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Leinster vs Toulouse

Leinster | Official Matchday Programme of Leinster Rugby | Issue 12 Leinster vs Toulouse | EPCR Heineken Champions Cup Saturday 14th May, 2022 | KO 3pm | Aviva Stadium

Leinster | Official Matchday Programme of Leinster Rugby | Issue 12
Leinster vs Toulouse | EPCR Heineken Champions Cup
Saturday 14th May, 2022 | KO 3pm | Aviva Stadium

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ISSUE 12 | LEINSTER RUGBY OFFICIAL MATCHDAY PROGRAMME<br />

LEINSTER<br />

VS<br />

<strong>Toulouse</strong><br />

SAT 14 th MAY<br />

AVIVA STADIUM<br />

KO 3PM<br />

FRONT PAGE


POWERED BY NATURE<br />

CRAFTED FOR YOU<br />

TISSOTWATCHES.COM<br />

TISSOT, INNOVATORS BY TRADITION


Newstead Building A,<br />

UCD,<br />

Belfield,<br />

Dublin 4<br />

#LEIVTOU<br />

The Line up<br />

Telephone:<br />

012693224<br />

Fax:<br />

012693142<br />

E-mail:<br />

information@leinsterrugby.ie<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie<br />

10<br />

24<br />

EXECUTIVE MANAGEMENT<br />

President: John Walsh<br />

Chief Executive: Michael Dawson<br />

Honorary Secretary: Stuart Bayley<br />

Honorary Treasurer: Michael McGrail<br />

RUGBY MANAGEMENT<br />

Head Coach: Leo Cullen<br />

Senior Coach: Stuart Lancaster<br />

Head of Rugby Operations:<br />

Guy Easterby<br />

Assistant Coach: Robin McBryde<br />

Backs Coach: Felipe Contepomi<br />

Kicking Coach: Emmet Farrell<br />

Contact Skills Coach: Denis Leamy<br />

14<br />

PROGRAMME CREDITS<br />

Editorial Team: Marcus Ó Buachalla,<br />

Ryan Corry & Paul Cahill<br />

Advertising: Gary Nolan<br />

Design: Julian Tredinnick,<br />

Ignition Sports Media<br />

Photography: Sportsfile<br />

Chief Steward: Sword Security<br />

Ambulance: St. John’s Ambulance<br />

Medilink<br />

Event Control & Safety Services:<br />

Eamonn O’Boyle & Associates<br />

82<br />

86<br />

STAY<br />

CONNECTED<br />

& KEEP<br />

UP-TO-DATE<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 3


EPCR<br />

WELCOME<br />

MESSAGE<br />

A very warm welcome<br />

to this eagerlyanticipated<br />

Heineken<br />

Champions Cup semifinal<br />

match with<br />

both clubs just one<br />

tantalising step<br />

away from a coveted<br />

place in the Marseille<br />

Final on Saturday<br />

week (28 May).<br />

FRONT PAGE<br />

The chance to lift this coveted<br />

European silverware at the iconic<br />

Stade Vélodrome is at stake as our<br />

two elite clubs go head-to-head in<br />

what promises to be another epic<br />

encounter.<br />

The traditional drama of the knockout<br />

stage has already gone up a notch this<br />

season, with the historic introduction of<br />

home and away legs in the Round of 16,<br />

followed by compelling quarter-finals.<br />

Now we are down to the last four clubs in<br />

the tournament.<br />

So, we are guaranteed high-stakes<br />

action featuring stars of the global game<br />

before the spotlight shines on our 2022<br />

showpiece final. Tickets have been<br />

selling fast for the Marseille weekend,<br />

and with demand increasing by the day,<br />

time is running out to book your place at<br />

epcrugby.com/finals/ for a weekend feast<br />

of rugby.<br />

We are delighted to be joined on the<br />

journey to Marseille by our long-standing<br />

title partner, Heineken, as well as by<br />

our official partner, DHL, who provide<br />

customised logistics solutions for both the<br />

Heineken Champions Cup and the EPCR<br />

Challenge Cup.<br />

We have also recently brought on a new<br />

partner in IHG Hotels & Resorts, who<br />

become our Official Hotels Partner and we<br />

are delighted to welcome IHG on board.<br />

We would also like to thank Tissot, the<br />

Financial Times, Gilbert and Kappa for<br />

their continuing support.<br />

We acknowledge the superb coverage<br />

provided by our TV partners BT Sport,<br />

beIN SPORTS, France Télévisions, Channel<br />

4, Virgin Media, S4C and Sky Italia whose<br />

output is complemented by the wide<br />

range of linear and OTT platforms which<br />

broadcast the Heineken Champions Cup<br />

globally.<br />

Following a difficult first half of the season<br />

which created challenges for everyone<br />

involved in the game, the knockout stage<br />

of the tournament has been a revelation so<br />

far, and we can confidently expect another<br />

thrilling contest today.<br />

There will be elation at the final whistle,<br />

and maybe some agony too, but whatever<br />

the outcome, on behalf of all at EPCR,<br />

enjoy the semi-final and best wishes to you,<br />

the supporters, as well as to your club’s<br />

players and staff.<br />

Yours in rugby,<br />

Dominic McKay<br />

EPCR Chairman


Every great match<br />

starts with 0.0


HEINEKEN ireland<br />

Welcome<br />

A very warm<br />

welcome<br />

to all the<br />

players,<br />

supporters<br />

and officials<br />

of both<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong><br />

Rugby<br />

and Stade<br />

Toulousain<br />

to this Semi-<br />

Final clash of<br />

the 2021/2022<br />

Heineken®<br />

Champions<br />

Cup.<br />

I hope you all enjoyed the<br />

excitement of the Heineken®<br />

Champions Cup Quarter Final<br />

games last weekend. Munster<br />

and today’s opponents Stade<br />

Toulousain served up a thrilling<br />

encounter, one which will live<br />

long in the memory of all those<br />

who were lucky enough to be<br />

present. The atmosphere and<br />

colour generated by over 40,000<br />

Munster fans was truly special.<br />

Both teams left absolutely<br />

everything on the field of play<br />

after an epic 100 minutes of<br />

rugby. It was a shame there<br />

had to be a loser, especially<br />

in such dramatic and rarely<br />

experienced circumstances.<br />

Commiserations to Munster Rugby<br />

but huge congratulations to Stade<br />

Toulousain and we are delighted<br />

to welcome them back again to<br />

Dublin today.<br />

Sincere congratulations as well to <strong>Leinster</strong><br />

Rugby who put in a superb performance<br />

against a formidable opponent in<br />

Leicester Tigers, in what was a very<br />

difficult Quarter Final assignment for<br />

them. Their dream of that illusive 5th<br />

Star is very much alive. Their victory<br />

sets up the mouth-watering prospect that<br />

awaits us all today in Dublin. If today’s<br />

game can come close to matching<br />

the excitement and drama of what we<br />

enjoyed last weekend, we are all in for<br />

another fantastic weekend of rugby.<br />

May I also extend my best wishes to<br />

Racing 92 and Stade Rochelais in<br />

tomorrow’s other semi-final. I have no<br />

doubt that the victors in both games<br />

this weekend will go on to deliver a<br />

memorable Heineken Champions Cup<br />

Final on the 28th May, in the iconic<br />

Stade Vélodrome, Marseille.<br />

We At Heineken are immensely proud to<br />

be a long-standing sponsor of Europe’s<br />

leading club rugby competition, a<br />

tournament that means so much to rugby<br />

fans in this country. Enjoy the game<br />

today with a cold, refreshing Heineken®<br />

or Heineken® 0.0% and as always,<br />

please do so responsibly.<br />

Maarten Schuurman<br />

Managing Director, HEINEKEN Ireland.<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 7


john walsh welcome<br />

PRESIDENT, LEINSTER RUGBY 2020/22<br />

On behalf of <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby, I<br />

am delighted to extend a warm<br />

Irish welcome to all rugby fans<br />

throughout the rugby world who<br />

are joining us today for what I hope<br />

will be a classic encounter between<br />

our visitors and reigning Heineken<br />

Champions Cup winners, <strong>Toulouse</strong>,<br />

and 2018 champions, <strong>Leinster</strong>.<br />

Those of you of a certain age<br />

and vintage will remember with<br />

fondness back to 1977 when Star<br />

Wars burst onto the big screen to<br />

fire our imagination as to what<br />

the future might hold for us.<br />

There have been several sequels<br />

to A New Hope and today’s<br />

event at the Aviva Stadium (the<br />

world’s oldest Test rugby venue)<br />

is without doubt a fitting venue<br />

for another Star Wars in the<br />

making with both sides boasting<br />

multi-talented players who have<br />

starred for their countries on the<br />

international rugby stage.<br />

Stade Toulousain’s red jersey proudly<br />

displays five gold stars and today<br />

will encounter the <strong>Leinster</strong> blue jersey<br />

displaying four gold stars in what<br />

promises to be an epic encounter<br />

between two of European rugby’s<br />

premier teams.<br />

Between us we have featured in a total<br />

of 12 Heineken Cup finals with <strong>Toulouse</strong><br />

heading the leaderboard with five wins<br />

followed by <strong>Leinster</strong> on four wins, with<br />

Toulon and Saracens on three wins each.<br />

We welcome <strong>Toulouse</strong> led by their club<br />

captain Julien Marchand, Club President<br />

Dedier Lacroix for what is the defence<br />

of their win last season when they<br />

defeated La Rochelle 22-17 in front of<br />

a Covid-restricted crowd of 10,000 at<br />

Twickenham.<br />

<strong>Toulouse</strong> are also the TOP14 champions<br />

of 2021 (their 21st title and the most<br />

successful club in France’s 130-year-old<br />

rugby tournament). They are currently<br />

sixth in the TOP14 having won 13 of their<br />

24 league fixtures and are just seven<br />

league points behind the table-toppers<br />

Montpellier.<br />

<strong>Toulouse</strong>’s successes in the Heineken<br />

Cup date back to the initial final in<br />

1996 when they required extra-time to<br />

defeat Cardiff 21-18. Their other four<br />

final successes were against French<br />

opposition. In 2003 they defeated<br />

Perpignan in this very stadium. Their<br />

third cup win came in 2005, when they<br />

needed extra-time again to defeat Stade<br />

Francais by 18-12 in Murrayfield.<br />

Their 2010 win was against Biarritz, by a<br />

score of 21-19 having defeated <strong>Leinster</strong><br />

in the semi-final. Their two Heineken Cup<br />

final defeats were at the hands of Wasps<br />

in 2004 (27-20) and Munster in 2008<br />

(16-13). As we now know, last week, they<br />

required extra-time and a penalty shoot<br />

out to overcome Munster in this stadium<br />

so perhaps Lady Luck might decide that<br />

she has done her duty for them!<br />

The <strong>Leinster</strong> squad of players<br />

has excelled in our United Rugby<br />

Championship and Heineken Champions<br />

Cup campaigns this season and have<br />

recorded a total of 18 wins from 23<br />

competitive fixtures played.<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong>’s 12 wins in the United Rugby<br />

Championship have placed them in pole<br />

position in the league table. A point to<br />

note is that our 511 points scored is the<br />

highest and that the 251 points conceded<br />

is the lowest in the league. Our only<br />

defeat at home was in the interpro derby<br />

loss to Ulster.<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> have scored a total of 68 tries to<br />

date in the United Rugby Championship.<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong>’s six Heineken Champions Cup<br />

fixtures played this season have resulted<br />

in <strong>Leinster</strong> scoring 303 points and<br />

crossing the try line on 42 occasions.<br />

The combined total between the United<br />

Rugby Championship and the Heineken<br />

Champions Cup amounts to 814 points<br />

scored and 110 tries.<br />

Full credit has to be given to all our<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> coaches and backroom staff<br />

8 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


To all our<br />

committed<br />

fans and<br />

sponsors we<br />

thank you for<br />

your most<br />

appreciated<br />

and generous<br />

support<br />

during the<br />

past two<br />

difficult<br />

seasons for<br />

all sports.<br />

for their dedication and vision as to the<br />

pathway that <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby aspires to<br />

take.<br />

The atmosphere at the Aviva Stadium is<br />

a unique one. We can all recall over the<br />

years those many special occasions such<br />

as our first victory over New Zealand. No<br />

matter what Irish province you support,<br />

today’s game is deserving of your full<br />

support for this <strong>Leinster</strong> team whose<br />

players have contributed so much this<br />

season to an Irish Triple Crown success.<br />

The scene is set, the stars are here, so<br />

let’s enjoy what we hope will be a game<br />

to savour.<br />

To all our committed fans and sponsors<br />

we thank you for your most appreciated<br />

and generous support during the past<br />

two difficult seasons for all sports.<br />

You have travelled with us throughout our<br />

numerous campaigns and your presence,<br />

inspiration and support makes such a<br />

difference to <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby.<br />

Go raibh míle maith agaibh,<br />

agus ALLEZ LES BLEUS!<br />

John Walsh<br />

President <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby 2020-2022<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 9


Leo Cullen<br />

head Coach Welcome<br />

A warm welcome to you all for the<br />

semi-final of this season’s Heineken<br />

Champions Cup, and in particular to<br />

Ugo Mola and his <strong>Toulouse</strong> team who<br />

are back at the Aviva Stadium for the<br />

second time in the last seven days.<br />

This is the time of the season<br />

we’ve been looking forward to<br />

all along, with big game after big<br />

game, reflecting the huge amount<br />

of work that has got us to this<br />

point.<br />

We know we have a mountain to climb<br />

today but what better or more exciting<br />

challenge than playing the five-times<br />

European champions, current Champions<br />

Cup holders and TOP14 champions for<br />

a place in the final? This is the sort of<br />

occasion you dream about.<br />

A massive thanks to all the <strong>Leinster</strong><br />

faithful who made the trip to Leicester last<br />

weekend.<br />

10 | www.leinsterrugby.ie<br />

As always, there was a raucous<br />

atmosphere at Welford Road and our<br />

players got a huge emotional lift when<br />

they were greeted with a sea of blue<br />

getting off the bus. We were delighted<br />

that so many of you were there and it<br />

made victory all the sweeter in the end.<br />

Congratulations to Joe McCarthy who<br />

made his Champions Cup debut against<br />

Leicester in last weekend’s quarter-final.<br />

Not a bad day to play in Europe for the<br />

first time!<br />

We’ve had a really busy schedule<br />

since our last home game, including a<br />

whirlwind trip to South Africa where<br />

a number of young players got to<br />

experience URC action for the first<br />

time. Even though we lost both games,<br />

we managed to come home with two<br />

valuable losing bonus points and I think<br />

everyone – especially those younger<br />

lads – will have benefitted from the<br />

experience.<br />

Congratulations to John McKee, Brian<br />

Deeny and Lee Barron who all made<br />

their <strong>Leinster</strong> debuts in South Africa. All<br />

three players are currently in the <strong>Leinster</strong><br />

Academy and we have high hopes that<br />

they will go on to have bright futures and<br />

long careers in the game.<br />

Sincere thanks to all our backroom staff<br />

for their hard work and dedication over<br />

the last few weeks.<br />

Behind the scenes, it’s been all hands<br />

on deck trying to manage that trip while<br />

simultaneously preparing a separate<br />

group back in UCD. A number of our<br />

Academy coaches also stepped up to the<br />

plate to make their <strong>Leinster</strong> ‘debuts’ and<br />

we hope they will all be better coaches<br />

for the experience.<br />

We’re at the business end of the season<br />

now with everything up for grabs. This<br />

is why we all got into rugby in the first<br />

place, to be competing for the big prizes.<br />

We’ve worked towards this moment for<br />

the past 42 weeks solidly – back when<br />

our pre-season started – and we hope to<br />

deliver a performance that will make our<br />

supporters proud.<br />

Speaking of supporters, I want to thank<br />

all our corporate partners and sponsors,<br />

led by Bank of Ireland, for their backing.<br />

I hope you enjoy being part of these big<br />

occasions because you deserve it.<br />

Days like today are what it’s all about<br />

really – playing in front of a big crowd,<br />

knowing your family and friends are there<br />

cheering you on. It inspires the team to<br />

give everything we have and that’s what<br />

we’ll do today.<br />

Enjoy the game.<br />

Leo


www.leinsterrugby.ie | 11


carla<br />

delaney<br />

DIRECTOR, BANK OF IRELAND AREA EAST<br />

A very quick turnaround this week as <strong>Leinster</strong> face reigning<br />

champions <strong>Toulouse</strong> in the Heineken Champions Cup semifinal<br />

at the Aviva Stadium. This competition always offers a<br />

unique challenge for Leo Cullen and his players, and now the<br />

Boys in Blue go straight from toppling the team currently<br />

atop the English Premiership to trying to overcome<br />

Munster’s most recent conquerors.<br />

It all makes for what promises to<br />

be a brilliant match kicking off at<br />

3pm!<br />

To secure the quarter-final win over<br />

Leicester at Welford Road took a huge<br />

effort, winning away in Europe always<br />

does. And to emerge victorious in such<br />

a brilliant stadium packed with noisy<br />

home supporters (not to mention the blue<br />

hoards) made it all the sweeter.<br />

We are proud in Bank of Ireland to<br />

support the team on the pitch, but we are<br />

also very proud of the <strong>Leinster</strong> supporters<br />

in the stands. I want to recognise the effort<br />

made by the volunteers from the OLSC to<br />

get so many flags over to Leicester and to<br />

have Welford Road turned so blue! The<br />

scenes on arrival for the team bus were<br />

pretty special, so well done to Bebhinn,<br />

Alan, Dave and to everyone in the OLSC<br />

that played their part in making the trip to<br />

Welford Road so memorable.<br />

To this weekend and the visit of <strong>Toulouse</strong>.<br />

They may have broken Munster hearts<br />

here in the Aviva last weekend, but we<br />

hope that’s the end of their European<br />

heart-breaking for this season!<br />

<strong>Toulouse</strong> are a giant of European rugby<br />

and put in another strong performance<br />

to edge a victory against a hugely<br />

motivated Munster team, who themselves<br />

can be extremely proud of their quarterfinal<br />

display. No doubt all Munster’s<br />

focus will now be on the URC game back<br />

here at the Aviva next week. But, for now,<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong>’s focus is solely on the European<br />

task at hand.<br />

Away from the senior team it’s been<br />

great to see such progress off the field<br />

over the last few weeks, with a number<br />

of competitions coming to a conclusion.<br />

With Covid-19 continuing (thankfully!)<br />

to recede from the general national<br />

consciousness, we hope that this is the last<br />

season of interruptions and that we can<br />

get back to completing a full programme<br />

of fixtures without any delays next season.<br />

Finally, to Leo, Johnny and all the players,<br />

the very best of luck today. Let’s hope we<br />

can all enjoy one last away day to France<br />

before the season is out!<br />

Enjoy the game.<br />

CD<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 13


Ri<br />

14 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


Garry<br />

ngrose<br />

This isn’t<br />

Garry<br />

Ringrose’s<br />

first invite<br />

to the dance.<br />

At just 27<br />

years of age,<br />

he has won<br />

all he can<br />

with <strong>Leinster</strong><br />

Rugby - four<br />

consecutive<br />

URC titles<br />

along with<br />

the 2018<br />

Heineken<br />

Champions<br />

Cup.<br />

the big interview<br />

BY RYAN CORRY<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 15


With Ireland, he’s won a Grand<br />

Slam and two triple crowns in<br />

42 caps and was nominated for<br />

World Rugby’s Junior Player of<br />

the Year award in 2014.<br />

Today’s semi-final clash with <strong>Toulouse</strong><br />

is to be his 99th in the blue of <strong>Leinster</strong>,<br />

40 of those coming in the Heineken<br />

Champions Cup including today.<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> haven’t played today’s<br />

