete has been a long-time MMA fan, having previously worked as a TV pundit in the sport, in addition to training alongside British MMA star Michael “Venom” Page at London Shootfighters gym.

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TOMMY O’DONNELL is a doubt for Munster’s Champions Cup visit to Glasgow on Saturday evening after suffering an ankle injury during last weekend’s win over Racing 92.

The Tipp man had missed much of Munster’s preparation for the Racing clash with a left ankle injury, but it is a new injury to his right ankle that makes O’Donnell a doubt this week.

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O’Donnell was excellent in the first half against Racing. Source: James Crombie/INPHO

O’Donnell was forced off after 48 minutes of the victory in Racing, replaced by Jack O’Donoghue, having taken a blow to his right ankle after making a clearing kick in the first half.

Munster say O’Donnell will be “reviewed by the medical department as the week continues” but he is now a doubt for the crucial Pool 1 meeting with Glasgow on Saturday.

There are a number of other Munster players carrying bumps and bruises after last weekend’s game at Stade Yves du Manoir, with Donnacha Ryan taking a blow to the ribs and Conor Murray sustaining a knock on the thigh, but none are thought to be serious concerns at this stage.

Promising centre Sam Arnold suffered a knee injury while playing for Munster A in their British and Irish Cup win against Doncaster over the weekend, and was replaced at half-time.

The 20-year-old will undergo a scan this week for further investigation. Arnold missed the start of the season after damaging ligaments in his knee soon after joining from Ulster.

More positively for Munster, second row Jean Kleyn and and loosehead prop Thomas Du Toit will return to full training this week after missing the Racing clash due to illness.

Still on Munster’s official injury list are Mike Sherry [back], Darren Sweetnam [knee], Duncan Casey [knee], Alex Wootton [shoulder], Cathal Sheridan [broken leg], Sean McCarthy [knee] and Mark Chisholm [concussion].

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THERE IS NO more appetising fixture in this European rugby weekend.

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Munster go to Glasgow this afternoon (17.30, Sky Sports) with a three-point buffer to work with, but on their home synthetic turf, the Warriors are a team to be feared. And make no mistake, they have an intense longing for the European knock-out stages themselves.

Gregor Townsend will leave the club at the end of this season to take a promotion into the Scottish head coach role. His time in Glasgow has been a period of complete positive transformation. From the move out of the football ground of Firhill in favour of establishing a true home in Scotstoun, to the implementation of an exciting brand of rugby that helped them raise expectations to threaten and then break the Irish-Welsh dominance of the Pro12 by comprehensively beating Munster in the final.

The one big tick missing from Townsend’s list of goals is a place in Europe’s knock-out rounds.

Munster may be in the Pool 1 driver’s seat, but Glasgow can force their way back to the top of the table today by winning while denying the southern province any bonus points.

As befits Townsend’s overall demeanour, the Warriors were perfectly respectful when they were the unfortunate team left to face a Munster team fuelled by grief and anguish in October.

However, while they took a beating from 14 men with good grace that day, there has been some evidence of a sour taste in the mouth since.

After losing a Pro12 tussle at home to an Ian Keatley drop-goal in December, Fraser Brown previewed his return to Champions Cup action by raising his ‘disappointment’ – as scathing a word as modern professionals will reach for – with an interview where Keith Earls suggested the hooker had ‘milked’ the incident brought a red card for the Moyross man on an emotional day at Thomond Park. A quick investigation prompted Earls to apologise and retract the words. He did. We all moved on.

Source: Dan Sheridan/INPHO

The Warriors will be utterly fired up to exact some retribution for the hammering in Limerick, though. They have forced their way back into the Pro12 top four while stringing five straight wins together since back-to-back home defeats to Ospreys and Munster, yet Rassie Erasmus’ men have the form book firmly on their side.

December’s defeat away to Leicester ended their brilliant seven-game unbeaten run. Yet the late narrow loss remains Munster’s only defeat in 11 and they are growing in confidence and precision with each passing week.

Win today, put one hand a home quarter-final berth and there’s no telling where that rediscovered belief might take them.

Glasgow Warriors:

15. Stuart Hogg
14. Tommy Seymour
13. Mark Bennett
12. Alex Dunbar
11. Lee Jones
10. Finn Russell
9. Ali Price

1. Gordon Reid
2. Fraser Brown
3. Zander Fagerson
4. Tim Swinson
5. Jonny Gray (captain)
6. Rob Harley
7. Ryan Wilson
8. Josh Strauss

Replacements:

16. Pat MacArthur
17. Alex Allan
18. D’arcy Rae
19. Matt Fagerson
20. Chris Fusaro
21. Grayson Hart
22. Nick Grigg
23. Peter Murchie

Munster:

15. Simon Zebo
14. Andrew Conway
13. Jaco Taute
12. Rory Scannell
11. Keith Earls
10. Tyler Bleyendaal
9. Conor Murray

1. Dave Kilcoyne
2. Niall Scannell
3. John Ryan
4. Jean Kleyn
5. Donnacha Ryan
6. Peter O’Mahony (captain)
7. Jack O’Donoghue
8. CJ Stander

Replacements:

16. Rhys Marshall
17. James Cronin
18. Thomas Du Toit
19. Dave Foley
20. Billy Holland
21. Duncan Williams
22. Ian Keatley
23. Francis Saili

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Rockwell College 28-18 St Munchin’s College

ROCKWELL COLLEGE OVERCAME St Munchin’s College with a 28-18 win in an entertaining first round of the Munster Schools Senior Cup at Clanwilliam Park today.

The 26-time champions’ smart use of possession and strong bench ultimately swung it in their favour.

Munchins started brightly, Jason Kiely landing an early penalty for the Limerick school after some high-throttle attacking led by their pack.

Rockwell’s gritty defence meant that despite little early possession they made it to the 20-minute mark on level terms, a good kick-chase and subsequent Jake Flannery penalty getting them on the scoreboard at 3-3.

The contest’s first try came from a lineout maul with Rockwell captain Kevin Kelly touching down in the corner.

Soon afterwards the Rockwell back line finally got to show its worth as a flowing move resulted in Christopher Egan sending his back three partner Ryan O’Sullivan clear in the corner, with Flannery adding the extras to make it 15-3.

Munchins responded immediately with a Luke Costello break penetrating the determined Rockwell defence, though Kiely missed the conversion to leave it 15-8 at half time.

Munchins started brightly after the restart, Shane Kelly finishing off a flowing move which came after a well-orchestrated lineout and strong pick-and-go carrying. Kiely had the chance to draw the sides level with his conversion but was off target again.

Munchins conceded a yellow card and a penalty soon after, which Flannery duly converted to nudge Rockwell into an 18-13 lead.

But an extended period of Munchins pressure ultimately culminated in a yellow card for Flannery and a try for just-introduced Tyrone O’Halloran to bring the sides level.

It was as close as Munchins got. A spectacular individual try from Padraig Leamy immediately reasserted Rockwell’s lead before Flannery added another penalty in the dying minutes to send his side 10 points clear and through to the quarter-final.

Scorers for Rockwell: Tries: Kevin Kelly, Ryan O’Sullivan, Padraig Leamy. Conversions: Jake Flannery, Ryan O’Sullivan. Penalties: Jake Flannery (3)

St Munchin’s: Tries: Luke Costello, Shane Kelly, Tyrone O’Halloran. Penalty: Jason Kiely.