opposition since the 2019 semi-final, a<br />

30-12 win for Ringrose and Co at Aviva<br />

Stadium in a year where the two teams<br />

met on three occasions.<br />

It was first blood to <strong>Toulouse</strong> in the<br />

pool stages, securing a one-point<br />

win on the continent before <strong>Leinster</strong><br />

took control of the group with a win<br />

at the RDS Arena in early January<br />

2019.<br />

Both teams qualified for the knockout<br />

stages and would meet again<br />

in the last four when <strong>Leinster</strong> won out<br />

and booked their place in the final at St<br />

James’ Park in Newcastle.<br />

That day in England’s north-east would<br />

end in disappointment against Saracens<br />

for <strong>Leinster</strong>, as it would the following<br />

September at today’s venue.<br />

The May Bank Holiday weekend<br />

in 2021 saw <strong>Leinster</strong> bow out at<br />

this stage to French opponents,<br />

La Rochelle and they would<br />

have to watch on as <strong>Toulouse</strong><br />

became the first team to get<br />

their hands on the illusive<br />

crown five times.<br />

However, not much has changed<br />

for the <strong>Leinster</strong> centre since that<br />

day in April 2019 when the sides<br />

last met.<br />

Lessons have been learned, some<br />

tougher to take than others, but<br />

ultimately necessary.<br />

16 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


We had a tough<br />

game over in<br />

Leicester which<br />

was physically and<br />

mentally challenging<br />

so thankfully we had<br />

Sunday to decompress<br />

and turn the page as<br />

soon as possible.<br />

“I think the motivation has increased<br />

because of the disappointment we’ve<br />

faced through that time,” he says.<br />

“We’ve learned some harsh but valuable<br />

lessons. Obviously, there’s been some<br />

personnel changes with guys that would<br />

have retired. Rob Kearney and Fergus<br />

McFadden are two and even seeing<br />

someone like Dan Leavy who has had to<br />

retire with injury, more recently, it makes<br />

us appreciate these days even more.<br />

“I guess you enjoy the wins but it’s the<br />

losses that stick around a bit more but, as<br />

a group, we took some valuable lessons.<br />

That’s what drives the motivation this<br />

year, when you experience how tough it<br />

is to go and win in Europe.<br />

“Even preparing as best you can, it takes<br />

something special to progress in the<br />

knockout stages. It makes us appreciate<br />

the opportunity we have today but we’re<br />

acutely aware of how we need to be at<br />

our best.<br />

“From a rugby perspective, we’ve been<br />

trying to grow our attack to beat strong<br />

defences, of which I think <strong>Toulouse</strong> are<br />

one of the best, certainly in the TOP14.<br />

“Thinking back to that game, the<br />

scoreline, we were lucky to come out on<br />

the right side but I remember a chip-kick<br />

went through and myself and Maxime<br />

Medard both went for the ball and<br />

grounded at the same time, it was semi<br />

held-up and the play was called back<br />

but that moment could have changed the<br />

game dramatically.<br />

“The scoreline and the momentum would<br />

have swung and it would have been very<br />

different. We’ve lost to <strong>Toulouse</strong> in the<br />

past in the group stages but were lucky<br />

enough to turn it around but we’ve huge<br />

respect for them as a club so there’ll be<br />

zero complacency going into this game<br />

from us.”<br />

It’s not often that <strong>Leinster</strong> will take on<br />

foreign opposition in Dublin and have<br />

the away side play in the Irish capital<br />

more recently than them but that is the<br />

case this week following <strong>Toulouse</strong>’s<br />

dramatic shootout victory over Munster<br />

last weekend.<br />

Trailing by 10 points and down a man<br />

with just 15 minutes remaining, you could<br />

have been forgiven for planning an all-<br />

Irish semi-final on this side of the draw.<br />

However, Rory Arnold’s return from<br />

the sinbin was followed soon after by<br />

a converted Matthis Lebel try. Then,<br />

Thomas Ramos brought it level five<br />

minutes from time with three off the tee.<br />

Two 10-minute halves of extra-time went<br />

without troubling the scorekeepers before<br />

the dreaded placekicking competition.<br />

<strong>Toulouse</strong> would score four to Munster’s<br />

two and seal their progression, the<br />

unpredictability of that game being<br />

one of the factors Ringrose highlights in<br />

making the French giants so difficult to<br />

play against.<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 17


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“I didn’t watch it before because we<br />

were preparing for our own game and<br />

didn’t get the result until after that. We<br />

got back late on Saturday night but I<br />

watched the recording of it on Sunday,”<br />

he adds.<br />

“It was an unbelievably challenging<br />

game for <strong>Toulouse</strong>, Munster did really<br />

well and made it difficult for them.<br />

<strong>Toulouse</strong> showed how dangerous they<br />

can be and I think they will even be<br />

challenging themselves to be better<br />

again and I’ve no doubt they will be<br />

better again.<br />

“It’s a long list (their threats). Certainly<br />

the danger that their backs pose, more<br />

specifically that’s something I’ll be<br />

dealing with. The quality they have right<br />

across it and the ability they have to<br />

score from anywhere.<br />

“I mean one example is how well they<br />

keep the ball alive in contact, they seem<br />

to have this sixth sense and instinct to<br />

read each other.<br />

“It doesn’t necessarily look pre-planned<br />

but guys have the ability to take<br />

opposition on and others act accordingly<br />

around it. When they’re in sync, they’re<br />

almost impossible to stop.<br />

“From a control perspective, they have<br />

two of the best half-backs in the world at<br />

the moment at nine and 10. They have<br />

the ability to win in more ways than one,<br />

and in tight margins they can see out<br />

games with those two marshalling. So,<br />

that’s one or two things of a few where<br />

I think they are very strong and very<br />

dangerous.”<br />

Of course, as mentioned by the former<br />

Blackrock College man, <strong>Leinster</strong> had<br />

their own quarter-final last Saturday<br />

evening.<br />

In front of almost 20,000 at Mattioli<br />

Woods Welford Road in Leicester, they<br />

shot down the Gallagher Premiership<br />

leaders, benefitting from a healthy<br />

20-point half-time lead when the hosts<br />

came out fighting for the second half.<br />

Ringrose mentions the visiting support<br />

that travelled in force to back them<br />

against Leicester but has once again sent<br />

out a call to arms for today, hoping for a<br />

replica of the sea of blue flags and noise<br />

that greeted the team arrival in England.<br />

“We had a tough game over in Leicester<br />

which was physically and mentally<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 19


challenging so thankfully we had Sunday<br />

to decompress and turn the page as<br />

soon as possible.<br />

“I think everyone came into training<br />

a little bit sore but there’s energy,<br />

motivation and determination, knowing<br />

the level we have to get to and step up<br />

again to repeat the result.<br />

“From our perspective, we enjoy playing<br />

at home and love any opportunity to get<br />

out in front of our home supporters and<br />

our families and close friends.<br />

“That always makes it even more special<br />

for us. It’s a special day and we’re<br />

grateful to have it in the Aviva, but it<br />

doesn’t guarantee anything result-wise.<br />

<strong>Toulouse</strong> have proven time and time<br />

again away from home that they can do<br />

the job,” he adds.<br />

Despite not facing <strong>Toulouse</strong> themselves<br />

for three years now, Ringrose will still<br />

have come up against many of their<br />

contingent in French jerseys at Test level.<br />

And he remains familiar with them,<br />

however, he maintains that there is no<br />

crossover from Ireland duty in terms of<br />

the players’ thinking this week with all<br />

attention firmly on the Champions Cup<br />

and not on getting any revenge for the<br />

Grand Slam that wasn’t.<br />

“I haven’t thought about it as revenge.<br />

There’s the spine of both teams, a lot<br />

of the same guys playing against each<br />

other. If anything, it’ll show that a game<br />

of this significance will be the equivalent<br />

of an international Test match which,<br />

again, has everyone on red alert with<br />

regard to our preparation,” he explains.<br />

“We felt great being able to go and get<br />

a win in Leicester. As a group that was<br />

great for us and to progress. But we all<br />

know there’s areas for us to be better<br />

and to try and repeat a result like that,<br />

we need to take a step forward.<br />

“And I know <strong>Toulouse</strong> will be saying<br />

the same thing. I haven’t thought about<br />

it in that way because our focus is a<br />

European championship and putting<br />

another star on our jersey but we’ll<br />

need to be at that international level of<br />

intensity for this fixture.”<br />

The layout of the last four, three French<br />

teams and one Irish, on top of that Six<br />

Nations Grand Slam is just indication of<br />

where rugby is in their country right now.<br />

The tight margins within the league mean<br />

that there are still plenty of play-off<br />

places up for grabs and plenty of teams<br />

willing to go for them.<br />

“With the success of the Six Nations, it’s<br />

been carried on within the clubs. Even<br />

looking at the TOP 14, watching the<br />

games and looking at the table, I think<br />

it’s only eight or nine points between first<br />

and eighth, so it shows how competitive<br />

it is.<br />

“It’s a credit to where French rugby is at<br />

the moment.”<br />

20 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


We felt great<br />

being able to go<br />

and get a win in<br />

Leicester. As a<br />

group that was<br />

great for us and<br />

to progress.<br />

But we all know<br />

there’s areas for<br />

us to be better<br />

and to try and<br />

repeat a result<br />

like that, we<br />

need to take a<br />

step forward.<br />

Right now though, it’s all focused on<br />

Lansdowne Road today.<br />

The professionals have <strong>Leinster</strong> as<br />

favourites for the game but Ringrose<br />

says that there’s nothing in that.<br />

“Personally, and I think collectively, we<br />

have too much respect for <strong>Toulouse</strong><br />

as a club and the history they have,<br />

being the most successful team in<br />

Europe and reigning champions in both<br />

competitions.<br />

“We’d never think about it that way<br />

and when it comes to finals rugby, both<br />

teams are going to be at their best. You<br />

have to be ready, games can fall on the<br />

smallest of moments and the smallest of<br />

margins. We just have to do everything<br />

we can in our preparation and commit<br />

fully to the game.<br />

“Hopefully that’ll be enough.”<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 21


Action<br />

replay 14 23<br />

LEICESTER TIGERS<br />

Freddie Steward; Chris Ashton (Freddie<br />

Burns 65), Matias Moroni (Nemani<br />

Nadolo 44), Guy Porter, Harry Potter;<br />

George Ford, Ben Youngs (Richard<br />

Wigglesworth 58); Ellis Genge (James<br />

Whitcombe 75), Julian Montoya (Nic<br />

Dolly 72), Dan Cole (Joe Heyes 58);<br />

Ollie Chessum, Calum Green (Harry<br />

Wells 61); Hanro Liebenberg. Tommy<br />

Reffell (George Martin 48), Jasper<br />

Wiese.<br />

SCORERS<br />

Tries: Chris Ashon, Nic Dolly.<br />

Cons: George Ford (2).<br />

SATURDAY, 7 MAY<br />

MATTIOLI WOODS WELFORD ROAD<br />

ATTENDANCE: 19,066<br />

HEINEKEN CHAMPIONS CUP<br />

LEINSTER RUGBY<br />

Hugo Keenan; Jimmy O’Brien (Tommy<br />

O’Brien 71), Garry Ringrose, Robbie<br />

Henshaw, James Lowe; Johnny Sexton<br />

(Ross Byrne 61), Jamison Gibson-Park<br />

(Luke McGrath 70); Andrew Porter (Cian<br />

Healy 61), Rónan Kelleher (Dan Sheehan<br />

46), Tadhg Furlong (Michael Ala’alatoa<br />

61); Ross Molony, James Ryan (Joe<br />

McCarthy 75); Caelan Doris, Josh van<br />

der Flier, Jack Conan (Rhys Ruddock 70).<br />

SCORERS<br />

Tries: Josh van der Flier, Robbie Henshaw.<br />

Cons: Johnny Sexton (2).<br />

Pens: Johnny Sexton (2), Ross Byrne.<br />

22 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


We put Tigers<br />

under a fair bit<br />

of pressure when<br />

they had the ball.<br />

In the secondhalf<br />

they threw<br />

the kitchen sink<br />

at us. It didn’t<br />

feel comfortable<br />

in the secondhalf<br />

from our<br />

point of view but<br />

we’re delighted<br />

to get a win.<br />

Leo Cullen<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 23


GIRLS’ AGE-GRADE<br />

RUGBY IN LEINSTER<br />

In 2009, Jennie Bagnall joined<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby in the role of<br />

Women's Development Officer.<br />

At the time, she was the only staff<br />

member solely related to the girls’ game<br />

and was tasked with increasing the<br />

participation numbers and the profile<br />

of women’s rugby in <strong>Leinster</strong> ‘from the<br />

ground up’.<br />

Back then, there were just seven adult<br />

teams and seven youth teams in the<br />

province, meagre numbers that would<br />

only increase through the work of those<br />

willing to roll up their sleeves.<br />

This season, there were over 80 youth<br />

teams involved in competitions, plus 25<br />

minis (U-8, U-10 and U-12) girls teams<br />

playing.<br />

The schoolgirls game has also increased<br />

dramatically with over 60 schools<br />

participating in the X7s secondary school<br />

full contact rugby tournaments. Over 800<br />

first-year girls in the Metro region came to<br />

play at one single blitz event in Seapoint<br />

RC earlier this season.<br />

The sustained impact of the various<br />

volunteers, from club committees to<br />

parents and coaches around the province<br />

has been the foundation on which the<br />

game has flourished.<br />

Once the framework was put in place,<br />

the growth in rugby for girls was driven<br />

by a ‘can-do’ attitude taken on by<br />

girls everywhere from Enniscorthy to<br />

Edenderry.<br />

“It is all positive news around rugby for<br />

girls in <strong>Leinster</strong>,” says Jennie, now the<br />

Lead Women’s Development Officer.<br />

“The numbers on the ground are growing<br />

at a high rate. The quantity and quality<br />

of girls' participation are constantly<br />

increasing. There are more clubs taking<br />

girls into their plans for the future, more<br />

events and programmes to improve skills,<br />

and more opportunities to simply play<br />

the game.<br />

“Specifically, in the schools, there is a<br />

really nice pathway evolving. It begins<br />

with tag rugby being introduced in<br />

primary schools.<br />

Then, we develop into a touch rugby form<br />

of the game going into the first year in<br />

secondary school, culminating in learning<br />

how to tackle through ‘Touch to Tackle’<br />

events run by our community rugby staff,<br />

in order to teach the girls to play contact<br />

nice and safely by the end of the first<br />

year.<br />

For Juniors and Seniors, they can play the<br />

‘gateway’ game created by the IRFU of<br />

seven-a-side cross-pitch rugby. For more<br />

advanced Junior players and Seniors,<br />

there is the option of 10-a-side also in an<br />

inaugural girls competition administrated<br />

by the <strong>Leinster</strong> Schools Committee.<br />

“This year, I feel we are starting to<br />

really join all the dots of the pathways,<br />

starting with learning the game at a much<br />

younger age with a huge surge in mini<br />

girls over the past three years.<br />

“We are creating performance<br />

opportunities and player development<br />

programmes to develop the girls who<br />

have the potential to be involved in the<br />

higher-level regional competitions, like the<br />

new Sarah Robinson (U-18) Cup.<br />

“This is a platform for the girls to develop<br />

to the provincial standard and through<br />

into ‘green jersey’ level,” Jennie says.<br />

“Over half of the squad selected last<br />

month to participate in the new U-18<br />

Six Nations in Scotland were players<br />

developed in <strong>Leinster</strong>’s clubs and schools<br />

which shows us that what we are doing<br />

is working.<br />

“Yes, things are not perfect. We badly<br />

need more female-specific staff on the<br />

ground to continue to support this level of<br />

growth. We need more female coaches,<br />

referees and volunteers to get involved.<br />

“We definitely need a better way<br />

of promoting the developments and<br />

opportunities for girls publicly,” she says.<br />

“These are all on the agenda and we’re<br />

constantly making progress in the right<br />

direction. International Women’s week<br />

was key to this progress. The U-18s<br />

refereeing programme and Female-Only<br />

Coaching Courses were just two of the<br />

new initiatives that we will be embedding<br />

into our pathways for the 2022/23<br />

season, and beyond.”<br />

Unlike their male counterparts, it is the<br />

club game, not the schools system that is<br />

leading the evolution. The absence of a<br />

traditional mindset allows those in charge<br />

to structure the game the way they see fit.<br />

Last month, the <strong>Leinster</strong> Clubs U-14,<br />

U-16 and U-18 finals took place in a<br />

celebration of the growth of the game<br />

and an advertisement for the high-quality<br />

rugby being produced.<br />

“I have been involved in girls rugby for<br />

the last five years,” issues Gary Brickell,<br />

the U-14 competition coordinator.<br />

“Were there the same number of teams<br />

then that are competing now? No. There<br />

are 26 or 27 clubs in each age grade<br />

from U-14, U-16 and U-18.<br />

“From what I see, the girls like everything<br />

about rugby. They like physical contact.<br />

They like the training aspect. They like the<br />

social connection too. There are plenty<br />

of girls that come and try it out that don’t<br />

24 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


stick with it. But, the girls that do, love it.<br />

They really do.”<br />

Last month, Athy RFC hosted the festival<br />

of finals in the U-14 and U-16 grades,<br />

including the U-16 Premier, Division 1<br />

and Division 2 League finals and the<br />

U-14 Premier, Division 1, Division 2 and<br />

Division 3 finals.<br />

It was a thrilling climax to the season for<br />

both age categories in which the numbers<br />

participating are climbing year-on-year.<br />

At U-16, the structure of the leagues was<br />

very effective with two similar groups of<br />

eight playing seven games. The top four<br />

advanced from each group into a Premier<br />

Division and the bottom four dropped<br />

into Division 1.<br />

Then, teams in these divisions played four<br />

more games against new opposition and<br />

the points from relevant games already<br />

played were carried forward.<br />

This approach has worked out as a great<br />

solution to the uncertainty every year<br />

around where each team stands.<br />

Division 2 was made up of teams who<br />

were more developmental in standard,<br />

so they played a stand-alone 11-team<br />

league.<br />

It is conservatively estimated that at<br />

least 430 girls played across the three<br />

divisions, based on an average of 18<br />

players from the 24 teams, albeit some<br />

squads were considerably larger.<br />

At U-14, there were 110 games<br />

scheduled in the various divisions with<br />

only 15 concessions, resulting in over 86<br />

per cent of games played.<br />

There were 29 teams, containing 500<br />

girls, playing rugby at this level. The<br />

decision was made to play the <strong>Leinster</strong><br />

cup and area matches before Christmas<br />

which worked out well.<br />

There is also a suggestion for each area<br />

to hold girls blitzes for the start of next<br />

season, followed by the cups in order to<br />

better grade the leagues to make them as<br />

competitive as possible.<br />

The Division 3, Division 2, Division 1 and<br />

Premier finals were run off in quarter-hour<br />

intervals at Athy’s home grounds in The<br />

Showgrounds.<br />

The U-18 competition was compromised<br />

by the late announcement of the U-18<br />

Girls Six Nations Festival in Scotland<br />

which scooped up the cream of Ireland<br />

talent at the grade.<br />

The impact of the Ireland training camps<br />

and the presence of the interprovincial<br />

sevens at Easter meant a restricted<br />

playing schedule, ending with Wicklow<br />

overcoming Port Dara in the Premier<br />

League final.<br />

“I would say 50 per cent of the girls play<br />

rugby only. But, there is a cross-breed of<br />

sports. I am in Kilkenny where some of<br />

the girls play camogie. The same goes for<br />

Enniscorthy and Wexford,” says Gary.<br />

“I know from talking to coaches around<br />

the province that girls come to rugby<br />

from gaelic football, from basketball and<br />

soccer.”<br />

From there, for instance, the Sarah<br />

Robinson Cup provides a platform for the<br />

girls to push for <strong>Leinster</strong> representation<br />

whether at Sevens or XVs. That leaves<br />

them one more step away from the<br />

international level, once again at Sevens<br />

or XVs.<br />

“We have growing numbers at the<br />

moment. There are, at a minimum, 1,500<br />

girls playing club rugby in <strong>Leinster</strong><br />

between U-14, U-16 and U-18,” says<br />

Gary.<br />

“Four years ago, in Kilkenny, all we had<br />

to show was our U-14 girls. That was the<br />

full extent of our participation.<br />

“Now, we have U-14s, U-16s and U-18s<br />

as well as getting our women’s team<br />

going again. In fact, they managed to<br />

win the <strong>Leinster</strong> League Division 5 final<br />

recently, the first silverware won by<br />

women in Kilkenny.”<br />

It is just one example of how girls' rugby<br />

is thriving from the ground up.<br />

2021/22 LEINSTER AGE-GRADE<br />

GIRLS LEAGUE FINALS.<br />

LEINSTER CLUBS U-14 LEAGUE FINALS<br />

PREMIER<br />

Mullingar 69 Greystones 7<br />

DIVISION 1<br />

Birr and Roscrea Ravens 40 Wexford 12<br />

DIVISION 2<br />

Wicklow 31 Port Dara 14<br />

DIVISION 3<br />

Longford 24 Ardee 21<br />

LEINSTER CLUBS U-16 LEAGUE FINALS<br />

PREMIER<br />

Arklow and Gorey Argos 35 Navan 5<br />

DIVISION 1<br />

Enniscorthy 45 Athy 22<br />

DIVISION 2<br />

Tullamore 21 Mullingar 10<br />

LEINSTER CLUBS U-18 LEAGUE FINAL<br />

PREMIER<br />

Wicklow 38 Port Dara 0<br />

If you are interested in<br />

taking up rugby or you<br />

would like to follow our<br />

updates, check out our<br />

social media channels:<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Women’s Rugby<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong>WomensRugby<br />