Rockwell College

15. Ryan O’Sullivan
14. Christopher Egan
13. Padraig Leamy
12. Andrew Daly
11. Joe McCormack
10. Jake Flannery (sin-bin 59’)
9. Oisin Mangan

1. Kevin Kelly (capt)
2. James O’Meara
3. Brendan Ryan
4. Christopher Farrell
5. Conall Kennedy (sin-bin 7’)
6. Patrick Murchan
7. Jack Harney
8. Ciaran Ryan

Replacements:

16. Darragh Molloy
17. Niall O’Hanrahan
18. Tom Russell
19. Coman Ryan
20. Harry Tobin
21. Joseph O’Connor
22. Fionn Kiely
23. Michael McMahon
24. Conor Forrest
25. Sean Cotter

St Munchin’s College

15. Rob Clancy
14. Luke Costello
13. Gary Quilligan
12. Eoghan Carr
11. Shane Murphy
10. Jason Kiely
9. Evan Maher (sin-bin 47’)

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1. Mark O’Driscoll
2. Darren Radcliffe
3. Gary McCoy
4. Paddy Kelly
5. Kealon McMahon (capt)
6. Mark Crowe
7. Jake Murphy
8. Shane Kelly

Replacements:

16. Evan Sheahan-O’Donnell
17. Karl Mullane
18. Keith Hyland
19. Shane Ryan/Jack Forde
20. Riann O’Dwyer
21. James Larkin
22. Jordan Curry
23. Jude Pendijito
24. Tyrone O’Halloran
25. Tom Harrington

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Welcome to the pit stop of sporting weekends

October 31, 2022 | News | No Comments

HOW DID THIS happen? Who is responsible? What cruel global conspiracy contrived a weekend pretty much without sport?

Is it the result of a hastily scribbled Trump executive order? Frankly, I’d prefer waterboarding.

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Is it the final twist of some dreadful January detox program?

“I’ve stayed off the drink, given up the fags, cut out the red meat…now this?!”

Is it just a dreadful, unfortunate mistake?

Of course, there is actually sport on this weekend, if you fancy broadening your palette away from the “big three” of soccer, GAA and rugby.

You really should stay up until the wee small hours and watch Carl Frampton defend his WBA featherweight title in an eagerly awaited rematch with Leo Santa Cruz.

Frampton was named The Ring magazine’s 2016 Fighter of the Year and is now being talked about as the greatest Irish boxer of all time.

There’s decent racing on, including at Cheltenham; though apparently there’s another meeting there in March that’ll be more worth your while.

Ah, but what about the tennis? The Australian Open finals? The Williams sisters (sort of) battling it out; the great Roger Federer and his quest for a fairytale 18th Grand Slam title?

On too early. Sport before breakfast doesn’t count. Anyway, what kind of weirdo gets up at 8am on a Sunday? [ahem…cough…]

No, what’s missing is the type of sport that’s normally plonked in the middle of your weekend, dominating your life, keeping you away from the twin threats of family and fresh air.

Matches. Big, fat matches. Build up, first half, half-time-was-it-a-penalty-Jamie?, second half, post-match-lets-hear-from-the-winning-manager…then flick and do it all again.

Here’s the grim picture. There are no major rugby fixtures on, with the authorities declaring an off week between the conclusion of the European Champions Cup pool stage and the beginning of the Six Nations. This is much like the way warring medieval kings would declare a truce to clear away the piles of dead bodies before resuming the bloody carnage.

Proper GAA action doesn’t start until next week, in the shape of the Allianz Football League. The league is often criticised because it takes three months to play, no-one really cares who wins and all memory of it is magically wiped away by the middle of May.

But we are damn glad of it when it comes around. Purists will point to this weekend’s finals of the January pre-season competitions, suggesting healthy attendances as evidence of their worth. But then people in Soviet Russia used to queue for hours to buy a potato.

Then there’s the football. Sorry to break it to you, but there’s no Premier League this weekend. It’s the FA Cup fourth round, you see.

Most of us have a similar relationship with the FA Cup as we have with the Irish language. We know it’s part of the heritage and that it’s important it is preserved, but frankly it has very little relevance to our lives today.

In many ways the FA Cup is England’s GAA: a vast, democratic edifice that reaches from the smallest hamlet right up to the great cathedrals of the national game.

Sure it’s Southampton against Arsenal this weekend, but last August it was Hemsworth Miners Welfare taking on Runcorn Linnets (the miners digging out a 2-1 win, naturally).