@<strong>Leinster</strong>Women<br />

womenspro@leinsterrugby.ie<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 25


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www.leinsterrugby.ie | 27


leo<br />

the lion’s<br />

kids<br />

corner<br />

IN A BLUR!<br />

Can you name this<br />

leinster player?<br />

spot the difference!<br />

Can you find all six?<br />

ANAGRAMS<br />

Can you un-jumble the names of these players?<br />

MAJORING<br />

SKI SNOB PA<br />

HURRY OIL<br />

ON LOG<br />

how did you do?<br />

IN A BLUR?<br />

JAMES LOWE<br />

ANAGRAMS<br />

JAMISON GIBSON-PARK<br />

RORY O’LOUGHLIN<br />

ZOOMED IN!<br />

CIARAN FRAWLEY<br />

zoomed in!<br />

WHo is this leinster<br />

player having an<br />

extreme close-up?<br />

28 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


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AZTO<br />

with<br />

Jamison Gibson-Park<br />

A – Action: If you could be a superhero,<br />

which would you be?<br />

Wolverine<br />

B – Boyhood: Who was your favourite<br />

sporting idol growing up?<br />

Tiger Woods<br />

C – Childhood: What is your favourite<br />

childhood memory?<br />

Footy on a Saturday morning<br />

D – Dish: What’s your go-to pre-match<br />

meal?<br />

Pasta followed by pancakes<br />

E – Education: What was your favourite<br />

subject in school?<br />

Geography<br />

F – Film buff: What’s your favourite film?<br />

Happy Gilmore<br />

G – Groove: Who is the best dancer in<br />

the squad?<br />

JVDF<br />

H – Holiday: What’s your favourite<br />

holiday destination?<br />

Croatia<br />

I – Inside: Who is the worst to sit beside<br />

in the dressing room?<br />

Hugo Keenan<br />

J – Joker: Who is the funniest in the<br />

squad?<br />

Will Connors<br />

K – Kick-off: What’s your favourite time<br />

of the day to play a match?<br />

3pm<br />

L – Languages: How many languages<br />

can you speak?<br />

One<br />

M – Music: Your favourite artist and<br />

song right now?<br />

Dave - System<br />

N – Number: Do you have a lucky<br />

number?<br />

4<br />

30 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


O – Others: What’s your<br />

favourite sport outside of rugby?<br />

Rugby League specifically NRL.<br />

P – Pal: Who is your best mate in<br />

the squad?<br />

It would have been Michael<br />

Bent up until this year!<br />

Q – Quirky: Who has the most<br />

interesting fashion sense?<br />

Jack Dunne<br />

R – Red Carpet: Who is the most<br />

famous contact in your phone?<br />

Piri Weepu<br />

S – Superstitions: Do you have<br />

any matchday routines?<br />

Sleep<br />

T – Trim: What’s the worst<br />

haircut you’ve ever had?<br />

Bowl cut<br />

U: Under pressure: Who in the<br />

squad would be the best in a<br />

bad situation?<br />

Larmour<br />

V – Verified: How often do you<br />

use social media?<br />

Daily<br />

W – Worst fear: What are you<br />

most scared of?<br />

Geese<br />

X – X-ray: Have you ever broken<br />

any bones?<br />

Yes<br />

Y – Youth: Where did you grow<br />

up?<br />

Great Barrier Island, New<br />

Zealand<br />

Z – Zoo: What’s your favourite<br />

animal?<br />

Panther<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 31


Did you know?<br />

• <strong>Leinster</strong> and Stade Toulousain<br />

will meet for the 13th time in<br />

the Heineken Champions Cup, only<br />

Munster and Castres Olympique (18)<br />

have faced each other more often<br />

in the competition; the two clubs<br />

are evenly split having won six<br />

games apiece in their previous 12<br />

encounters.<br />

• This will be the fourth time<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> and Stade Toulousain<br />

have met in the semi-finals of the<br />

Heineken Champions Cup, the most<br />

played fixture at this stage of the<br />

competition (Munster v Saracens,<br />

3 times); <strong>Toulouse</strong> won the first<br />

semi-final clash between the clubs<br />

at Stadium de <strong>Toulouse</strong> in 2009/10,<br />

while <strong>Leinster</strong> have won their two<br />

such meetings since then.<br />

• Stade Toulousain (2.79) and<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby (2.85) are the<br />

only sides to boast an average<br />

ruck speed under three seconds<br />

in the Heineken Champions Cup<br />

this season; in defence, only Sale<br />

Sharks (4.15) have slowed down<br />

their opponents’ rucks more than<br />

<strong>Toulouse</strong> (3.99).<br />

• <strong>Leinster</strong> have averaged the most<br />

metres (930) and line breaks<br />

(10.2) per game of any club in<br />

the Heineken Champions Cup this<br />

season, while Stade Toulousain<br />

have beaten the most defenders<br />

(31.8) and made the most offloads<br />

(16.4) on average.<br />

• Antoine Dupont has averaged<br />

six defenders beaten per game in<br />

the Heineken Champions Cup this<br />

season, the most of any player<br />

to feature more than once this<br />

campaign, overall only Michael<br />

Lowry (29) has beaten more<br />

defenders than last year’s EPCR<br />

European Player of the Year (24).<br />

• Thomas Ramos has made the most<br />

offloads of any player in the<br />

Heineken Champions Cup this season<br />

(16), while he has the best goal<br />

kicking success rate of anyone to<br />

attempt more than 10 kicks at goal<br />

in 2021/22 (90%, 17/19).<br />

• James Lowe has scored eight tries<br />

in the Heineken Champions Cup this<br />

season, more than any other player,<br />

while no player has made more<br />

line breaks than the <strong>Leinster</strong> wing<br />

(9, level with Michael Lowry and<br />

Alivereti Raka).<br />

COMPARISON<br />

PLAYED<br />

186<br />

(96 home, 90 away)<br />

WINS<br />

128<br />

(78 home, 50 away)<br />

LOSSES<br />

53<br />

(17 home, 36 away)<br />

DRAWS<br />

5<br />

(1 home, 4 away)<br />

AVERAGE POINTS<br />

27<br />

BIGGEST WIN<br />

89 - 7<br />

HEAVIEST DEFEAT<br />

10 - 51<br />

TOTAL TRIES<br />

43<br />

METRES GAINED<br />

5582<br />

PASSES<br />

1050<br />

PLAYED<br />

186<br />

(90 home, 96 away)<br />

WINS<br />

126<br />

(72 home, 54 away)<br />

LOSSES<br />

53<br />

(14 home, 39 away)<br />

DRAWS<br />

7<br />

(4 home, 3 away)<br />

AVERAGE POINTS<br />

26<br />

BIGGEST WIN<br />

108 - 16<br />

HEAVIEST DEFEAT<br />

17 - 77<br />

TOTAL TRIES<br />

16<br />

METRES GAINED<br />

4089<br />

PASSES<br />

851<br />

34 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


leinster<br />

squad<br />

2021/22 season<br />

Vakh Abdaladze #1263<br />

PROP<br />

DOB: 06/02/1996<br />

HEIGHT: 1.88m<br />

WEIGHT: 121kg<br />

Michael Ala’alatoa #1301<br />

prop<br />

DOB: 28/08/1991<br />

HEIGHT: 1.91m<br />

WEIGHT: 127kg<br />

7<br />

CAPS<br />

Ryan Baird #1278<br />

LOCK<br />

DOB: 26/07/1999<br />

HEIGHT: 1.98m<br />

WEIGHT: 113kg<br />

8<br />

CAPS<br />

Adam Byrne #1213<br />

WING / FULL BACK<br />

DOB: 10/04/1994<br />

HEIGHT: 1.91m<br />

WEIGHT: 98.18kg<br />

1<br />

CAP<br />

Ed Byrne #1222<br />

6<br />

CAPS<br />

Harry Byrne #1280<br />

2<br />

CAPS<br />

Ross Byrne #1236<br />

13<br />

CAPS<br />

Thomas Clarkson #1285<br />

PROP<br />

DOB: 09/09/1993<br />

HEIGHT: 1.8m<br />

WEIGHT: 114.09kg<br />

FLY HALF<br />

DOB: 22/04/1999<br />

HEIGHT: 1.9m<br />

WEIGHT: 95kg<br />

FLY HALF<br />

DOB: 08/04/1995<br />

HEIGHT: 1.9m<br />

WEIGHT: 92kg<br />

PROP<br />

DOB: 22/02/2000<br />

HEIGHT: 1.85m<br />

WEIGHT: 118kg<br />

36 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


Jack Conan #1223<br />

27<br />

CAPS<br />

7<br />

CAPS<br />

Will Connors #1264<br />

9<br />

CAPS<br />

Sean Cronin #1202<br />

72<br />

CAPS<br />

Max Deegan #1256<br />

1<br />

CAP<br />

NO. 8<br />

DOB: 29/07/1992<br />

HEIGHT: 1.93m<br />

WEIGHT: 114.09kg<br />

BACK ROW<br />

DOB: 04/04/1996<br />

HEIGHT: 1.96m<br />

WEIGHT: 100kg<br />

HOOKER<br />

DOB: 06/05/1986<br />

HEIGHT: 1.78m<br />

WEIGHT: 103.18kg<br />

NO. 8<br />

DOB: 01/10/1996<br />

HEIGHT: 1.93m<br />

WEIGHT: 110kg<br />

Peter Dooley #1230<br />

Caelan Doris #1268<br />

17<br />

CAPS<br />

Jack Dunne #1276<br />

Ciaran Frawley #1265<br />

PROP<br />

DOB: 04/08/1994<br />

HEIGHT: 1.83m<br />

WEIGHT: 117kg<br />

BACK ROW<br />

DOB: 02/04/1998<br />

HEIGHT: 1.93m<br />

WEIGHT: 107kg<br />

LOCK<br />

DOB: 21/11/1998<br />

HEIGHT: 2.03m<br />

WEIGHT: 120kg<br />

FLY HALF<br />

DOB: 04/12/1997<br />

HEIGHT: 1.91m<br />

WEIGHT: 98kg<br />

Tadhg Furlong #1220<br />

PROP<br />

DOB: 14/11/1992<br />

HEIGHT: 1.83m<br />

WEIGHT: 125kg<br />

57<br />

CAPS<br />

13<br />

CAPS<br />

Jamison Gibson-Park #1247<br />

SCRUM HALF<br />

DOB: 23/02/1992<br />

HEIGHT: 1.75m<br />

WEIGHT: 80kg<br />

17<br />

CAPS<br />

David Hawkshaw #1290<br />

FLY HALF / Centre<br />

DOB: 03/07/1999<br />

HEIGHT: 1.75m )<br />

WEIGHT: 85.91kg<br />

Cian Healy #1142<br />

PROP<br />

DOB: 07/10/1987<br />

HEIGHT: 1.85m<br />

WEIGHT: 116.82kg<br />

116<br />

CAPS<br />

2<br />

CAPS<br />

Robbie Henshaw #1251<br />

57<br />

CAPS<br />

9<br />

CAPS<br />

Dave Kearney #1158<br />

19<br />

CAPS<br />

Hugo Keenan #1253<br />

20<br />

CAPS<br />

Ronan Kelleher #1277<br />

18<br />

CAPS<br />

CENTRE<br />

DOB: 12/06/1993<br />

HEIGHT: 1.9m<br />

WEIGHT: 99.09kg<br />

WING / FULL BACK<br />

DOB: 19/06/1989<br />

HEIGHT: 1.8m<br />

WEIGHT: 90kg<br />

FULL BACK<br />

DOB: 18/06/1996<br />

HEIGHT: 1.85m<br />

WEIGHT: 91.82kg<br />

HOOKER<br />

DOB: 24/01/1998<br />

HEIGHT: 1.83m<br />

WEIGHT: 105kg<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 37


Jordan Larmour #1258<br />

30<br />

CAPS<br />

Dan Leavy #1231<br />

11<br />

CAPS<br />

WING<br />

DOB: 10/06/1997<br />

HEIGHT: 1.78m<br />

WEIGHT: 90kg<br />

FLANKER<br />

DOB: 23/05/1994<br />

HEIGHT: 1.91m<br />

WEIGHT: 105.91kg<br />

for full squad profiles<br />

please click here<br />

James Lowe #1262<br />

12<br />

CAPS<br />

Nick McCarthy #1241<br />

Luke McGrath #1206<br />

19<br />

CAPS<br />

Michael Milne #1279<br />

WING / FULL BACK<br />

DOB: 08/07/1992<br />

HEIGHT: 1.88m<br />

WEIGHT: 105kg<br />

SCRUM HALF<br />

DOB: 25/03/1995<br />

HEIGHT: 1.8m<br />

WEIGHT: 84.09kg<br />

SCRUM HALF<br />

DOB: 03/02/1993<br />

HEIGHT: 1.75m<br />

WEIGHT: 84.09kg<br />

PROP<br />

DOB: 05/02/1999<br />

HEIGHT: 1.83m<br />

WEIGHT: 115kg<br />

Jimmy O’Brien #1272<br />

Conor O’Brien #1260<br />

Josh Murphy #1261<br />

Ross Molony #1233<br />

LOCK<br />

DOB: 11/05/1994<br />

HEIGHT: 1.96m<br />

WEIGHT: 113kg<br />

FLANKER<br />

DOB: 17/02/1995<br />

HEIGHT: 1.98m<br />

WEIGHT: 110kg<br />

CENTRE<br />

DOB: 06/02/1996<br />

HEIGHT: 1.91m<br />

WEIGHT: 100kg<br />

CENTRE<br />

DOB: 27/11/1996<br />

HEIGHT: 1.83m<br />

WEIGHT: 88kg<br />

Tommy O’Brien #1283<br />

Rory O’Loughlin #1248<br />

1<br />

CAP<br />

Scott Penny #1271<br />

Andrew Porter #1246<br />

43<br />

CAPS<br />

CENTRE<br />

DOB: 28/05/1998<br />

HEIGHT: 1.83m<br />

WEIGHT: 95kg<br />

CENTRE<br />

DOB: 21/01/1994<br />

HEIGHT: 1.88m<br />

WEIGHT: 94.09kg<br />

FLANKER<br />

DOB: 22/09/1999<br />

HEIGHT: 1.83m<br />

WEIGHT: 104kg<br />

PROP<br />

DOB: 16/01/1996<br />

HEIGHT: 1.83m<br />

WEIGHT: 114.09kg<br />

38 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


Garry Ringrose #1237<br />

42<br />

CAPS<br />

Rhys Ruddock #1167<br />

27<br />

CAPS<br />

James Ryan #1259<br />

43<br />

CAPS<br />

Johnny Sexton #1127<br />

105<br />

CAPS<br />

14<br />

CAPS<br />

CENTRE<br />

DOB: 26/01/1995<br />

HEIGHT: 1.85m<br />

WEIGHT: 96kg<br />

BACK ROW<br />

DOB: 13/11/1990<br />

HEIGHT: 1.91m<br />

WEIGHT: 113.18kg<br />

LOCK<br />

DOB: 24/07/1996<br />

HEIGHT: 2.03m<br />

WEIGHT: 115kg<br />

FLY HALF<br />

DOB: 11/07/1985<br />

HEIGHT: 1.88m<br />

WEIGHT: 90kg<br />

Dan Sheehan #1286<br />

HOOKER<br />

DOB: 17/09/1998<br />

HEIGHT: 1.91m<br />

WEIGHT: 110.91kg<br />

7<br />

CAPS<br />

Devin Toner #1128<br />

LOCK<br />

DOB: 29/06/1986<br />

HEIGHT: 2.11m<br />

WEIGHT: 127kg<br />

70<br />

CAPS<br />

James Tracy #1211<br />

HOOKER<br />

DOB: 02/04/1991<br />

HEIGHT: 1.83m<br />

WEIGHT: 106kg<br />

6<br />

CAPS<br />

Josh van der Flier #1228<br />

FLANKER<br />

DOB: 25/04/1993<br />

HEIGHT: 1.85m<br />

WEIGHT: 103kg<br />

40<br />

CAPS<br />

Coaching<br />

Staff<br />

2021/22 season<br />

LEO CULLEN<br />

HEAD COACH<br />

STUART LANCASTER<br />

SENIOR COACH<br />

ROBIN MCBRYDE<br />

ASSISTANT COACH<br />

FELIPE CONTEPOMI<br />

BACKS COACH<br />

EMMET FARRELL<br />

KICKING COACH AND<br />

LEAD PERFORMANCE ANALYST<br />

GUY EASTERBY<br />

HEAD OF RUGBY OPERATIONS<br />

DENIS LEAMY<br />

CONTACT SKILLS COACH<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 39


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from Mao At Home today


One of the all time greats of<br />

County Carlow Rugby Club,<br />

Bob Fennell from Ballickmoyler,<br />

passed away in early May 2022<br />

in his 86th year.<br />

Bob Fennell was a key member of the<br />

Carlow team which won the Provincial<br />

Towns Cup in 1957, 1961 and 1965.<br />

His half-back partnership with Peter O<br />

Gorman at number nine was described<br />

by many as the best paring that ever<br />

donned the Carlow black and amber<br />

jersey.<br />

Bob’s day job was in maths teaching at<br />

The High School in Rathgar, Dublin but<br />

all his life he commuted every weekend<br />

to Carlow to fulfil his passion for Carlow<br />

rugby.<br />

In the early days this commuting was on<br />

a 50cc scooter. Sometimes he carried his<br />

6’ 5” clubmate Shirley Gillespie on the<br />

scooter as well.<br />

Although a natural leader both on and<br />

off the field, Bob, because he was living<br />

in Dublin, never took on captaincy or<br />

formal administration positions with<br />

Carlow. Yet he was constantly helping<br />

and advising his team-mates, especially<br />

new players.<br />

Bob Fennell RIP<br />

BY JOHN SHIRLEY<br />

Tommy Doyle, who shared the Towns<br />

Cup victories with him, described Bob as<br />

the “epitome of a really good clubman,<br />

a team player and thorough gentleman.<br />

As an astute kicking outhalf he would<br />

control games. His cross kicks were spot<br />

on and led to many tries for Carlow. Also<br />

he was equally adept with both feet and<br />

frequently we won games with a late Bob<br />

Fennell drop-kick. ”<br />

Martin Byrne, 1992 Towns Cup winner<br />

with Carlow, said; “As a newcomer to<br />

rugby, Bob took me under his wing and<br />

explained not just the rules but also the<br />

skills and positioning.”<br />

When Carlow were trying to get youth<br />

teams going Bob brought down youth<br />

teams from The High School to provide<br />

opposition for the fledgling Carlow sides.<br />

In The High School, Bob was rugby<br />

coach and manager as well as Vice-<br />

Principal. He guided future rugby<br />

internationals such as Philip Orr and John<br />

Robbie in the game. In 1973, The High<br />

School won the <strong>Leinster</strong> Senior Schools<br />

Rugby Cup for the one and only time.<br />

In gratitude for Bob’s contribution to the<br />

school, The High School recently named<br />

a new Denis O’Brien-sponsored rugby<br />

pitch after the Carlow out-half.<br />

Bob’s nephew William Fennell, a Towns<br />

Cup winner in 1977, described his uncle<br />

as a “an out and out Carlow rugby<br />

man who continued to play rugby till<br />

he was about 50 and after that was a<br />

constant and knowledgeable supporter<br />

at matches.<br />

“He was an all round sportsman and<br />

during the summer also commuted to<br />

Carlow to play cricket in Bagenalstown,<br />

along with his sons, Russell and Nigel.”<br />

There are many stories of Bob’s kindness<br />

and generosity. Once when he was<br />

dropping a neighbour to the boat to<br />

England, (again on his scooter) Bob<br />

noticed the man had no overcoat. He<br />

removed his own and handed it to the<br />

emigrant. Gladly the emigrant hit better<br />

times but never forgot Bob’s gesture and<br />

called to him on return visits to Ireland.<br />

Bob is survived by his wife Doris (nee<br />

Meredith) daughter Annalee, sons,<br />

Russell and Nigel, and their families.<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 43