But while the FA Cup is fine in the romantic flush of its early rounds, and later on when stuttering giants are desperately looking for a bit of silverware, it’s the bit in the middle that’s the problem. The bit where the colliery towns and factory works teams are gone and it’s just disinterested Premier League squad players shuffling about, like sulky teenagers visiting their granny’s house. Give it a miss.

So what is the sports fan to do this weekend? You could go to the cinema. Try La-La Land. It’s ridiculously overhyped and has suffered a huge backlash, but contains undoubted flourishes of aesthetic beauty. Think Pep Guardiola at Manchester City.

Star Wars: Rogue One is a story of what happens when a brave rebel defies an all-powerful emperor and pays the ultimate price, much like what happened when Ian Madigan moved to France.

Trolls? That’s enough about Joe Brolly.

But don’t worry, in the next few weeks we’ve got the Super Bowl, the Six Nations, the GAA leagues, Champions League, Premier League etc, etc…all building up to that mad March weekend with the Cheltenham Gold Cup, the club GAA finals, Michael Conlan’s fight, Manchester City v Liverpool, Kerry v Dublin in the league, Ireland v England in the rugby….[deep breath].

So think of this as a fallow weekend before the harvest to come. Go for a walk, read a book, learn Tai Chi. Hell, give The42 a rest; click on a fact check in TheJournal, or read a funny meme on the Daily Edge. Take a break this weekend.

Take a break this weekend.

You’re going to need it.

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Division 1A

St Mary’s College 27-18 Old Belvedere

Templeville Road

Old Belvo’s Chalie Rock recently made his Leinster debut. Source: Donall Farmer/INPHO

ST. MARY’S COLLEGE snapped their four-match losing streak in the Ulster Bank League with a much-needed 27-18 bonus point victory over south Dublin rivals Old Belvedere at Templeville Road.

Belvedere, who qualified for the Bateman Cup final last week, were 15-0 winners when the sides met at Anglesea Road in early December. They included Charlie Rock – a recent Leinster debutant – at scrum half, while his Academy colleague Terry Kennedy featured at full-back for the hosts.

Out-half Willie Staunton drifted a second minute penalty past the posts for ‘Belvo and it was his opposite number, versatile youngster Dave Fanagan, who opened the scoring with a comfortable strike at the other end.

Although Daniel Riordan and Rock were combining to good effect for the visitors, a stray offload on 17 minutes allowed Fanagan to set the wheels in motion for Mary’s opening try. Having broken out of defence, he passed wide to Conor Hogan and in attempting to prevent the winger from scoring, Belvedere’s Shane McDonald conceded a penalty try and was also sin-binned.

Mary’s confidence was growing as the first half went on. Staunton opened ‘Belvo’s account off the tee before Hogan touched down from a Paddy O’Driscoll assist for Mary’s second seven-pointer – Fanagan’s second conversion went over with the aid of the woodwork. The latter then crossed for a try of his own in the 29th minute, at the end of a sweeping attack.

The margin stood at 22-6 at the turnaround, with Staunton landing his second penalty following a yellow card for Mary’s replacement back rower Jack Dilger. From their very first attack of the second half, ‘Belvo’s McDonald drifted in off his right wing to collect a pass and dot down in style for Staunton convert.

However, Mary’s kept their discipline in defence and by the time Dilger returned, they were still in the driving seat. Just before the hour mark, a strong maul got them into scoring range and when the ball was turned loose, Mary’s captain Brian McGovern finished off the bonus point try.

Belvedere did have the better of the closing stages, but they missed out on a losing bonus point when Rock missed the conversion of replacement David Brandon’s late try which came from a magnificent passage of play involving several players.

ST. MARY’S COLLEGE: Terry Kennedy; Ryan O’Loughlin, Darren Moroney, Paddy Lavelle, Conor Hogan; Dave Fanagan, Paddy O’Driscoll; Tom O’Reilly, Richard Halpin, Brian McGovern (capt), Ciaran Ruddock, Cathal O’Flaherty, Hugh Kelleher, Nick McCarthy, Kevin Sheahan.