ENERGIA MEN’S ALL-IRELAND LEAGUE<br />

FINALS<br />

DEACONroundup<br />

BY ROBERT<br />

The weekend of April 30 saw the<br />

play-offs for both the title and<br />

promotion spots for this season’s<br />

Energia Men’s All-Ireland Leagues<br />

take place, and what a weekend<br />

of club rugby it turned out to be.<br />

Of the five divisions that make up the All-<br />

Ireland League, three of the finals were<br />

contested between <strong>Leinster</strong> clubs, Clontarf<br />

and Terenure in Division 1A, Greystones<br />

and Blackrock in Division 2B, while<br />

Enniscorthy played Skerries in Division<br />

2C. Naas represented the province in the<br />

final of Division 1B.<br />

In Division 2C, Enniscorthy who had led<br />

the league all season entertained Skerries<br />

who had finished in second place. Both<br />

clubs had come through tough semi-finals,<br />

Enniscorthy accounting for Tullamore 12-<br />

9, while Skerries won a close encounter<br />

at home against fellow seasiders Bangor<br />

winning 32-29.<br />

Enniscorthy, with home advantage in<br />

the final, pulled away in the second half<br />

to eventually run out winners by 41-14,<br />

despite the best efforts of a gallant<br />

Skerries team. Enniscorthy will now play<br />

in Division 2B next season.<br />

The Division 2B final was also between<br />

two <strong>Leinster</strong> clubs, old rivals Greystones<br />

and Blackrock. Greystones, who had<br />

led the league all year had defeated<br />

Galway Corinthians 19-14 at home in the<br />

semi-final, while Blackrock, by finishing<br />

third, had to travel to Belfast Harlequins<br />

where they came away with a creditable<br />

29-17 victory.<br />

The final played in Dr Hickey Park turned<br />

out to be an epic encounter where<br />

Blackrock staged an unforgettable<br />

comeback after being 17 points down<br />

to score with the last play of the game<br />

to win by 25-23. It proved to be a gutwrenching<br />

end for Greystones after an<br />

excellent league campaign. Blackrock<br />

will now ply their trade in Division 2A<br />

next season.<br />

Naas travelled to Limerick to contest<br />

the final of Division 1B against the<br />

Munster men from Shannon. Naas, who<br />

had finished fourth in the league, had<br />

accounted for table-toppers Old Wesley<br />

in the semi-final in an exciting encounter<br />

in Energia Park where they held on to<br />

run out winners by a 38-37 score-line.<br />

Shannon took on and beat Cork rivals<br />

Highfield by 25-19 in the second semifinal.<br />

The final drew a large crowd to Coonagh<br />

in Limerick where Shannon did not<br />

disappoint the home fans with a strong<br />

display winning 30-15, and as a result<br />

are promoted to Division 1A for next<br />

season.<br />

On Sunday, 1 May, the attention turned<br />

to the Aviva Stadium for the Division<br />

1A final between Clontarf and Terenure,<br />

again an all-<strong>Leinster</strong> affair, and what a<br />

44 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


match it turned out to be. The semifinals<br />

had seen league leaders Clontarf<br />

overcome fourth place Cork Constitution<br />

29-13 in Castle Avenue. Terenure,<br />

with home advantage, accounted for<br />

Lansdowne by the narrow margin of<br />

20-18.<br />

A record crowd for an All-Ireland League<br />

final of just short of 6000 were treated<br />

to a wonderful contest and the vocal<br />

support of both sets of supporters was<br />

relentless throughout.<br />

Clontarf seeking to win the competition<br />

for the third time survived a frantic finish<br />

by their southside rivals holding on to win<br />

by 29-23. Terenure fought gallantly to the<br />

end but could not breach a stout Clontarf<br />

defence who held out to be crowned<br />

worthy champions.<br />

The Division 1A final proved a fitting<br />

occasion to what was an outstanding<br />

season of AIL rugby which witnessed<br />

increased attendances across all five<br />

divisions. In a season that started with<br />

so much uncertainty the standard and<br />

quality of the Energia All-Ireland League<br />

showed, yet again, what our clubs have<br />

to offer the game, long may it continue.<br />

Congratulations to all clubs.<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 45


compiled by stuart farmer<br />

media services limited<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Player<br />

Statistics<br />

SQUAD<br />

CAP<br />

NO<br />

DEBUT<br />

2021/22 SEASON FOR LEINSTER LEINSTER CAREER<br />

ALL GAMES URC EPCR ALL GAMES PRO14/URC EPCR<br />

App Try Pts App Try Pts App Try Pts App Try Pts App Try Pts App Try Pts<br />

SINCE LAST TRY<br />

CAPS<br />

VAKH ABDALADZE 1263 2 DEC 17 0+5 1 5 0+4 1 5 0+1 - - 0+17 2 10 0+16 2 10 0+1 - - 2 -<br />

MICHAEL ALA'ALATOA 1301 25 SEPT 21 12+9 2 10 11+4 1 5 1+4 1 5 12+9 2 10 11+4 1 5 1+4 1 5 9 WS 7<br />

RYAN BAIRD 1278 27 APR 19 5+4 1 5 4+3 1 5 1+1 - - 17+19 7 35 15+14 7 35 2+5 - - 4 IR 8<br />

LEE BARRON 1308 23 APR 22 0+2 - - 0+2 - - - - - 0+2 - - 0+2 - - - - - - -<br />

ADAM BYRNE 1213 29 DEC 12 6+2 4 20 6+2 4 20 - - - 55+10 24 120 45+10 18 90 10 6 30 5 IR 1<br />

ED BYRNE 1222 9 FEB 14 7+7 2 10 7+5 2 10 0+2 - - 26+58 12 60 26+45 11 55 0+13 1 5 1 IR 6<br />

HARRY BYRNE 1280 28 SEPT 19 6+4 - 12 6+4 - 12 - - - 20+14 6 166 20+13 6 161 0+1 - 5 13 IR 2<br />

ROSS BYRNE 1236 4 SEPT 15 13+7 3 152 11+3 2 109 2+3 1 40 83+41 9 802 69+21 4 580 14+19 5 219 7 IR 13<br />

THOMAS CLARK-<br />

1285 29 AUG 20 3+4 - - 3+4 - - - - - 5+12 - - 5+12 - - - - - - -<br />

SON<br />

JACK CONAN 1223 20 FEB 14 8 2 10 3 - - 4 2 10 88+25 25 125 62+15 16 80 25+10 9 45 6 IR 27<br />

WILL CONNORS 1264 9 FEB 18 1+1 - - 1+1 - - - - - 18+7 2 10 17+7 2 10 1 - - 12 IR 9<br />

TIM CORKERY 1298 12 MAR 21 - - - - - - - - - 0+2 - - 0+2 - - - - - - -<br />

CHRIS COSGRAVE 1305 26 MAR 22 1+1 - - 1+1 - - - - - 1+1 - - 1+1 - - - - - - -<br />

SEAN CRONIN 1202 28 OCT 11 3+6 3 15 3+6 3 15 - - - 123+81 45 225 79+60 28 140 43+19 16 80 3 IR 72<br />

MAX DEEGAN 1256 3 DEC 16 7+11 6 30 7+7 6 30 0+4 - - 42+41 24 120 39+29 22 110 3+12 2 10 4 IR 1<br />

BRIAN DEENY 1306 23 APR 22 2 - - 2 - - - - - 2 - - 2 - - - - - - -<br />

PETER DOOLEY 1230 31 OCT 14 3+7 - - 3+7 - - - - - 43+60 5 25 41+54 5 25 2+6 - - 18 -<br />

CAELAN DORIS 1268 28 APR 18 11 2 10 5 2 10 5 - - 43+8 7 35 31+6 5 25 11+2 2 10 8 IR 17<br />

JACK DUNNE 1276 16 FEB 19 2+3 - - 2+3 - - - - - 4+16 - - 4+16 - - - - - - -<br />

CORMAC FOLEY 1299 24 APR 21 1+2 - - 1+2 - - - - - 1+3 - - 1+3 - - - - - - -<br />

CIARAN FRAWLEY 1265 17 FEB 18 12+5 2 31 10+2 1 26 2+3 1 5 29+23 6 174 26+16 4 158 3+7 2 16 6 -<br />

TADHG FURLONG 1220 1 NOV 13 8+1 2 10 3+1 - - 4 2 10 81+42 10 50 45+34 3 15 35+8 7 35 2 IR 57<br />

JAMISON GIBSON-PARK 1247 2 SEPT 16 7+4 4 20 3+2 - - 3+2 4 20 56+56 21 105 47+30 14 70 8+26 7 35 2 IR 17<br />

MARCUS HANAN 1295 19 FEB 21 - - - - - - - - - 0+3 - - 0+3 - - - - - - -<br />

DAVID HAWKSHAW 1290 2 NOV 20 0+3 1 13 0+3 1 13 - - - 0+11 2 27 0+11 2 27 - - - 2 -<br />

CIAN HEALY 1142 5 MAY 07 4+9 2 10 3+5 2 10 1+3 - - 160+84 29 145 93+53 15 75 65+29 13 65 4 IR 116<br />

ROBBIE HENSHAW 1251 8 OCT 16 7 4 20 3 1 5 3 2 10 63+1 15 75 28 6 30 34+1 8 40 1 IR 57<br />

DAVE KEARNEY 1158 16 MAY 09 3+1 1 5 3+1 1 5 - - - 150+23 52 260 124+16 45 225 25+6 7 35 2 IR 19<br />

HUGO KEENAN 1253 5 NOV 16 12 4 20 6 1 5 5 3 15 39+3 8 40 28+3 5 25 10 3 15 3 IR 20<br />

RONAN KELLEHER 1277 22 FEB 19 7+2 4 20 2+2 3 15 4 1 5 27+7 13 65 16+5 11 55 10+2 2 10 5 IR 18<br />

JORDAN LARMOUR 1258 2 SEPT 17 9 6 30 6 4 20 3 2 10 61+10 25 125 37+7 18 90 24+3 7 35 1 IR 30<br />

46 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


SQUAD<br />

CAP<br />

NO<br />

DEBUT<br />

2021/22 SEASON FOR LEINSTER LEINSTER CAREER<br />

ALL GAMES URC EPCR ALL GAMES PRO14/URC EPCR<br />

App Try Pts App Try Pts App Try Pts App Try Pts App Try Pts App Try Pts<br />

SINCE LAST TRY<br />

CAPS<br />

TEMI LASISI 1304 12 MAR 22 0+1 - - 0+1 - - - - - 0+1 - - 0+1 - - - - - - -<br />

DAN LEAVY 1231 31 OCT 14 4+3 - - 4+3 - - - - - 47+32 17 85 39+22 13 65 8+10 4 20 8 IR 11<br />

JAMES LOWE 1262 2 DEC 17 9+2 11 55 5+1 3 15 3+1 8 40 61+2 45 225 39+1 28 140 21+1 17 85 2 IR 12<br />

JOE MCCARTHY 1303 29 JAN 22 5+1 - - 5 - - - - - 5+1 - - 5 - - - - - - -<br />

NICK MCCARTHY 1241 19 DEC 15 3+7 1 5 3+7 1 5 - - - 9+37 5 25 9+31 5 25 0+6 - - 6 -<br />

LUKE MCGRATH 1206 5 MAY 12 12+8 1 5 10+4 1 5 2+3 - - 114+57 40 200 79+47 32 160 35+9 8 40 5 IR 19<br />

JOHN MCKEE 1307 23 APR 22 2 - - 2 - - - - - 2 - - 2 - - - - - - -<br />

MICHAEL MILNE 1279 28 SEPT 19 0+1 - - 0+1 - - - - - 1+16 2 10 1+16 2 10 - - - 15 -<br />

MARTIN MOLONEY 1300 24 APR 21 2+4 - - 2+4 - - - - - 2+5 - - 2+5 - - - - - - -<br />

ROSS MOLONY 1233 20 FEB 15 16+3 1 5 10+3 - - 5 1 5 80+55 5 25 72+40 4 20 7+15 1 5 12 -<br />

JOSH MURPHY 1261 3 NOV 17 7+4 - - 3+4 - - 4 - - 49+11 5 25 44+10 4 20 5+1 1 5 20 -<br />

JAMIE OSBORNE 1294 30 JAN 21 10+2 - - 10+2 - - - - - 12+6 1 5 12+6 1 5 - - - 13 -<br />

CONOR O'BRIEN 1260 3 NOV 17 1 - - 1 - - - - - 17+7 6 30 17+6 6 30 0+1 - - 10 -<br />

JIMMY O'BRIEN 1272 23 NOV 18 13+1 8 42 8 3 17 4+1 5 25 39+10 15 79 32+9 9 49 6+1 6 30 4 -<br />

SEAN O'BRIEN 1297 12 MAR 21 0+1 - - 0+1 - - - - - 0+3 - - 0+3 - - - - - - -<br />

TOMMY O'BRIEN 1283 20 DEC 19 6+6 3 15 6+4 3 15 0+1 - - 10+11 6 30 10+9 6 30 0+1 - - 2 -<br />

RORY O'LOUGH-<br />

1248 2 SEPT 16 8+1 1 5 8+1 1 5 - - - 72+24 22 110 65+16 19 95 7+8 3 15 3 IR 1<br />

LIN<br />

MAX O'REILLY 1291 2 JAN 21 2 - - 2 - - - - - 8+1 1 5 8+1 1 5 - - - 8 -<br />

SCOTT PENNY 1271 23 NOV 18 10+1 6 30 10+1 6 30 - - - 33+7 22 110 33+7 22 110 - - - 2 -<br />

ANDREW PORTER 1246 2 SEPT 16 9+1 3 15 4+1 2 10 4 1 5 37+50 14 70 27+31 10 50 9+19 4 20 4 IR 43<br />

GARRY RINGROSE 1237 12 SEPT 15 12 2 10 6 2 10 5 - - 96+2 29 153 58+1 18 98 37+1 11 55 4 IR 42<br />

RHYS RUDDOCK 1167 6 DEC 09 13+6 1 5 12+3 1 5 1+2 - - 156+51 12 60 118+34 10 50 37+14 2 10 13 IR 27<br />

ROB RUSSELL 1302 3 OCT 21 2+2 - - 2+2 - - - - - 2+2 - - 2+2 - - - - - - -<br />

JAMES RYAN 1259 2 SEPT 17 4 - - 3 - - - - - 48+6 3 15 25+1 1 5 22+5 2 10 14 IR 43<br />

JOHNNY SEXTON 1127 27 JAN 06 6+2 - 72 2+1 - 22 3+1 - 40 154+27 26 1579 89+20 13 855 62+7 12 683 21 IR 105<br />

DAN SHEEHAN 1286 23 OCT 20 4+8 7 35 3+3 4 20 1+4 3 15 7+18 13 65 6+13 10 50 1+4 3 15 5 IR 7<br />

ANDREW SMITH 1292 2 JAN 21 - - - - - - - - - 1+1 - - 1+1 - - - - - - -<br />

ALEX SOROKA 1296 28 FEB 21 1+1 - - 1+1 - - - - - 2+2 - - 2+2 - - - - - - -<br />

DEVIN TONER 1128 27 JAN 06 6+7 - - 6+4 - - 0+3 - - 212+67 4 20 146+46 4 20 63+21 - - 62 IR 70<br />

JAMES TRACY 1211 4 NOV 12 7+5 4 20 7+4 4 20 0+1 - - 64+77 18 90 57+48 17 85 7+29 1 5 5 IR 6<br />

LIAM TURNER 1287 23 OCT 20 - - - - - - - - - 4+2 - - 4+2 - - - - - - -<br />

JOSH VAN DER FLIER 1228 11 OCT 14 11+1 6 30 5+1 1 5 5 4 20 86+24 17 85 50+18 8 40 35+6 8 40 1 IR 40<br />

KICKING<br />

2021/22 SEASON FOR LEINSTER LEINSTER CAREER<br />

ALL GAMES URC EPCR ALL GAMES PRO14/URC EPCR OVERALL<br />

SUCCESS<br />

RATE<br />

C PG DG C PG DG C PG DG C PG DG C PG DG C PG DG ATT Career<br />

%<br />

- - - HARRY BYRNE 66.67% 6 - - 6 - - - - - 59 6 58 5 1 1 83 78.31%<br />

ROSS BYRNE 86.11% 49 13 - 33 11 - 16 1 - 245 88 1 187 61 1 58 26 - 426 78.17%<br />

CIARAN FRAWLEY 100.00% 3 5 - 3 5 - - - - 54 12 - 51 12 - 3 - - 80 82.50%<br />

DAVID HAWKSHAW 66.67% 4 - - 4 - - - - - 7 1 - 7 1 - - - - 12 66.67%<br />

JIMMY O'BRIEN 100.00% 1 - - 1 - - - - - 2 - - 2 - - - - - 4 50.00%<br />

GARRY RINGROSE - - - - - - - - - - 4 - - 4 - - - - - 6 66.67%<br />

JOHNNY SEXTON 82.50% 27 6 - 8 2 - 17 2 - 261 298 11 128 171 7 124 121 4 700 79.86%<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 47


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ig picture<br />

7 May 2022<br />

Josh van der Flier, right, and<br />

Jonathan Sexton of <strong>Leinster</strong><br />

celebrate a turnover during<br />

the Heineken Champions Cup<br />

Quarter-Final match between<br />

Leicester Tigers and <strong>Leinster</strong> at<br />

Mattoli Woods Welford Road<br />

Stadium in Leicester, England.<br />

50 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


Photo by Harry Murphy/Sportsfile<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 51


THE GREATEST WEEKEND IN RUGBY<br />

27-28 MAY, STADE VÉLODROME


offical leinster supporters club<br />

Welcome to what we hope come the<br />

final whistle around 5/ 5:15pm, will<br />

indeed have been a Super Saturday<br />

for <strong>Leinster</strong> as we welcome <strong>Toulouse</strong><br />

for the first of the weekend’s<br />

semi-final fixtures in the 2021/22<br />

Heineken Champions Cup.<br />

We last took to the field here<br />

around a month ago, when on<br />

Good Friday we secured victory<br />

over our interprovincial rivals<br />

Connacht (56-20) which saw us<br />

take our place in the last eight.<br />

Last weekend in that game played in<br />

Mattioli Woods Welford Road, we<br />

overcame Leicester Tigers 23-14 to<br />

secure our place here today. Our visitors<br />

for today are no stranger to the Aviva<br />

and they’ve even managed to take to the<br />

field here more recently than we last did,<br />

just last week (Saturday) to be exact!<br />

For them, and only the second time in the<br />

history of the competition, the result was<br />

secured after a place kicking competition<br />

and our other interprovincial rivals<br />

Munster fell at that hurdle in what was a<br />

cauldron of red.<br />

Our aim today is to make sure that the<br />

cauldron atmosphere is replicated,<br />

however in the colour of blue! For<br />

those of you who were in Leicester last<br />

weekend, there was something very<br />

special and heart-warming about seeing<br />

Leo getting off the coach in the car park<br />

and the smile that spread across his face<br />

when he saw the #SeaOfBlue that was<br />

there to greet him and the team.<br />

Covid restrictions have had on away<br />

fixtures.<br />

That welcome last week no doubt brought<br />

a tear to a few eyes and we hope that<br />

today will be no different. A number of<br />

the OLSC Committee travelled over to<br />

the game last weekend and at numerous<br />

times over the course of the day, both<br />

before and after the game, there was<br />

nothing but praise for you the fans who<br />

were in attendance and we thank you<br />

for this.<br />

We work to ensure we can assist as many<br />

fans as we can to get to games, and last<br />

week certainly showed that when the<br />

blue travels, it travels in large numbers<br />

and is loud. Very Loud! It’s been said<br />

before numerous times and especially by<br />

Leo in his pre-match notes that the team<br />

acknowledge and appreciate how much<br />

this means to them and what a boost it<br />

gives them.<br />

Back to this afternoon though and there’s<br />

not much point dwelling on the past<br />

history and results between ourselves<br />

and <strong>Toulouse</strong> as they could be debated<br />

and rehashed over for hours. Last week<br />

we made a fast start, even leading 20-0<br />

at half-time before running out winners<br />

23-14.<br />

finished 24-all with Munster missing a last<br />

gasp penalty to secure victory. The rest<br />

we all know about and the final score-line<br />

brings <strong>Toulouse</strong> back to the Aviva.<br />

The lessons for us to take from their<br />

victory is that they are resilient (well, you<br />

don’t secure five stars on sheer luck and<br />

chance) and if you don’t shake them, they<br />

will continue to sniff and wait for their<br />

opportunity to pounce and this is exactly<br />

what they did last week.<br />

The ‘home’ crowd last week did their<br />

utmost to roar their team to victory<br />

however it wasn’t to be but for us, this is<br />

our home away from home and we know<br />

that a big performance is needed, from<br />

us and the team!<br />

Last week was a tight affair and we<br />

expect no different this week but what<br />

we do know as evidenced in the past is<br />

that we can come away with the victory<br />

when we need it most when the crowd<br />

is behind the team and let’s make sure<br />

today is no different.<br />

This is where we want to stamp our mark<br />

on the competition and lay out our stall<br />

and announce to the remaining teams<br />

that we mean business and want to<br />

become the second European, and first<br />

Irish, team to secure an illustrious fifth star.<br />

We’d love for the road to Marseille to be<br />

paved blue, and wouldn’t you ….<br />

As always we’re thankful for the support<br />

we as a committee get from <strong>Leinster</strong><br />

Rugby, Bank of Ireland and all the<br />

Corporate Sponsors, and as always we<br />

encourage you to show your support<br />

through our social media channels.<br />

Be loud, be true, be blue<br />

It was a special moment for all involved<br />

given the last two years and the impact<br />

<strong>Toulouse</strong> on the other hand went into the<br />

break all square (14-apiece) before it<br />

Yours in Rugby,<br />

Your OLSC Committee<br />

54 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


OFFICIAL<br />

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As Official Clean Air Partner to <strong>Leinster</strong><br />

Rugby we are delighted to support the<br />

team in their pursuit of excellence by<br />

adding Novaerus Air Disinfection to their<br />

winning formula.<br />

Irish-designed and patented Novaerus<br />

NanoStrike technology strives to give<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> the physical and competitive edge<br />

by disinfecting the squad and<br />

management team’s indoor<br />

air safely, 24/7.


GETTING<br />

We check social media<br />

for the latest views<br />

and thoughts across<br />

SOCIAL<br />

the 12 counties<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 59


60 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


GETTING<br />

SOCIAL<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 61


WHERE ARE<br />

THEY NOW?<br />

CIARAN CLARKE<br />

THEN: Ciaran<br />

played for<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby<br />

more than 30<br />

times between<br />

1991 and 1999.<br />

NOW: The<br />

53-year-old<br />

lives with his<br />

partner Sonya<br />

Mooney and son<br />

James (18) in<br />

Rathfarnham,<br />

working as a<br />

Pharmaceutical<br />

Representative<br />

for Pinewood<br />

Healthcare.<br />

62 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


December 30, 1995.<br />

Ciaran Clarke isn’t blessed with<br />

unimpeachable memory. He can’t<br />

be precise about how many caps<br />

he wore for <strong>Leinster</strong> - somewhere<br />

in the low 30s - or how many tries<br />

he put his name to in blue.<br />

But, he has always held the detail of this<br />

date, the first Heineken Cup semi-final<br />

when <strong>Leinster</strong> came up short against<br />

Cardiff Blues at Lansdowne Road in front<br />

of an official crowd of 7,350.<br />

And not for the disappointment of the 23-<br />

14 defeat to the storied Welsh club.<br />

“I broke my hand in the game. I’m not<br />

sure how it happened. It might have been<br />

trodden on,” he says.<br />

“Anyway, the ambulance got stuck when<br />

it left the wrong way, the underneath of<br />

it catching on a cement grid. The air had<br />

to be let out of the tyres to get it over the<br />

hump.<br />

“I was left sitting in the Meath Hospital<br />

in my <strong>Leinster</strong> gear. After I was seen and<br />

let go, I made my way back in a taxi to<br />

Lansdowne Road hours later. There was<br />

no one there.<br />

“I had to get someone to let me into the<br />

stadium to get my car. My pal Joe Lynch<br />

was getting married the same day and<br />

I drove one-handed in my <strong>Leinster</strong> gear<br />

on icy roads to The Glenview Hotel in<br />

Wicklow at night.<br />

“Looking back on it now, you have to<br />

laugh. I don’t remember much about my<br />

rugby. But, I remember that day all too<br />

well.”<br />

Ciaran was known for his big left boot<br />

and an athletic frame that made for<br />

a high ceiling coming out of Terenure<br />

College where he lost in the 1987<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Schools Senior Cup final and<br />

was ruled out in 1988 with a broken<br />

collar-bone.<br />

Ciaran played for <strong>Leinster</strong> as an amateur,<br />

semi-professional in 1996/97 and<br />

1997/98 and full-time professional in<br />

1998/99.<br />

By late 1991, <strong>Leinster</strong> head coach Ciaran<br />

Callan sat down in an old-fashioned<br />

system with five selectors to give the<br />

22-year-old his debut against Ulster.<br />

This was back when there wasn’t a<br />

weight in sight at <strong>Leinster</strong> sessions and the<br />

priority was around organisation for the<br />

game at the weekend.<br />

“It was very different back then. We were<br />

a combination of professional and semiprofessional<br />

players.<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 63


“As a pro, you might go in early in the<br />

morning for a weights session at 8am,<br />

finish by 10am. Then, you are twiddling<br />

your thumbs, hanging around all day<br />

waiting for a pitch session in the evening<br />

because some of the players had to put in<br />

a day’s work in between.<br />

“You are still training in the dark in the<br />

middle of winter even though you are a<br />

professional,” he adds.<br />

Ciaran’s greatest moment for <strong>Leinster</strong><br />

came against a galaxy of Wallaby stars<br />

in a tour match at Lansdowne Road in<br />

1992.<br />

“I never played against Australia in my<br />

five internationals for Ireland. So, I won’t<br />

forget the day we played them when they<br />

had Michael Lynagh, David Campese,<br />

Jason Little, Tim Horan and John Eales.<br />

“I do look back with pride on the fact that<br />

I played for <strong>Leinster</strong>.”<br />

One year later, Ciaran was at full-back<br />

for Ireland when Mick Galwey’s famous<br />

try sealed a 17-3 win over a multitalented,<br />

bruising England side looking to<br />

complete a Grand Slam.<br />

However, the appearances for <strong>Leinster</strong><br />

and Ireland were limited due to suffering<br />

a ruptured cruciate ligament playing<br />

for Terenure against Sunday’s Well in<br />

October 1993, months after his first three<br />

Ireland caps.<br />

“I played seven years of rugby with no<br />

cruciate in my right knee which sounds<br />

ridiculous now. I had my knee replaced<br />

18 months ago because of it,” he reveals.<br />

“When it happened, I had seen players<br />

who had opted for an operation. Some<br />

had better results than others. The<br />

surgeon told me I had to have surgery. I<br />

said: ‘No’.<br />

“There was no guarantee of getting<br />

back. I just didn’t fancy it. It wasn’t like it<br />

is today when a player could be back in<br />

eight months.<br />

“It had a drastic effect on my game. I<br />

wore a big brace. I kept tearing bits of<br />

cartilage. I would plant my foot, turn<br />

quickly and the knee would wobble.<br />

“I played a lot of my <strong>Leinster</strong> caps and<br />

my last two Ireland caps in that condition.<br />

You didn’t announce it back then. There<br />

was no social media. The scrutiny wasn’t<br />

the same. I never really talked about it<br />

publicly.<br />

“I worked incredibly hard to keep my<br />

right leg strong and stable. But, over time,<br />

it got worse and I had to retire at the age<br />

of 30 in 1999 at the end of my first year<br />

as a full professional.<br />

“In fact, that was probably the death<br />

knell because I was on my feet much<br />

more. It began to deteriorate rapidly. Bits<br />

of bone began to break off and it just<br />

became too sore.<br />

“You would be running a line at training<br />

and be hit with this unbelievable pang<br />

of pain in your knee and it would go as<br />

quickly as it came.”<br />

It was an enduring experience that had<br />

to be handled by myself, alone for quite<br />

some time.<br />

“It was only when Liam Hennessy and<br />

64 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


Dave Fagan got involved in <strong>Leinster</strong>, that I<br />

got a lot of really good help.”<br />

He didn’t have to be told when it was<br />

time to move on, concentrating on his<br />

career in the pharmaceutical industry.<br />

“I loved playing rugby. It took me a long<br />

time to get over the end of my career<br />

because I didn’t finish on my own terms.<br />

“I was just 30 when I packed it in. The<br />

rest of my body was fine. I was incredibly<br />

fit, bar a deteriorating knee.”<br />

There must have been nights when sleep<br />

was uncapturable, lying in the dark,<br />

turning over in his mind how good he<br />

could have been with two legs under him.<br />

“There probably was a bit of that. Where<br />

do you go with it? You would drive<br />

yourself mad if you kept thinking about<br />

it,” Ciaran admits.<br />

“I suppose you could convince yourself,<br />

in romantic dreams, that you could have<br />

had so many more caps for <strong>Leinster</strong> and<br />

Ireland.”<br />

Although, he casts his mind back to a<br />

moment when his eyes told him there was<br />

greatness on the way.<br />

“I remember sitting in the Wesley end of<br />

Donnybrook with Kurt McQuilkin - we<br />

were playing for <strong>Leinster</strong> - watching the<br />

‘A’ team play a match in 1999 and it<br />

had Brian O’Driscoll in the centre and<br />

Gordon D’Arcy at full-back.<br />

“The two lads were ripping it up on the<br />

pitch, doing all sorts of brilliant things.<br />

Kurt and myself were looking at each<br />

other, realising our time was almost up.”<br />

Ciaran has been able to turn those<br />

painful times into something more positive<br />

later in life, calling on an inner-strength he<br />

found during his rugby career.<br />

“The planning and the determination<br />

needed, particularly with the cruciate,<br />

changes you mentally, gives you a certain<br />

resolve that you didn’t know was there<br />

“This has certainly benefited me in my<br />

work life, helping to push through things,”<br />

he shares.<br />

Now, Ciaran marvels at the detail his son<br />

James has been opened to in Terenure<br />

College, the wing’s form in this year’s<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Schools Senior Cup earning an<br />

invite into the <strong>Leinster</strong> U-19 squad this<br />

summer.<br />

“The game is so different now. The<br />

young players are completely on top<br />

of everything. The preparation and the<br />

game are light years away from what we<br />

did in the 1990s,” he says.<br />

James probably knows more from what<br />

people said to him about Ciaran as a<br />

player than what his dad has shared.<br />

“I don’t think he has seen too many of<br />

my matches because they are all on VHS<br />

tape in the attic.<br />

“Anyway, he is his own man. The <strong>Leinster</strong><br />

U-19s is all down to the work he has put<br />

in over a long period.<br />

“I had my time. This is his.”<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 65


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Referees<br />

Corner<br />

BY DAN WALLACE<br />

A warm welcome to the<br />

Aviva Stadium for today’s<br />

encounter with <strong>Toulouse</strong>,<br />

and another edition of<br />

Referees Corner.<br />

Today’s match officiating team<br />

is Karl Dickson (Eng); Assistant<br />

referees: Christophe Ridley<br />

(Eng), Anthony Woodthorpe<br />

(Eng); TMO: Stuart Terheege<br />

(Eng); Citing Commissioner: Beth<br />

Dickens (Sco).<br />

Karl Dickson started in rugby as<br />

a player, competing at scrum-half.<br />

Dickson played for Bedford Blues<br />

and Harlequins before announcing<br />

his retirement in 2017. Through the<br />

London Society of Referees he made his<br />

refereeing debut at the Reigate School<br />

Sevens in March 2014 and since then<br />

has taken charge of a range of matches<br />

including schools, club juniors, sevens as<br />

well as local and national league clubs.<br />

He made his Six Nations referee debut<br />

in the 2022 tournament when he took<br />

charge of Scotland v France. We wish<br />

him well today.<br />

Want to get<br />

involved?<br />

Feel free to make contact with the <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby Referees<br />

at hayley.whyte@leinsterrugby.ie If you are interested<br />

in becoming a referee get in contact with us through our<br />

Facebook, our website www.leinsterrugbyreferees.ie or<br />

through twitter @leinsterreferee.<br />

68 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


Gordon Condell<br />

elected President<br />

A warm congratulations to<br />

Gordon Condell of Clondalkin<br />

RFC who was recently elected<br />

President of the <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby<br />

Referees at our Annual General<br />

Meeting. Gordon has been<br />

a long time referee, coach,<br />

assessor, area representative<br />

and has put in a huge amount<br />

of work over a number of years<br />

with referees and players in his<br />

club and local area. We wish him<br />

well in his coming season. He will<br />

be ably assisted by Senior Vice<br />

President, Tom Tuohy, and Junior<br />

Vice President, Martin Farrelly.<br />

Acme Whistles<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby Referees are<br />

delighted to announce our<br />

partnership with Acme whistles<br />

as our preferred whistle supplier.<br />

Speaking about the partnership <strong>Leinster</strong><br />

Rugby Referees President David<br />

Robb said: “We are delighted to be<br />

partnering with Acme as our whistle<br />

supplier, a company that has been<br />

providing whistles to referees since<br />

before the foundation of <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby<br />

Referees in 1902. Its a company of<br />

long standing tradition with quality<br />

workmanship providing rugby referees<br />

from grass roots to the elite of the game<br />

with a quality whistle to officiate.”<br />

ACME Whistles have been<br />

manufacturing and selling many<br />

different types of whistles from dog<br />

whistles to football whistles and many<br />

more since 1870. As part of this great<br />

sponsorship, the referees of the <strong>Leinster</strong><br />

Schools Junior and Senior Cup games<br />

were presented with inscribed ACME<br />

whistles as a memento of their day.<br />

IRFU Appointments<br />

Further congratulations go to<br />

our <strong>Leinster</strong> referees who have<br />

made the 2022/23 IRFU National<br />

Referee panel. They are: High<br />

Performance Development<br />

Group - Andrew Cole. Level 1<br />

- Padraic Reidy, Dermot Blake,<br />

Paul Haycock, Glenn Sheridan.<br />

Level 2 - John Flynn, Robbie<br />

Jenkinson, John Carvill, Colm<br />

Roche, Sam Holt, Paul O’Connor.<br />

Level 3 - Katie Byrne, Michael<br />

Forrestal. Best wishes go to Nigel<br />

Correll who retired from the<br />

panel at the end of the season.<br />

Brian MacNeice has been appointed to<br />

be TMO for both Argentina v Scotland<br />

tests this summer. Brian continues to be<br />

a TMO at the highest level and we wish<br />

him well on this great appointment. Also<br />

congratulations to Berney White who<br />

refereed the 2022 Towns Cup Final<br />

between Ashbourne and Kilkenny. He<br />

was assisted by Ian Thompson and Ian<br />

Hayes.<br />

With only a few weeks left in the season<br />

we are immensely proud of the work<br />

that h as been put in by referees at all<br />

levels this season and look forward<br />

to moving onwards in the 2022/23<br />

season.<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 69


TO MAXIMISE YOUR SPORTS AND EXERCISE<br />

PERFORMANCE THROUGH NUTRITION<br />

Optimum Nutrition and <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby have partnered to help share good nutrition tips throughout<br />

the season to help you achieve your performance goals. Here are some simple tips and things to<br />

remember to help maximise your performance and help you recover quickly to come back stronger.<br />

Protein Rich.<br />

Protein provides your muscles with<br />

the building blocks to repair & grow.<br />

Carb-Up.<br />

Carbohydrate foods are king as they<br />

power high intensity play.<br />

Fuel-Up.<br />

Consume the majority of your<br />

carbohydrates around training to<br />

support fuelling and recovery.<br />

Recover.<br />

Quality rest & nutrition between<br />

training sessions is the key to<br />

recovery. Remember to:<br />

Repair with protein,<br />

Refuel with carbohydrate,<br />

Rehydrate with fluid.<br />

Hydrate.<br />

Dehydration can lead to a drop in<br />

exercise intensity & can impact your<br />

decision making. Drink 2-3 litres of<br />

fluid each day to ensure hydration.<br />

Game Day.<br />

To fuel performance on the field,<br />

consume a large carbohydrate rich<br />

meal 2-3 hours before kick-off, i.e.<br />

chicken & pasta, turkey bolognaise<br />

wraps.<br />

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<strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby charity partner<br />