Replacements: Hugo Kean, Cathal Ryan, Jack Dilger, Conor Gilsenan, Zach O’Hagan.

OLD BELVEDERE: Daniel Riordan; Shane McDonald, John Kennedy (capt), James Kearns, Sean Coughlan; Willie Staunton, Charlie Rock; Jonathan Inglis, Cathal O’Flynn, Adam Howard, Connor Owende, Jack Kelly, Jonathan Slattery, Michael Oyuga, David Sherry.

Replacements: Brian Coyle, Killian Foley, Karl Miller, David Brandon, Aaron Sheehan.

_____________________________________

Dublin University 0-29 Clontarf

College Park

Clontarf’s Royce Burke-Flynn. Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

Clontarf were the only team in the Division 1A to win both back-to-back fixtures either side of Christmas as they whitewashed Dublin University 29-0 at College Park.

Hirsute winger Mick McGrath grabbed the headlines with four tries, including a second half hat-trick, as ‘Tarf followed up on their 33-0 home win over the students in the last round.

Aided by other results yesterday, Andy Wood’s men have climbed back into the top four ahead of next Friday night’s clash with lowly Terenure College back at Castle Avenue.

There was little between the teams in the first half, Trinity defending stoutly with ever-alert flanker Brian du Toit stealing possession on two occasions to break up promising ‘Tarf attacks.

Tommy Whittle injured himself during a try-saving tackle, so regular out-half Jack McDermott made his return off the bench. After two penalty misses by Rob Keogh, the visitors finally broke the deadlock when loose ball led to McGrath barrelling through in the 25th minute for Keogh to convert.

The students started the second period in very good fettle, their strong scrum continuing to make an impression and winger Bryan Mollen was just fingertips away from an intercept try.

However, ‘Tarf pushed on and went 14-0 ahead when good work in midfield by David Joyce and Matt D’Arcy saw McGrath complete his brace. Trinity, willed on by the consistent excellence of scrum half Slater and du Toit, went close again but a knock-on at a 62nd minute maul, five metres out, robbed them of a real try-scoring opportunity.

The students felt aggrieved at some of referee Leo Colgan’s decisions, including his interpretation of a couple of high tackles from ‘Tarf on Slater. A Keogh penalty made it 17-0 before McGrath added two more tries late on, either side of Trinity captain Jack Burke’s sin-binning for a high tackle – a decision which capped off another frustrating day at the office for Tony Smeeth’s youngsters. They are second-from-bottom now and need to produce a big performance away to Cork Constitution next week.

DUBLIN UNIVERSITY: Colm Hogan; Tim Maupin, Michael Courtney, Kyle Dixon, Bryan Mollen; Tommy Whittle, Brian Slater; Eric O’Sullivan, Paddy Finlay, Andy Keating, Jack Burke (capt), Cian O’Dwyer, Pierce Dargan, Brian du Toit, Tom Ryan.

Replacements: Jack Boland, Darragh Higgins, Niall O’Riordan, Daniel Joyce, Jack McDermott.

CLONTARF: Jack Power; Rob Keogh, Michael Brown, Matt D’Arcy, Mick McGrath; Mark Sutton, Peter du Toit; Vakh Abdaladze, Jason Harris-Wright, Royce Burke Flynn, Ben Reilly (capt), Mick Kearney, Michael Noone, Adrian D’Arcy, Tony Ryan.

Replacements: Jonathan Larbey, Karl Moran, Dylan Doyle, Sam Cronin, David Joyce.

_____________________________________

Terenure College 27-17 Garryowen 17

Lakelands Park

Terenure head coach James Blaney. Source: Dan Sheridan/INPHO

Bottom side Terenure College lifted their spirits with a well-earned 27-17 success at home to Garryowen, reversing last month’s 41-26 defeat to the same opposition.

Obviously fired up by James Blaney’s half-time words and armed with a second half wind advantage, Terenure thrilled their Lakelands Park faithful with a 27-point performance over the closing 40 minutes.

The result put an end to their six-match losing run in the league and provides some vital momentum to their bid to avoid relegation. They are now nine points behind UCD at the foot of the table, but February could make or break them with three games against title-chasing teams – Clontarf, Young Munster and Cork Constitution.

Sitting in fourth place before kick-off, Garryowen had to wait until just before half-time to open the scoring. Two line breaks were clinically finished by scrum half and captain Neil Cronin (33 minutes) and centre Hugh O’Brien-Cunningham (37) for unconverted tries and a 10-0 interval lead.

However, the third quarter really belonged to resilient ‘Nure who cut the gap thanks to two well-struck penalties from out-half Mark O’Neill after 47 and 51 minutes.

The hosts’ first seven-pointer followed just four minutes later, referee Mark Patton awarding them a penalty try after the Light Blues had cynically pulled down a lineout maul on their own whitewash.

Now trailing 13-10, it soon descended into a nightmare scenario for Garryowen as persistent infringing saw O’Brien-Cunningham sin-binned and they were down to 13 men when Steven McMahon – the hat-trick hero from the sides’ first meeting on December 3 – saw yellow for a high tackle in the corner on the advancing Sam Coghlan Murray.

Terenure’s numerical advantage paid off with 12 minutes remaining when influential number 10 O’Neill used turnover ball to send centre Marc Hiney over for a converted score – 20-10.

O’Neill’s opposite number Jamie Gavin was then binned for offside. That left them with 14 players and ‘Nure copper-fastened the win with Hiney’s second try via a powerful fend out wide. Garryowen full-back Andrew O’Byrne grabbed a late consolation try converted by Cronin, but there was no bonus point for the ill-disciplined Limerick side who have fallen one place to fifth.

Terenure College scorers:
Tries: Marc Hiney x2, Penalty try
Conversions: Mark O’Neill x3
Penalties: Mark O’Neill x2
Garryowen scorers:
Tries: Neil Cronin, Hugh O’Brien-Cunningham, Andrew O’Byrne
Conversions: Neil Cronin

TERENURE COLLEGE: James O’Donoghue; Jake Swaine, Marc Hiney, Conor Finn, Sam Coghlan Murray; Mark O’Neill, Kevin O’Neill; Kieran Moloney, Robbie Smyth, Oisin Heffernan, Mike Murphy, Kyle McCoy (capt), Harrison Brewer, Stephen Caffrey, Eoin Joyce.

Replacements: Risteard Byrne, Gary Hamilton, John Dever, Conor Weakliam, Willie Devane.

GARRYOWEN: Andrew O’Byrne; Steven McMahon, Hugh O’Brien-Cunningham, Dave McCarthy, Dylan Sheehan; Jamie Gavin, Neil Cronin (capt); Niall Horan, Diarmaid Barron, Mike O’Donnell, Tim Ferguson, Barra O’Byrne, Johnny Keane, Alwyn van Vuuren, Bailey Faloon.

Replacements: Caolan Moloney, Jack Mullany, Mike Wilson, Dara Shanahan, Ronan O’Halloran, Conor Oliver.

_____________________________________

UCD 17-3 Cork Constitution 

Belfield Bowl

UCD’s Nick Peters with Ned Hodson of Cork Con. Source: Gary Carr/INPHO

A sterling defensive performance in the first half was followed by tries from Peadar Timmins and Stephen Murphy as UCD turned the tables on Cork Constitution at Belfield.

UCD’s last two league encounters with Constitution ended in whopping defeats – 58-15 at this venue last February and 50-25 on Leeside before Christmas.

However, a reinforced starting line-up, bolstered by the presence of Billy Dardis, Hugo Keenan, Jeremy Loughman, Sean McNulty and Peadar Timmins who were all back from Leinster ‘A’ duty, helped the students to carve out a determined 17-3 victory.

Cork Con should have been ahead at half-time but the 3-3 scoreline owed much to UCD’s ability to frustrate them in defence. Matthew Gilsenan and Tomas Quinlan swapped penalties inside the first 25 minutes, yet the visitors had nothing to show for a prolonged 15-minute spell in the College 22.