Cardiac Risk in<br />

the Young [CRY]<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby<br />

has announced<br />

Cardiac Risk<br />

in the Young<br />

(CRY) as its<br />

latest charity<br />

partner for<br />

the month of<br />

May as part<br />

of the Charity<br />

Affiliate<br />

Programme<br />

which was<br />

first launched<br />

in November<br />

2020.<br />

Indeed, this is not the first time<br />

that CRY have worked with<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby having been a<br />

charity partner of the club back<br />

in 2015 and only last season<br />

CRY was again a partner of<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby for the month of<br />

September.<br />

Similar to last season, CRY have once<br />

again been nominated by one of <strong>Leinster</strong><br />

Rugby’s premium partners, BearingPoint.<br />

Established in 2002, CRY facilitates free<br />

clinical assessment and management<br />

to all families across Ireland, north and<br />

south, who have suffered, or are at risk<br />

of, a Sudden Cardiac Death (SCD). The<br />

charity’s Family Support Programme<br />

offers free access to listening volunteers,<br />

mentors and bereavement specialists, with<br />

its newly launched helpline also offering<br />

a listening ear to those impacted by SCD.<br />

72 | www.leinsterrugby.ie<br />

The charity fundraises to support its<br />

specialist Centre for Cardiovascular<br />

Risk in Younger Persons Tallaght, Dublin<br />

24, where, since 2007, over 7,000<br />

individuals have been seen. Over 100<br />

individuals have had pacemaker or<br />

defibrillator devices fitted to protect them<br />

against sudden cardiac death. Hundreds<br />

more have been treated with medications<br />

and surgical procedures.<br />

Thousands have been found to be<br />

unaffected and reassured. Cardiac tests<br />

are performed in a single day, with<br />

detailed consultations with specialists to<br />

explain outcomes and implications. CRY<br />

also raises funds to support research into<br />

the causes and prevention of Sudden<br />

Cardiac Death, in collaboration with<br />

other likeminded bodies.<br />

In attendance at the launch in <strong>Leinster</strong><br />

Rugby head office in UCD were <strong>Leinster</strong><br />

Rugby players Robbie Henshaw,<br />

Ross Molony and Ciara Faulkner, as<br />

well as representatives from CRY and<br />

BearingPoint.<br />

Welcoming the news of the partnership,<br />

Dr Deirdre Ward, of CRY said, “CRY<br />

Ireland are delighted to be nominated<br />

as a charity partner to <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby,<br />

and are very grateful to Bearing Point<br />

for helping to make this important<br />

opportunity possible. Over it's 20 years<br />

of existence CRY Ireland has relied on<br />

the generous support of the Irish public,<br />

business community and our own families<br />

to fund services for families affected by,<br />

or at risk from, sudden cardiac death due<br />

to inherited cardiac conditions.<br />

"Having focused for many years on<br />

developing and sustaining a medical<br />

centre for the diagnosis and management<br />

of the conditions that can cause sudden<br />

cardiac death, the Charity can now<br />

focus efforts on the areas of providing<br />

emotional support for affected families<br />

and on research into the conditions.<br />

As well as the fundraising boost that<br />

partnership with one of Europe's most<br />

successful rugby clubs will bring to<br />

finance these activities such as the CRY<br />

Volunteer Helpline, we are also very<br />

grateful for the opportunity to raise<br />

awareness of the risk of sudden cardiac<br />

death, and the importance of basic<br />

resuscitation skills such as CPR in the<br />

community.”<br />

Speaking on behalf of BearingPoint,<br />

Ian Kilty, said “Through our partnership<br />

with <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby, BearingPoint is<br />

delighted to nominate CRY Ireland as<br />

their charity partner for the month of


May. BearingPoint is proud to continue<br />

supporting the great work that CRY<br />

does in raising awarness and providing<br />

services to the families impacted by<br />

Sudden Cardiac Death syndrome<br />

(SADS).”<br />

For the month of May, <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby<br />

will lend its digital support to CRY, in<br />

particular supporting their team and its<br />

considerable efforts to raise awareness<br />

of these diseases and ultimately, to help<br />

save lives.<br />

Speaking at the launch, <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby<br />

Sponsorship Manager, Éamon de Búrca<br />

said, “It is great that BearingPoint have<br />

nominated CRY once again this year, a<br />

charity that we as a club know very well<br />

having worked with them before but also<br />

through their links with our former player<br />

Darragh Fanning.<br />

“Lucia and her team in CRY continue to<br />

do amazing work. We saw that at first<br />

hand last season and we look forward to<br />

highlighting that work again in the month<br />

ahead. As we continue to come out of<br />

Covid-19, charities continue to need all<br />

our support.”<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby also confirmed that Bank<br />

of Ireland would continue to support<br />

the charity partner scheme again this<br />

season and that its Player of the Month<br />

Award donation will now be made to the<br />

monthly charity affiliate, rather than the<br />

player in question, a move that is also<br />

supported by the <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby players.<br />

Like all the charities selected, CRY<br />

was selected by <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby after<br />

a consultation process involving the<br />

leadership group of the men, women’s<br />

and Academy teams and consultation<br />

with the premium sponsors and partners<br />

and the OLSC.<br />

For more information on CRY, please visit<br />

their website.<br />

Further information about the <strong>Leinster</strong><br />

Rugby Charity Affiliate Programme:<br />

The charities supported by <strong>Leinster</strong><br />

Rugby as part of this initiative, include<br />

2020/21 Season: Women’s Aid (November), Debra Ireland (December),<br />

numerous local causes supported by Bank of Ireland (January), ALONE<br />

(February), Pieta (March), AsIAm (April), LauraLynn (May), the Gavin Glynn<br />

Foundation (June), Irish Heart Foundation (August) and CRY (September)<br />

2021/22 Season: Alzheimer Society of Ireland (November), Peter McVerry<br />

Trust (December), numerous local causes supported by Bank of Ireland such<br />

as Outcomers, Citywise Means Business, New Horizon and Purple House<br />

(January), the RNLI (February), Irish Cancer Society (March), Irish Community Air<br />

Ambulance (April) and CRY (May)<br />

The selection process for all the charities includes the <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby players,<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby sponsors and partners and also the Official <strong>Leinster</strong> Supporters<br />

Club (OLSC)<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 73


opposing view<br />

Photo by Ramsey Cardy/Sportsfile<br />

7 May 2022<br />

Pierre Fouyssac of <strong>Toulouse</strong><br />

celebrates after the ‘place kick<br />

competition’ to decide the winner<br />

of the Heineken Champions Cup<br />

Quarter-Final match between<br />

Munster and <strong>Toulouse</strong> at Aviva<br />

Stadium in Dublin.<br />

74 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


Founded:<br />

1907<br />

Ground:<br />

STADE ERNEST WALLON<br />

Capacity:<br />

18,754<br />

<strong>Toulouse</strong><br />

last time out<br />

Munster Rugby 24<br />

Stade Toulousain 24 AET<br />

(<strong>Toulouse</strong> win 4-2 in place-kick shootout) | Aviva Stadium | Saturday, 7 May | Referee – Luke Pearce (RFU) | words: epcrugby.com<br />

Stade Toulousain beat Munster Rugby on place kicks<br />

to reach the Heineken Champions Cup semi-finals<br />

after a breathtaking 24-24 draw at the Aviva<br />

Stadium last week.<br />

Extra-time was required with<br />

the sides level after 80 minutes,<br />

but the additional 20 minutes<br />

couldn’t separate the two<br />

teams either and so the game<br />

was decided on a rare shootout,<br />

which reigning champions<br />

<strong>Toulouse</strong> claimed 4-2.<br />

Misses from Munster’s Ben Healy<br />

and Conor Murray proved crucial, as<br />

<strong>Toulouse</strong>’s Thomas Ramos, Antoine<br />

Dupont (2) and Romain Ntamack made<br />

no mistake with their efforts.<br />

Munster had led with five minutes to play<br />

thanks to tries from Alex Kendellen, Keith<br />

Earls and Mike Haley, in addition to a<br />

Joey Carbery penalty, but <strong>Toulouse</strong>, who<br />

had crossed through Romain Ntamack<br />

and Matthis Lebel (2), notched a threepointer<br />

through Ramos to send the game<br />

into the additional period.<br />

Munster drew first blood as flanker<br />

Kendellen squeezed over after a slick<br />

lineout move on nine minutes, but<br />

<strong>Toulouse</strong> were level moments later<br />

when out-half Ntamack planted down<br />

following a break from full-back Ramos.<br />

The two sides wrestled for control<br />

over the next quarter of an hour, but<br />

<strong>Toulouse</strong>’s dominant scrum began to<br />

provide the visitors with an attacking<br />

platform, and they capitalised on that<br />

on 26 minutes as they gained forward<br />

momentum before sending wing Lebel<br />

over in the corner.<br />

76 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


Carbery was off target with a penalty<br />

on 34 minutes as the Irish province<br />

attempted to reduce the deficit, but after<br />

wing Earls dotted down out wide in the<br />

final moments of the half, the out-half<br />

drew his side level with an excellent<br />

conversion.<br />

Despite another Carbery penalty<br />

drifting wide early in the second half,<br />

Munster would take the lead on 44<br />

minutes as centre Chris Farrell scythed<br />

through the <strong>Toulouse</strong> defence and teed<br />

up full-back Haley to squirm over.<br />

<strong>Toulouse</strong> lock Rory Arnold was sinbinned<br />

on 50 minutes for a dangerous<br />

tackle on Munster wing Simon Zebo<br />

and following more ill-discipline from<br />

the French side over the minutes that<br />

followed, Carbery slotted his first<br />

penalty of the game.<br />

They were the only points scored with<br />

<strong>Toulouse</strong> down to 14 men and once<br />

they were back to their full complement,<br />

the visitors grabbed a third try as<br />

Lebel surged through midfield and<br />

produced an outrageous sidestep to<br />

beat the last man and dive over on 67<br />

minutes.<br />

A Ramos penalty then left the scores<br />

at 24-24 on 75 minutes and Munster<br />

replacement out-half Ben Healy was<br />

unable to hand his side victory with a<br />

penalty attempt from inside his own half<br />

with the clock in the red, sending the<br />

game to extra time.<br />

The additional 20 minutes offered little<br />

to separate the two sides, with Ramos<br />

and Healy both unsuccessful with<br />

drop-goal attempts, and with both<br />

teams having scored the same number<br />

of tries, a place kick competition was<br />

required.<br />

And it would ultimately be heartbreak<br />

for Munster, as Murray and Healy<br />

dragged their efforts wide and<br />

<strong>Toulouse</strong>’s kickers held their nerve to<br />

book their place in the last four.<br />

MUNSTER RUGBY<br />

Mike Haley (Ben Healy 71); Keith Earls,<br />

Chris Farrell, Damian de Allende, Simon<br />

Zebo (Murray 96); Joey Carbery,<br />

Conor Murray (Craig Casey 59); Josh<br />

Wycherley (Jeremy Loughman 54), Niall<br />

Scannell (Diarmuid Barron 54), Stephen<br />

Archer (John Ryan 50); Jean Kleyn<br />

(Jason Jenkins 59), Fineen Wycherley<br />

(Thomas Ahern 71); Peter O’Mahony<br />

(Jack Daly 63), Alex Kendellen, Jack<br />

O’Donoghue.<br />

TOULOUSE<br />

Thomas Ramos; Dimitri Delibes (Maxime<br />

Medard 44), Pierre Fouyssac (Baptiste<br />

Germain 63), Pita Ahki, Matthis Lebel;<br />

Romain Ntamack, Antoine Dupont;<br />

Rodrigue Neti (Cyril Baille 45), Julien<br />

Marchand (Peato Mauvaka 45),<br />

Dorian Aldegheri (David Ainu’u 50);<br />

Rory Arnold, Emmanuel Meafou;<br />

Rynhardt Elstadt (Anthony Jelonch<br />

45), Thibaud Flament (Joe Tekori 63),<br />

Francois Cros.<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 77


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Head coach<br />

Ugo Mola<br />

As a player, Ugo Mola featured<br />

for <strong>Toulouse</strong> from 1990 to<br />

1996, winning both French and<br />

European titles before depating<br />

for Castres.<br />

He also played for his country, his last of<br />

12 caps coming in the 1999 World Cup<br />

final defeat to Australia.<br />

Mola returned to <strong>Toulouse</strong> as head<br />

coach in 2015 and has led them to two<br />

TOP 14 titles and last year’s Champions<br />

Cup crown since.<br />

Captain<br />

Julien Marchand<br />

Hooker Julien Marchand has<br />

been <strong>Toulouse</strong> captain since the<br />

2018/19 captain when he was<br />

handed the honour at just 23<br />

years of age.<br />

He is a product of the club’s youth system<br />

and made his debut with their senior side<br />

in 2014.<br />

He is also a France international,<br />

debuting in November 2018 in their<br />

shock home loss to Fiji. He missed out on<br />

last year’s final due to suspension.<br />

<strong>Toulouse</strong> squad<br />

PITA AHKI<br />

CENTRE<br />

DAVID AINU’U<br />

LOOSE HEAD PROP<br />

DORIAN ALDEGHERI<br />

TIGHT HEAD PROP<br />

RICHIE ARNOLD<br />

LOCK<br />

RORY ARNOLD<br />

LOCK<br />

MAX AURIAC<br />

FULL BACK<br />

PAUL AUSSET<br />

BACK ROW<br />

CYRIL BAILLE<br />

LOOSE HEAD PROP<br />

ETONIA BAINIVALU<br />

CENTRE<br />

ALEXI BALES<br />

SCRUM HALF<br />

ARTHUR BONNEVAL<br />

WING<br />

IAN BOUBILA<br />

HOOKER<br />

JOSHUA BRENNAN<br />

LOCK<br />

SANTIAGO CHOCOBARES<br />

CENTRE<br />

RUBEN COURTIES CHAUBET<br />

SCRUM HALF<br />

GUILLAUME CRAMONT<br />

HOOKER<br />

FRANCOIS CROS<br />

BACK ROW<br />

VICTOR DANIELLI<br />

BACK ROW<br />

DIMITRI DELIBES<br />

CENTRE<br />

BENJAMIN DESCAMPS<br />

FULL BACK<br />

SIMON DESERT<br />

CENTRE/WING<br />

ANTOINE DUPONT<br />

SCRUM HALF<br />

RYNHARDT ELSTADT<br />

BACK ROW/LOCK<br />

CHARLIE FAUMUINA<br />

TIGHT HEAD PROP<br />

THIBAUD FLAMENT<br />

BACK ROW/LOCK<br />

PIERRE FOUYSSAC<br />

CENTRE/WING<br />

BAPTISTE GERMAIN<br />

SCRUM HALF<br />

SOFIANE GUITOUNE<br />

FULL BACK/WING<br />

MALACHI HAWKES<br />

TIGHT HEAD PROP<br />

ZACK HOLMES<br />

OUTSIDE HALF<br />

ANTHONY JELONCH<br />

BACK ROW<br />

LÉO LABARTHE<br />

BACK ROW<br />

MATTHIS LEBEL<br />

FULL BACK/WING<br />

RUBEN MAKA<br />

SCRUM HALF<br />

PAUL MALLEZ<br />

TIGHT HEAD PROP<br />

JUAN CRUZ MALLÍA<br />

CENTRE/WING<br />

JULIEN MARCHAND<br />

HOOKER<br />

PEATO MAUVAKA<br />

HOOKER<br />

EMMANUEL MEAFOU<br />

LOCK<br />

MAXIME MÉDARD<br />

FULL BACK<br />

JOEL MERKLER<br />

TIGHT HEAD PROP<br />

ANTOINE MIQUEL<br />

BACK ROW<br />

TIM NANAI-WILLIAMS<br />

FULL BACK/WING<br />

RODRIGUE NETI<br />

LOOSE HEAD PROP<br />

ROMAIN NTAMACK<br />

OUTSIDE HALF<br />

THEO NTAMACK<br />

CENTRE<br />

MARTIN PAGE RELO<br />

SCRUM HALF<br />

ALBAN PLACINES<br />

BACK ROW<br />

RAPHAEL PORTAT<br />

LOCK<br />

THOMAS RAMOS<br />

FULL BACK<br />

HUGO REILHES<br />

TIGHT HEAD PROP<br />

EDGAR RETIERE<br />

SCRUM HALF<br />

ROMAIN RIGUET<br />

CENTRE<br />

CLÉMENT SENTUBERY<br />

BACK ROW<br />

PAULO TAFILI<br />

TIGHT HEAD PROP<br />

LUCAS TAUZIN<br />

CENTRE/WING<br />

JOE TEKORI<br />

LOCK<br />

SELEVASIO TOLOFUA<br />

BACK ROW<br />

MARCO MIGUEL TRAUTH<br />

LOOSE HEAD PROP<br />

CLEMENT VERGE<br />

LOCK<br />

YANNICK YOUYOUTTE<br />

LOCK<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 79


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Club in Focus<br />

GOREY RFC<br />

Each match programme, <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby profile<br />

one of the clubs across the province to look<br />

at the people, the stories and the history that<br />

make it so special to their community. This<br />

week, we look at Gorey RFC through the eyes of<br />

long-time member, John Breen.<br />

John Breen.<br />

Every club needs a John<br />

Breen.<br />

A jack of all trades, heavylifting<br />

lifer, quick to jump<br />

on board for any plan or<br />

development that will push<br />

Gorey RFC forward into the<br />

future.<br />

John came to rugby relatively<br />

late in life, using the skills he had<br />

honed on the soccer pitches with<br />

Courtown Hibernians and on the<br />

gaelic fields for Ballygarrett’s Realt<br />

na Mara.<br />

At 22, he sampled a taste of<br />

the sport that would become his<br />

passion and has never looked<br />

back with anything other than joy<br />

to those early days in the late-70s.<br />

“I played every sport and rugby,<br />

to me, is number one, both socially<br />

and to play. It is a huge part of my<br />

life,” he says.<br />

“Don’t ask me why? I don’t know<br />

why. I can’t put my finger on it. I<br />

suppose I love meeting people.<br />

I’ve met a lot of people from other<br />

clubs around the country.”<br />

“I love the game. I love being<br />

involved in the club. It is my life, at<br />

the moment.”<br />

82 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


The Club President in 2013/14 and<br />

2014/15 soon realised his other major<br />

pastime golf would have to take a back<br />

seat for three years, such was the allencompassing<br />

grind of the office.<br />

Since then, John has held the post<br />

of Director of Rugby, not quite the<br />

glamorous position pursued in the<br />

professional environment.<br />

“I am 65 years of age now. I’ve told the<br />

lads I will give up next year. But sure, I<br />

won’t give up. I just love being involved<br />

as a touch judge, match reporter, doing<br />

anything to help.”<br />

However, progress isn’t easy.<br />

The flourishing women’s section of rugby<br />

has led to an explosion in girls at the<br />

minis, youth and senior levels of the<br />

game, all trickling down to a need to<br />

upgrade and expand the club’s services.<br />

Greater participation means a greater<br />

need for facilities, coaches and all<br />

manner of resources.<br />

The IRFU actually own the grounds<br />

at Clonattin, right in the middle of the<br />

town. The club leases the venue in an<br />

arrangement both parties are very happy<br />

to have.<br />

“We have two pitches and two training<br />

areas and we installed a full gym in<br />

2012,” shares John.<br />

“We’re struggling for room, even though<br />

we manage things fairly well. We are put<br />

to the pin of our collar with the numbers.”<br />

Gorey has been pro-active in pursuing the<br />

monies needed to add on new dressing<br />

rooms, to the cost of €300,000, which<br />

are designed to cater for girls’ needs.<br />

“We have girls playing AIL with<br />

Suttonians, Railway Union, Old Belvedere<br />

and Blackrock,” states John.<br />

“There is no grand plan to create an<br />

AIL club here in order to attract those<br />

girls back or, indeed, keep the girls here<br />

from leaving. We just want to be a club<br />

where players can stay and play, if they<br />

want to.<br />

“In previous years, we had success in the<br />

ladies through encouraging them to come<br />

in from the GAA. But, they came and<br />

went, leaving us with a ‘one year good,<br />

the next year bad’ scenario.”<br />

Since then, the commitment has been<br />

made to grassroots level to build on<br />

strong, local foundations, reaching out to<br />

everyone in the community.<br />

“In total, there are 700 members in the<br />

club. We have three men’s adults teams,<br />

the thirds only coming out for the cup.<br />

In fact, we won the Anderson Cup last<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 83