They also could not capitalise on two UCD yellow cards before the break. The students succeeded in disrupting the Con lineout, winning a crucial steal at the second attempt.

The home side had shown little in attack, but they looked the brighter team on the resumption as Ireland Sevens international Harry McNulty, playing on the left wing, and captain Jamie Glynn both found space and exploited it.

Con invited further pressure on them with a deliberate knock-on, and centre Stephen Murphy made them pay with a clever dummy and gliding run to the try-line. Gilsenan converted for 10-3.

UCD’s tails were up now and a second converted effort followed from Leinster ‘A’ captain Timmins who finished off good work from Josh Murphy and Sean McNulty. Gilsenan supplied the extras again, and flanker Murphy, who had a great impact off the bench, managed to disrupt the Con lineout again as the Bateman Cup finalists struggled to respond.

A terrific kick chase by Glynn and Harry McNulty summed up UCD’s greater desire and work-rate on the day, with the result seeing Andy Skehan’s charges climb back up to seventh overall. Cork Con had dropped one place to third following their first defeat in seven league rounds.

UCD: Billy Dardis; Hugo Keenan, Jamie Glynn (capt), Stephen Murphy, Harry McNulty; Matthew Gilsenan, Nick Peters; Jeremy Loughman, Sean McNulty, Liam Hyland, Brian Cawley, Emmet MacMahon, Greg Jones, Alex Penny, Peadar Timmins.

Replacements: Gordon Frayne, Stephen McGivern, Josh Murphy, Sean McKeon, Andy Marks.

CORK CONSTITUTION: Liam O’Connell; Alex McHenry, Ned Hodson, Niall Kenneally (capt), Rob Jermyn; Tomas Quinlan, Jason Higgins; Gavin Duffy, Max Abbott, Rory Burke, Conor Kindregan, Brian Hayes, Luke Cahill, James Murphy, Evan Mintern.

Replacements: Ger Sweeney, Graeme Lawler, Cian Barry, John Poland, Darragh Lyons.

_____________________________________

Young Munster 19-10 Landsdowne

Tom Clifford Park

 

Lansdowne. Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

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Young Munster have reduced Lansdowne’s lead at the top of Division 1A to a single point following their impressive 19-10 win over the table toppers at Tom Clifford Park.

Multi-talented Tipperary teenager Alan Tynan showed his coolness under pressure by kicking 14 points in what was a huge game for his club, coming on the back of last month’s 30-24 loss at Lansdowne.

The Cookies did themselves and other play-off hopefuls a big favour with this hard-earned victory which moves them above Munster rivals Cork Constitution into second place.

Almost all of the scoring came in the first half, but telling Lansdowne were unable to make the most of the attacking qualities possessed by the four Ireland Sevens internationals in their back-line – Mark Roche, Tom Daly, John O’Donnell and Alan Bennie.

Munster duo Dan Goggin (another Sevens international) and Cian Bohane provided plenty of work for the Lansdowne defence in midfield, and it was the latter who broke through for a 23rd minute try, converted by out-half Tynan for a 13-3 lead.

Tynan had opened the scoring with successive penalties after 8 and 10 minutes, before Scott Deasy, who recently became the first Lansdowne player to score 500 league points, split the posts with 21 minutes on the clock.

Limerick man Bennie snipped through in typical scrum half fashion for a Lansdowne try, with Deasy supplying the extras, however a third successful penalty from Tynan, a recent member of the Ireland Under-20 training squad, closed out the first half 16-10 in Munsters’ favour.

The second period was just as gripping, although scores proved hugely difficult to come by. In the end, a fourth and final penalty goal from the left boot of Tynan was enough to see the home side over the line and send Lansdowne home pointless, with their head coach Ruddock still awaiting his first victory at Greenfields.

YOUNG MUNSTER: Shane Airey; Craig O’Hanlon, Dan Goggin, Cian Bohane, Jack Harrington; Alan Tynan, Rob Guerin; Gavin Ryan, Ger Slattery, Colm Skehan, Alan Ross, Sean Duggan (capt), Alan Kennedy, Dan Walsh, Darren Ryan.

Replacements: David Begley, Shane Fenton, Ben Kilkenny, Abrie Griesel, David O’Mahony.

LANSDOWNE: Eamonn Mills; Daniel McEvoy, Mark Roche, Tom Daly, John O’Donnell; Scott Deasy, Alan Bennie; Peter Dooley, Tyrone Moran, Ian Prendiville (capt), Josh O’Rourke, Stephen Gardiner, Willie Earle, Charlie Butterworth, Max Deegan.

Replacements: James Rael, Ntinga Mpiko, Barry Fitzpatrick, Matthew D’Arcy, Charlie McMickan.

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FOLLOWING A DISAPPOINTING defeat at Murrayfield, Ireland head coach Joe Schmidt will name his match-day squad for their second tie of this year’s Six Nations on Thursday.

Before he does, we’d like to hear who would make your selection for the clash with the Azzuri on Saturday (KO 14.25 Irish time), from 1-23 and why, in the comments section below.

Starting on the back foot, and having ruled out their chances of winning both the Grand Slam and Triple Crown, Ireland seek redemption at the Stadio Olimpico and need their strongest possible side to do so.

Ireland team manager Paul Dean stated that there were no new injury concerns for Ireland at Carton House yesterday, but the fate of Johnny Sexton is still unclear.

So what changes will you make to last week’s match-day squad? Let us know who you think should make it this weekend in the comments section below.

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BERNARD O’BYRNE has claimed ‘five or six’ sports federations have colluded in advance of Thursday’s vote to elect the next president of the Olympic Council of Ireland.

O’Byrne, the current Chief Executive of Basketball Ireland, will be on tomorrow’s ballot alongside acting OCI president Willie O’Brien and Swim Ireland’s Sarah Keane.

But speaking to Ger Gilroy on Newstalk’s Off The Ball this evening, O’Byrne painted a picture of a tainted, corrupt process.

“I know there are other deals done in advance of it. I haven’t done any deals. I’ve declared who I’m going to vote for for the officerships”, he said.

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He was then pressed by Gilroy on what he meant by ‘deals’.

“Five or six federations went into a room and carved up the positions between them, that they were all going to vote for each other. ‘You have the presidency, you have the vice-presidency, you have a place on the Executive’”, O’Byrne said.

For legal reasons, O’Byrne would not confirm what federations were present in the room but said such behaviour and those responsible for it were well-known.

“Everybody knows it. One of them that was at the meeting told me. That’s the reason I know. They were actually in the room. That shouldn’t happen. That absolutely shouldn’t happen and I wouldn’t go near it”.

O’Byrne also claimed that he was approached about becoming OCI treasurer as a compromise.

“I was sounded out – did I want the treasurership? It was a very short answer. And it was left at that. ‘We have our preference for presidency, would you like the treasurership?’ – that type of thing. Somebody else might describe that as good electioneering and good tactics. What it isn’t is open and it’s not transparent”.

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The ex-England hooker has agreed a two-year deal with the Pro12 club and will start the job when his short-term spell coaching role with Toulon comes to an end.

Assistant coaches Stevie Scott and Pete Wilkins will remain in their current roles.

46-year-old Cockerill, capped 27 times at international level, retired from playing in 2005 spent 12 years at Leicester Tigers but was sacked position as director of rugby last month.

“I am very much looking forward to a new challenge and the opportunity at Edinburgh Rugby ticked all the boxes,” Cockerill said.

“It’s a real rugby city, and the club has a lot of potential to grow on, and off, the pitch.

“The conversations I had with (Scottish Rugby chief executive) Mark Dodson and Scott Johnson (Scottish Rugby director of rugby) were instrumental in understanding what the vision for Edinburgh Rugby is and it is a project I’m excited to be a part of.

“I’m also relishing the chance of coaching in the Guinness PRO12, which is a new league for me, and working with a clearly talented group of players.”

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