month, edging out Ashbourne by a point<br />

(8-7),” he says.<br />

There are numbers of 200-plus minis<br />

all feeding into the boys U-13s, U-14s,<br />

U-15s, U-16s and U-18.5s and girls<br />

U-14s, U-16s and U-18s, most playing for<br />

the love of the game, some of them keen<br />

to see how far they can go.<br />

Of course, Paul Boyle is currently<br />

carrying the green, white and blue flag<br />

in the professional arena for Connacht.<br />

Foster Horan was a member of the<br />

Ireland Sevens at the Olympics in Japan.<br />

Robin Copeland is still soldiering in a<br />

long and eventful career that has taken<br />

in Munster, Connacht, Cardiff Blues and,<br />

currently, French PRO Div 2 club Soyaux<br />

Angouleme.<br />

In 2012, Gorey put out their first-ever<br />

women’s senior team and the club has<br />

produced talent in that time, highlighted<br />

by the emergence of Ireland’s current<br />

Sevens international Katie Farrell-<br />

McCabe.<br />

The increase in girls playing rugby<br />

has shrunk the male-dominated image<br />

and given Gorey RFC a more inclusive<br />

welcome for all.<br />

“It makes it a more social club,” chuckles<br />

John.<br />

“They have great energy for getting<br />

practical things done, injecting real<br />

enthusiasm and a sense of fun into the<br />

place.<br />

“That is even before you look into the<br />

impact they have made for the club<br />

on the playing fields, through players<br />

like Katie Farrell-McCabe and Sarah<br />

Robinson, who sadly passed away.”<br />

However, the encroachment of Covid<br />

really cut into the numbers, players<br />

retiring or unable to give the necessary<br />

commitment for one reason or another.<br />

“We used to have a senior women’s team<br />

before Covid came along. I’m not going<br />

to lie, we struggled badly for numbers this<br />

year,” he admits.<br />

As with anything worth doing, it has to<br />

be done in the correct way. That is why<br />

Gorey has placed an emphasis on the<br />

girls’ youth section.<br />

“Our plan is for the U-14s, U-16s and<br />

U-18s to come through into the senior<br />

ranks and the U-16s joined with Arklow to<br />

make up the Argos team which actually<br />

won the <strong>Leinster</strong> U-16 Premier League<br />

in April.<br />

“We have a very good relationship<br />

with Gorey Community School. Neville<br />

Copeland, Robin’s brother, coached<br />

them to win the McMullen Cup for the<br />

third time this year and the girls have won<br />

the All-Ireland Schools Sevens title.”<br />

The connection between the school and<br />

the club has stayed strong through the<br />

influence of Frank Duke, now retired,<br />

whose sons Stephen and Michael play<br />

for the club.<br />

The various strands contributing to the<br />

club from the school to the influx of<br />

girls make these exciting times for<br />

Gorey RFC.<br />

84 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


YOUR ACCESS TO THE HEART OF EUROPEAN<br />

RUGBY HAS NEVER BEEN BETTER<br />

HEINEKENCHAMPIONSCUP.COM<br />

#HeinekenChampionsCup


86 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


liam<br />

turner<br />

THE ACADEMY<br />

INTERVIEW<br />

BY PAUL CAHILL<br />

Liam Turner<br />

has achieved<br />

more in his few<br />

years playing<br />

the game than<br />

most people<br />

could ever<br />

dream of.<br />

From lifting the Bank of Ireland<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Schools Senior Cup as<br />

Blackrock College captain, to<br />

starting in a Grand Slam winning<br />

campaign with the Irish U-20 side,<br />

to making his <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby<br />

senior debut and travelling the<br />

world with the Irish Sevens team,<br />

it has been quite the journey so<br />

far.<br />

But, for Turner himself, the work really<br />

only starts now as he has recently been<br />

rewarded with his first senior contract with<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby.<br />

“It’s great to be offered a senior contract<br />

because that’s what you are working<br />

towards in the Academy,” says Turner.<br />

“I’m just looking forward to kicking on<br />

now. A few injuries have disrupted the<br />

progress I was making. I’m looking to<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 87


come back and contribute to the team.”<br />

Having shone in the Blackrock College<br />

number 13 jersey during his school<br />

days, comparisons were quickly made<br />

to former great players who have also<br />

donned that famous blue and white<br />

jersey.<br />

But instead of being weighed down by<br />

links to the likes of Brian O’Driscoll or<br />

indeed a more recent vintage in Garry<br />

Ringrose, Turner tries to take the positives<br />

from such comparisons.<br />

“It’s cool to be compared to such good<br />

rugby players. I’ve no issues with it.<br />

“I admire him (Garry) a lot in how he<br />

plays and I try and take things that he<br />

does and try and implement them myself.<br />

He’s certainly a good role model to work<br />

off.”<br />

In fact, Turner would even go to the<br />

current Irish international for advice.<br />

“Garry is certainly someone who I<br />

chat to a lot. When I was in first year in<br />

school, he was part of that Blackrock<br />

College Senior Cup team of 2013 that<br />

won.<br />

“I always followed his progression<br />

closely. I saw him in school and I<br />

watched him playing U-20 with Ireland<br />

and then seeing him progress through<br />

the <strong>Leinster</strong> system, so he is certainly<br />

someone I look up to.”<br />

Despite putting in place the right<br />

foundations for an impressive CV<br />

himself, things haven’t always been so<br />

straightforward for Turner.<br />

Take the Grand Slam as an example,<br />

even though he was the starting outside<br />

centre on the 2019 Irish U-20 Grand<br />

Slam-winning team, it didn’t look like<br />

he would be involved just a few weeks<br />

before the Six Nations began.<br />

Having been at all of the camps leading<br />

up to the tournament, Turner was<br />

disappointed to not be selected in the<br />

squad for a challenge game against a<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Development XV.<br />

But, having not been selected by the Irish<br />

U-20s meant that he could line out for<br />

the <strong>Leinster</strong> side. A perfect opportunity<br />

to show the coaches what he could do<br />

when faced with adversity.<br />

“It was late December, so it was quite<br />

close to the Six Nations kicking off. It<br />

went very well for me. It was one of my<br />

best games that I played in a long time.<br />

“Everything seemed to fall my way and<br />

that opened the door for me to get back<br />

in with the Irish U-20s, and it just went<br />

from there.<br />

“I played all of the games at 13, and we<br />

just went on an incredible run and won<br />

the Grand Slam.”<br />

The rest, as they say, is history.<br />

That U-20 team was only the third Irish<br />

side to win the Six Nations at that age<br />

grade, with a fourth added earlier this<br />

year.<br />

Liam Turner is quick to highlight what a<br />

special group he had the pleasure of<br />

playing with.<br />

“It was a great team to play in. We had<br />

the likes of Harry Byrne, Scott Penny, Ben<br />

Healy, Craig Casey, Josh Wycherley and<br />

Ryan Baird. A lot of that team are in the<br />

senior Irish squad now.<br />

“A big thing for us was the team unity.<br />

We had a lot of great players, but we<br />

were very well connected as a team. I<br />

think it was a really good group of lads<br />

and it definitely paid dividends when we<br />

won the Grand Slam.”<br />

88 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


For all of the big days that Liam Turner<br />

has had so far, there is one constant<br />

throughout; his parents shouting on from<br />

the stands. Andrew and Julie Turner have<br />

been there every step of the way.<br />

Julie has had the honour of presenting<br />

him with the Senior Schools Cup trophy<br />

at an RDS bathed in sunshine. Great days<br />

but made all the better for the support of<br />

loved ones.<br />

“I get great support from my mum and<br />

dad. They go to every game and they<br />

absolutely love it. They support me in<br />

everything I do, so they are brilliant.”<br />

But, when his most recent milestone came<br />

along, his parents couldn’t be there due<br />

to Covid-19.<br />

On October 23, 2020, Turner made his<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby debut against Zebre in<br />

front of an empty RDS.<br />

“It was definitely a bit strange not having<br />

my parents there. It was actually funny,<br />

my dad was asking if he could be Leo the<br />

Lion and watch the game from inside the<br />

mascot costume!<br />

“After the game I went straight to my<br />

cousin’s house. They were all there and<br />

they all watched the game together. So<br />

I met up with them afterwards and they<br />

were absolutely over the moon for me,<br />

which was really nice.”<br />

Turner would go on to make six senior<br />

appearances for <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby in the<br />

2020/21 season. Regular involvement<br />

with the Irish Sevens team meant he has<br />

been away from <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby HQ for<br />

large parts of the current season, but he<br />

did enjoy another run out with the <strong>Leinster</strong><br />

team earlier this year in pre-season<br />

against Harlequins.<br />

“It was a great experience playing at<br />

Aviva Stadium. It was actually the first<br />

game back with crowds. My family were<br />

there this time, which was great. So I got<br />

to see them afterwards.<br />

“It was a new experience. The senior<br />

games I had played for <strong>Leinster</strong> were all<br />

in front of no crowd, so obviously it was<br />

a lot louder. There’s a much better buzz<br />

when the crowd are cheering you on.<br />

“I got to play with the likes of Johnny<br />

Sexton who would have been away<br />

when I made my previous appearances,<br />

so that was a new experience too, which<br />

was cool.”<br />

Throughout his time travelling with the<br />

Irish Sevens team, it has given him a<br />

different platform to show what he can<br />

do.<br />

“My biggest year with the Sevens was<br />

actually the season that was stopped<br />

because of Covid.<br />

“I did the Dubai and Cape Town leg,<br />

the Hamilton and Sydney leg and the<br />

LA and Vancouver leg. And then we<br />

got back from Vancouver on the<br />

Tuesday, the country closed down on<br />

the Thursday.<br />

“After that, I got my break with <strong>Leinster</strong><br />

where I played six times until the end<br />

of January. This year, I felt I needed<br />

to perform as a third year Academy<br />

player. I played with the Sevens again in<br />

Vancouver, France and Dubai.”<br />

When he wasn’t jet setting with the<br />

Sevens, Turner knew he had to keep<br />

trying to impress the <strong>Leinster</strong> coaches<br />

enough to earn a contract.<br />

90 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


Another avenue that would help him<br />

impress was for his Energia All-Ireland<br />

League club, Dublin University FC.<br />

“Playing in the AIL has been great for me.<br />

When I wasn’t sure if I was in the U-20<br />

Irish squad, I think playing a lot with<br />

Trinity really helped.<br />

“At the end of the day, if you want<br />

get better as a rugby player, you<br />

need to play games. Playing in little<br />

cameos can be frustrating, and playing<br />

regularly is far more beneficial.”<br />

A niggly injury required a procedure<br />

in February, which was poor timing for<br />

Turner who was still trying to earn his<br />

senior contract.<br />

“I had a lot of conversations with Leo<br />

and the coaching staff and in fairness I<br />

always appreciated that they were very<br />

straight up about everything. At times<br />

it could be frustrating, but I understood<br />

how the whole process works.<br />

“It was all up in the air for a while, but<br />

thankfully at the end of February I found<br />

out that I was being offered a senior<br />

92 | www.leinsterrugby.ie<br />

There’s always<br />

a buzz around<br />

pre-season and I<br />

want to be there<br />

and contribute<br />

to the team.<br />

contract. It was actually the day of my<br />

surgery.<br />

“I woke up and the first thing I see on the<br />

phone was a text from my agent saying<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> are offering me a contract. So<br />

that was a nice thing to wake up to!”<br />

With his contract sorted, and his summer<br />

exams completed in Trinity where he<br />

studies business, economics, political<br />

science and sociology, Turner is fully<br />

focused on the 2022/23 season.<br />

“The goal is just to get back fit for the<br />

start of pre-season. If I manage to do that,<br />

that will be the first full pre-season I will<br />

have had here because of the Irish U-20s,<br />

Covid and the Sevens.<br />

“So I can’t wait to get a full pre-season<br />

under my belt and look to kick on. There’s<br />

always a buzz around pre-season and<br />

I want to be there and contribute to the<br />

team.<br />

“I’m just very thankful for the opportunity<br />

and I’m looking forward to getting back<br />

and showing what I can do again.”


www.leinsterrugby.ie | 93


Success in rugby is about collective excellence,<br />

the sort of excellence demonstrated last season<br />

by Stade Toulousain when they memorably<br />

clinched a record-breaking fifth Heineken<br />

Champions Cup title, and by Montpellier Hérault<br />

Rugby who lifted the EPCR Challenge Cup for<br />

the second time in their history.<br />

But within a group of players there is always<br />

the opportunity for individual brilliance and<br />

that is where the EPCR European Player of the<br />

Year award comes in. This prestigious accolade,<br />

won with such style in 2021 by the outstanding<br />

Antoine Dupont, is in the spotlight once again<br />

following announcement of this season’s 15<br />

nominees who are now vying to claim the<br />

Anthony Foley Memorial Trophy.<br />

Voting remains open and fans will be in the<br />

running to win a signed ball and a signed jersey<br />

courtesy of one of the Heineken Champions<br />

Cup finalist clubs. The list will be reduced<br />

to five candidates after the semi-finals by a<br />

combination of the public vote and the verdict<br />

of the judging panel, and players who have not<br />

been included in the initial longlist, but who<br />

make a significant impact during the knockout<br />

stages, may be considered for the shortlist.<br />

The voting will then re-open and the winner of<br />

the 2022 award will be announced following the<br />

Heineken Champions Cup final in Marseille.<br />

JUDGING PANEL<br />

Erik Bonneval (beIN SPORTS),<br />

Bryan Habana (two-time<br />

Heineken Champions Cup<br />

winner), Lee McKenzie<br />

(Channel 4), Alan Quinlan<br />

(Virgin Media and two-time<br />

Heineken Cup winner) and<br />

Dimitri Yachvili (France<br />

Télévisions)<br />

ROLL OF HONOUR<br />

2021: Antoine Dupont (Stade<br />

Toulousain); 2020: Sam<br />

Simmonds (Exeter Chiefs);<br />

2019: Alex Goode (Saracens);<br />

2018: Leone Nakarawa<br />

(Racing 92); 2017: Owen<br />

Farrell (Saracens); 2016: Maro<br />

Itoje (Saracens); 2015: Nick<br />

Abendanon (ASM Clermont<br />

Auvergne); 2014: Steffon<br />

Armitage (RC Toulon); 2013:<br />

Jonny Wilkinson (RC Toulon);<br />

2012: Rob Kearney (<strong>Leinster</strong><br />

Rugby); 2011: Sean O’Brien<br />

(<strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby); 2010: Ronan<br />

O’Gara (Munster Rugby –<br />

best player of first 15 years of<br />

European professional club<br />

competitions)


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ENERGIA ALL-IRELAND LEAGUE<br />

AWARD WINNERS ANNOUNCED<br />

Energia, title sponsor of the All-<br />

Ireland League and one of Ireland’s<br />

leading energy suppliers, have<br />

announced the winners of the<br />

Energia AIL awards.<br />

This 2021/22 season, clubs have<br />

reported a 15 per cent increase<br />

in attendance and the Energia<br />

AIL final on May 1 in the Aviva<br />

Stadium, more than doubled its<br />

crowd record at the venue.<br />

The Men’s Division 1A Player of the Year,<br />

Cormac Daly, starred with a hat-trick of<br />

tries in Clontarf’s bonus-point victory over<br />

Dublin University and stunned Garryowen<br />

at a wet Dooradoyle, with a try after<br />

just 90 seconds. Daly also won Player<br />

of the Match in the Energia AIL Division<br />

1A final.<br />

The Women’s Player of the Year, Aoife<br />

Doyle enjoyed a tremendous season,<br />

which included a fantastic brace of tries<br />

in Railway Union’s 43-8 bonus point<br />

win at Old Belvedere. Doyle was just 18<br />

when she made her Ireland debut against<br />

France in the 2015 Six Nations, she also<br />

played Sevens for several years and is<br />

now back playing XVs regularly. These<br />

awards were voted for by the Head<br />

Coaches and Directors of Rugby across<br />

the league.<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Academy player Alex Soroka<br />

and his older brother, Ivan, both Clontarf,<br />

were awarded the Positive Energy Award<br />

for their fundraising for Ukraine.<br />

The Moment of the Year was awarded<br />

to Stephen O’Neill, Terenure College<br />

RFC, for his run down of a Garryowen<br />

player. It was a time in the game where<br />

Garryowen were on top and could<br />

seriously dent Terenure’s battle for<br />

the play-offs. O’Neill led by captain’s<br />

example winning a key turnover, but<br />

unfortunately missed out on the play-offs<br />

due to injury.<br />

Clubs from across Ireland were invited<br />

to nominate members or volunteers who<br />

go above and beyond the call of duty<br />

and Conall Fitzpatrick from Waterpark<br />

RFC, was awarded the Community Hero<br />

Award. The nominees for this award<br />

have provided years of service and have<br />

volunteered for the betterment of their<br />

club many times, at all levels and over a<br />

wide range of tasks on and off the pitch.<br />

Nominations were sought from clubs<br />

around the island, with a huge quantity<br />

received. Seamus Lowry (Oughterard<br />

RFC) Richard Black (City of Armagh RFC)<br />

and Martina Fitzpatrick (Tallaght RFC)<br />

were also shortlisted. The Moment of<br />

the Year and Community Hero awards<br />

were nominated by club members and<br />

supporters of the league.<br />

The ceremony also included a 15-minute<br />

panel discussion with Niamh Briggs,<br />

Richie Murphy, and John Fogarty. The<br />

panellists discussed the 2021/22 Energia<br />

AIL season while reflecting on the efforts<br />

of the U-20 and women’s teams in this<br />

year’s Six Nations Championships.<br />

Each panellist also touched upon their<br />

respective individual experiences playing<br />

in the All-Ireland League.<br />

This year’s awards were presented by<br />

The Club Scene Podcast host, Daragh<br />

Frawley, and celebrated the action both<br />

on and off the pitch and highlighted some<br />

of the real skill, talent, and incredible<br />

rugby we have seen from the players this<br />

season.<br />

ENERGIA AIL PLAYER OF THE YEAR<br />

AWARDS<br />

• Women’s Division Player Of The<br />

Division – Aoife Doyle (Railway Union)<br />

• Men’s Division 1A Player Of The<br />

Division – Cormac Daly (Clontarf)<br />

• Men’s Division 1B Player Of The<br />

Division – JJ O’Dea (Old Wesley)<br />

• Men’s Division 2A Player Of The<br />

Division – David Whitten (Queen’s<br />

University)<br />

• Men’s Division 2B Player Of The<br />

Division – Cathal Forde (Galway<br />

Corinthians)<br />

• Men’s Division 2C Player Of The<br />

Division – Niall Parker (Enniscorthy)<br />

ENERGIA AIL COACH OF THE YEAR<br />

AWARDS<br />

• Energia Men’s AIL Coach of the Year –<br />

Andy Wood (Clontarf)<br />

• Energia Women’s AIL Coach of the<br />

Year – Ben Martin (Blackrock College)<br />

ENERGIA MOMENT OF THE<br />

SEASON<br />

• Stephen O’Neill (Terenure College RFC)<br />

ENERGIA COMMUNITY HERO<br />

AWARD<br />

• Conall Fitzpatrick (Waterpark RFC)<br />

ENERGIA AIL POSITIVE ENERGY<br />

AWARD<br />

• Alex and Ivan Soroka (Clontarf)<br />

ENERGIA AIL CLUB SCENE AWARD<br />

• Terenure College RFC<br />

96 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


RUGBY.<br />

DELIVERED.<br />

TEAMWORK. SPEED. DELIVERY. THERE CAN BE ONLY ONE<br />

OFFICIAL LOGISTICS PARTNER. DHL.


<strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby Academy<br />

Year Three 2021/22:<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby Academy<br />

Year two 2021/22:<br />

Second Row<br />

Brian Deeny #1306<br />

DOB: 02/03/2000<br />

HEIGHT: 1.99m WEIGHT: 121kg<br />

HONOURS: Ireland U20 (8 caps) &<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby (2 caps)<br />

Did You Know: Brian played youth rugby with Wexford<br />

Wanderers RFC. He got his first Irish cap playing for<br />

Ireland Under-18 Sevens. Brian played midfield for<br />

his school St Peter’s College in Gaelic football and<br />

reached the All-Ireland Colleges Final in 2017. He is<br />

currently studying Science in Trinity and lives in Abbey<br />

House B&B, Wexford. Instagram: brian_deeny<br />

wing<br />

Niall Comerford<br />

DOB: 06/04/2000<br />

HEIGHT: 1.83m WEIGHT: 86kg<br />

HONOURS: Ireland U20<br />

Did You Know: Niall played both hurling and Gaelic<br />

football with Kilmacud Crokes for 14 years. He also<br />

represented Dublin in Gaelic football in the U17<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Championship. He is currently studying<br />

Commerce in UCD.<br />

Instagram: niall_c123<br />

Cormac Foley #1299<br />

DOB: 24/10/1999<br />

HEIGHT: 1.81m WEIGHT: 88kg<br />

HONOURS: Ireland U20 (9 caps)<br />

& <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby (4 caps)<br />

Marcus Hanan #1295<br />

DOB: 03/10/2000<br />

HEIGHT:1.8m WEIGHT:110.91kg<br />

HONOURS: Ireland U20 (2 caps)<br />

& <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby (3 caps)<br />

Scrum Half<br />

Did You Know: Started playing rugby with Greystones<br />

RFC when he was nine. Growing up, Cormac did a lot<br />

of show jumping and he is now studying Economics and<br />

Finance in UCD.<br />

Instagram: cormacfoley6<br />

prop<br />

Did You Know? Marcus is from Clane in Kildare and is the<br />

youngest of three. His dad went to the High School and then<br />

played rugby in Old Wesley before coaching back at Clane<br />

RFC. Marcus has Italian connections on his mother’s side with her<br />

father, Luigi Rea, being from Italy. Marcus is studying Business<br />

Management in Griffith College. Instagram: @marcus_hanan<br />

Back Row<br />

Martin Moloney #1300<br />

DOB: 19/10/1999<br />

HEIGHT: 1.88m WEIGHT: 99kg<br />

HONOURS: Ireland U20 (5 caps) &<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby (7 caps)<br />

Did You Know: Martin played hurling for Kildare and<br />

played GAA and basketball for his secondary school,<br />

Knockbeg College, and local GAA club, St Laurence’s.<br />

He played his youth rugby with Athy RFC. He is now<br />

studying Business and Law in UCD, He also enjoys<br />

working on the family farm. Instagram: martin_moloney<br />

Second Row<br />

Joe McCarthy #1303<br />

DOB: 26/03/2001<br />

HEIGHT: 1.95m WEIGHT: 119kg<br />

HONOURS: Ireland U20 (3 caps) &<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby (6 caps)<br />

Did You Know: Joe started playing rugby with Blackrock<br />

College RFC at the age of six before moving to<br />

Willow Park and then Blackrock College. He was also<br />

on the Blackrock swim team for five years. He’s currently<br />

studying Global Business in Trinity College Dublin.<br />

Instagram: joetmmcc<br />

Second Row<br />

Charlie Ryan<br />

DOB: 03/02/1999<br />

HEIGHT: 2.01m WEIGHT: 115kg<br />

HONOURS: Ireland U20 (15 caps)<br />

Did You Know: Charlie played youth rugby at Blackrock<br />

College RFC while also attending the school since<br />

Senior Infants. He captained Ireland to the U20 Grand<br />

Slam in 2019 and again for the U20s World Cup. His<br />

friends call him Chuck! He is currently studying Business<br />

and Legal Studies in UCD.<br />

Instagram: chuck_ryan5<br />

hooker<br />

John McKee #1307<br />

DOB: 15/02/2000<br />

HEIGHT: 1.82m WEIGHT: 105kg<br />

HONOURS: Ireland U20 (12 caps) &<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby (2 caps)<br />

Did You Know: John grew up in Belfast going to school<br />

at Campbell College where he won a Senior Cup. He<br />

was involved with Ulster at age grade level until moving<br />

to Dublin after school. He also has multiple medals<br />

from Northern Irish Schools Judo competitions.<br />

Instagram: johnmckee_<br />

Centre<br />

Liam Turner #1287<br />

DOB: 14/07/1999<br />

HEIGHT: 1.73m WEIGHT: 91kg<br />

HONOURS: Ireland U20 (10 caps)<br />

& <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby (6 caps)<br />

Did You Know: Liam started to play rugby at the age<br />

of six at Blackrock College RFC. He later joined<br />

Blackrock College and was part of the 2018 Senior Cup<br />

winning team. He was also part of the Ireland U20 team<br />

that went on to win the 2019 Grand Slam. Liam currently<br />

studys BESS in Trinity College. Instagram: liamtn123<br />

Centre / Full Back<br />

Jamie Osborne #1294<br />

DOB: 16/11/2001<br />

HEIGHT:1.93m WEIGHT:96.82kg<br />

HONOURS: <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby (18 caps)<br />

Did you know? Jamie is studying commerce in UCD. His<br />

grandad, Paddy Osborne, was a horse trainer in Naas,<br />

while his dad played rugby all throughout his life and<br />

his mum played hockey. Other than rugby, Jamie loves<br />

all sports especially soccer, GAA and NFL. Jamie is<br />

currently in a house with fellow <strong>Leinster</strong> Academy players<br />

Brian Deeny, Martin Moloney and Max O’Reilly.<br />

Instagram: @jamieosborne01<br />

100 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


Seán O’Brien #1297<br />

Lee Barron #1308<br />

Back Row<br />

DOB: 31/07/2000<br />

HEIGHT: 1.90m WEIGHT: 103kg<br />

HONOURS: Ireland U20 (3 caps)<br />

& <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby (3 caps)<br />

Did You Know: Seán started playing rugby at age<br />

six with Greystones RFC where he played up until Under-13.<br />

He then played on the Junior and Senior Cup<br />

teams in Blackrock College. He is currently studying<br />

Economics and Finance in UCD<br />

Instagram: seanobrien456<br />

Hooker<br />

DOB: 15/02/2001<br />

HEIGHT: 1.91m WEIGHT: 108kg<br />

HONOURS: <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby (2 caps)<br />

Did You Know: Lee played golf growing up in the<br />

Castle Golf Club and in the end was playing off a<br />

handicap of eight. He has family roots in Carlow but<br />

went to school in Dublin and attended St Michael’s College.<br />

As well as rugby with his school, he also played<br />

GAA and even lined out in Croke Park.<br />

Instagram: @lleebarron<br />

Max O’Reilly #1291<br />

Chris Cosgrave #1305<br />

Full Back<br />

DOB: 26/02/2000<br />

HEIGHT: 1.85m WEIGHT: 86kg<br />

HONOURS: Ireland U20 (3 caps) &<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby (9 caps)<br />

Did You Know: Max is currently in his third year of<br />

Business and Management in DIT. His preferred sport<br />

was soccer until about the age of 15, which he had<br />

played at centre midfield with Enniskerry FC for over 10<br />

years and also for Wicklow.<br />

Instagram: max_oreilly<br />

full back<br />

DOB: 24/07/2001<br />

HEIGHT:1.83m WEIGHT:85kg<br />

HONOURS: <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby (2 caps)<br />

Did You Know: Chris is a member of UCD RFC, where he<br />

is also an Ad Astra scholar studying Agricultural Science.<br />

His athleticism is best highlighted by his feats in the field<br />

of Athletics with All-Ireland honours to his name in both<br />

the 4x100m relay and the Discus. Before the UCD and<br />

St Michael’s College days, he played at a young age<br />

with Old Belvedere RFC. Instagram: @chriscosgrave1<br />

Andrew Smith #1292<br />

Mark Hernan<br />

DOB: 21/07/2000<br />

HEIGHT: 1.83m WEIGHT: 91kg<br />

HONOURS: Ireland U20 (3 caps) &<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby (2 caps)<br />

DOB: 04/07/2000<br />

HEIGHT: 1.88m WEIGHT: 99kg<br />

HONOURS: <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby (1 cap)<br />

Back Three<br />

Did You Know: Andrew is currently studying Quantity<br />

Surveying and Construction Economics in TUD. In<br />

2019, he won the <strong>Leinster</strong> Schools Senior Cup with St<br />

Michael’s College. Andrew also played Gaelic football<br />

with his local club - Clanna Gael Fontenoy GAA Club.<br />

Instagram: andrew.sm1th<br />

Flanker<br />

Did You Know: Mark was coached by Ross Molony,<br />

Josh Murphy, Ross Byrne and Nick McCarthy when in<br />

St. Michael’s College. His grandfather Fergus O’Brien<br />

was Lord Mayor of Dublin and his father, Ray, played<br />

for Connacht seniors and Ireland u25s.<br />

Instagram: @mark_hernani<br />

Alex Soroka #1296<br />

Temi Lasisi #1304<br />

Back Row<br />

DOB: 19/02/2001<br />

HEIGHT: 1.95m WEIGHT: 104.5kg<br />

HONOURS: Ireland U20 (7 caps)<br />

& <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby (4 caps)<br />

Did You Know: Alex’s family moved to Ireland from<br />

Ukraine shortly before his birth. He was born in Cork<br />

before moving to Dublin.<br />

Instagram: alex._.soroka<br />

prop<br />

DOB: 09/05/2001<br />

HEIGHT: 1.78m WEIGHT: 115.8kg<br />

HONOURS: <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby (1 cap)<br />

Did You Know: The TUD Mechanical Engineering<br />

student originally picked up the oval ball in Enniscorthy<br />

before later moving to Lansdowne FC. Temi rose<br />

through the ranks in the Youths system, his first outing<br />

with the province came at U-18 level against Northampton.<br />

He also describes himself as a ‘competent<br />

pianist’. Instagram: @lasisi.temi<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby Academy<br />

Year one 2021/22:<br />

Scrum half<br />

Ben Murphy<br />

DOB: 23/04/2001<br />

HEIGHT: 1.75m WEIGHT: 80kg<br />

HONOURS: Ireland U20 (3 caps)<br />

& <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby (1 cap)<br />

Did You Know: Ben played all different sports growing<br />

up including football, GAA and golf and won an 800m<br />

gold in the U-14 East <strong>Leinster</strong>s. He is studying economics<br />

in UCD. Ben’s father Richie played for <strong>Leinster</strong><br />

Rugby and has coached at all levels of the game and is<br />

the current Ireland U-20s head coach. I<br />

nstagram: @ben._murphy01<br />

Jack Boyle<br />

DOB: 10/03/2002<br />

HEIGHT: 1.85m WEIGHT: 106kg<br />

HONOURS: Ireland U20 (9 caps)<br />

Rob Russell #1302<br />

DOB: 13/01/1999<br />

HEIGHT: 1.83m WEIGHT: 90kg<br />

HONOURS: <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby (4 caps)<br />

Prop<br />

Did You Know: Jack’s father, Herbie, and uncles, Colon<br />

and Eric, all represented Old Wesley rugby club for<br />

years. His cousin Stephen Boyle also represented the<br />

<strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby youths. Jack is currently studying for a<br />

Commerce Degree in UCD.<br />

Instagram: @jackboyle1<br />

Full Back / Wing<br />

Did You Know: Rob is currently in his final year of<br />

Business and Management in DIT. He started playing<br />

rugby at the age of five with Wanderers RFC. He also<br />

played football up to minor level with Kilmacud Crokes<br />

and it took priority over rugby until he left school.<br />

Instagram: @robrussell7<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 101


Date<br />

25/09<br />

03/10<br />

09/10<br />

16/10<br />

22/10<br />

27/11<br />

03/12<br />

11/12<br />

1/12<br />

1/01<br />

22/01<br />

29/01<br />

11/02<br />

19/02<br />

25/02<br />

05/03<br />

12/03<br />

26/03<br />

02/05<br />

08/04<br />

15/04<br />

23/04<br />

30/04<br />

07/05<br />

KO/<br />

Result<br />

W<br />

31-3<br />

W<br />

7-6<br />

W<br />

43-7<br />

Opposiotion Venue 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 1 2<br />

URC VODACOM<br />

BULLS<br />

URC DRAGONS<br />

Aviva<br />

Stadium<br />

Rodney<br />

Parade<br />

URC ZEBRE RDS Arena J O’BRIEN<br />

KEENAN O’LOUGHLIN RINGROSE FRAWLEY LOWE<br />

SEXTON<br />

3C 1P<br />

MCGRATH<br />

PORTER<br />

1T<br />

SHEEHAN<br />

KEENAN RUSSELL RINGROSE C O’BRIEN O’LOUGHLIN R BYRNE GIBSON-PARK PORTER SHEEHAN<br />

A BYRNE<br />

2T<br />

OSBORNE<br />

FRAWLEY<br />

W<br />

50-15 URC SCARLETS RDS Arena KEENAN LARMOUR RINGROSE FRAWLEY<br />

1C<br />

W<br />

31-15<br />

URC GLASGOW<br />

Scotstoun<br />

Stadium<br />

KEENAN<br />

1T<br />

A BYRNE<br />

1T<br />

L<br />

10-20 URC ULSTER RDS Arena J O’BRIEN A BYRNE HENSHAW<br />

1T<br />

W<br />

47-19 URC CONNACHT RDS Arena KEENAN LARMOUR 1T RINGROSE<br />

1T<br />

W<br />

45-20 HCC BATH Aviva<br />

Stadium<br />

L<br />

0-28<br />

W<br />

89-7<br />

W<br />

64-7<br />

L<br />

29-27<br />

W<br />

26-7<br />

W<br />

29-7<br />

W<br />

21-13<br />

HCC MONTPELLIER<br />

GGL (Altrad)<br />

Stadium<br />

KEENAN<br />

1T<br />

HCC MONTPELLIER RDS Arena KEENAN<br />

HCC BATH<br />

URC<br />

CARDIFF<br />

RUGBY<br />

Recreation<br />

Ground<br />

Cardiff Arms<br />

Park<br />

LARMOUR<br />

1T<br />

LOWE<br />

RINGROSE FRAWLEY LOWE<br />

FRAWLEY<br />

HENSHAW<br />

LARMOUR RINGROSE FRAWLEY<br />

LARMOUR<br />

LOWE<br />

LOWE<br />

1T<br />

H BYRNE<br />

SEXTON<br />

1C 1P<br />

R BYRNE<br />

4C 1P<br />

R BYRNE<br />

1C 1P<br />

H BYRNE<br />

5C<br />

R BYRNE<br />

5C<br />

MCGRATH<br />

GIBSON-PARK<br />

MCGRATH<br />

E BYRNE<br />

1T<br />

PORTER<br />

1T<br />

HEALY<br />

CRONIN<br />

1T<br />

KELLEHER<br />

1T<br />

KELLEHER<br />

1T<br />

MCGRATH E BYRNE TRACY<br />

MCGRATH<br />

GIBSON-PARK<br />

2T<br />

HEALY<br />

PORTER<br />

- - - - - - - - -<br />

KEENAN<br />

1T<br />

LARMOUR<br />

1T<br />

LARMOUR<br />

1T<br />

RINGROSE<br />

RINGROSE<br />

FRAWLEY<br />

HENSHAW<br />

J O’BRIEN<br />

1T<br />

J O’BRIEN<br />

4T<br />

J O’BRIEN A BYRNE 1T OSBORNE FRAWLEY O’LOUGHLIN<br />

URC EDINBURGH RDS Arena OSBORNE T O’BRIEN O’LOUGHLIN FRAWLEY KEARNEY<br />

URC OSPREYS RDS Arena J O’BRIEN<br />

URC<br />

EMIRATES<br />

LIONS<br />

W<br />

17-61 URC BENETTON Stadio<br />

Monigo<br />

L<br />

13-18 URC ULSTER Kingspan<br />

Stadium<br />

W<br />

45-8<br />

LARMOUR<br />

1T<br />

OSBORNE H BYRNE KEARNEY<br />

RDS Arena O’REILLY T O’BRIEN OSBORNE H BYRNE<br />

J O’BRIEN<br />

2T 1C<br />

URC CONNACHT Sportsground J O’BRIEN<br />

W<br />

34-19 URC MUNSTER Thomond<br />

Park<br />

LARMOUR<br />

1T<br />

KEARNEY<br />

1T<br />

OSBORNE H BYRNE T O’BRIEN<br />

J O’BRIEN A BYRNE O’LOUGHLIN OSBORNE T O’BRIEN<br />

KEENAN<br />

W<br />

26-21 HCC CONNACHT Sportsground KEENAN<br />

1T<br />

W<br />

56-20 HCC CONNACHT Aviva<br />

Stadium<br />

L<br />

23-28<br />

L<br />

13-20<br />

W<br />

23-14<br />

URC<br />

CELL C<br />

SHARKS<br />

URC<br />

DHL<br />

STORMERS<br />

HCC<br />

LEICESTER<br />

TIGERS<br />

14/05 15:00 HCC TOULOUSE<br />

21/05 19:15 URC MUNSTER<br />

fixtures and<br />

results 2021/22<br />

Jonsson<br />

Kings Park<br />

Green Point<br />

Stadium<br />

Mattioli Woods<br />

Welford Road<br />

Aviva<br />

Stadium<br />

Aviva<br />

Stadium<br />

T O’BRIEN<br />

2T<br />

J O’BRIEN<br />

1T<br />

OSBORNE<br />

RINGROSE<br />

1T<br />

FRAWLEY<br />

1T<br />

HENSHAW<br />

J O’BRIEN RINGROSE HENSHAW<br />

KEENAN J O’BRIEN RINGROSE<br />

COSGRAVE<br />

T O’BRIEN<br />

1T<br />

OSBORNE<br />

HENSHAW<br />

2T<br />

FRAWLEY<br />

2C 3P<br />

O’LOUGHLIN<br />

1T<br />

LOWE<br />

2T<br />

LOWE<br />

2T<br />

LOWE<br />

4T<br />

O’REILLY A BYRNE OSBORNE O’LOUGHLIN RUSSELL<br />

KEENAN J O’BRIEN RINGROSE<br />

HENSHAW<br />

1T<br />

R BYRNE<br />

1T 7C<br />

SEXTON<br />

5C<br />

R BYRNE<br />

3C 2P<br />

R BYRNE<br />

3C<br />

R BYRNE<br />

3C 1P<br />

R BYRNE<br />

3C<br />

R BYRNE<br />

1T 7C<br />

R BYRNE<br />

1C 2P<br />

R BYRNE<br />

1C<br />

R BYRNE<br />

1P 4C<br />

SEXTON<br />

1C 2P<br />

SEXTON 6C<br />

GIBSON-PARK<br />

1T<br />

MCGRATH<br />

PORTER<br />

PORTER<br />

1T<br />

SHEEHAN<br />

1T<br />

KELLEHER<br />

1T<br />

KELLEHER<br />

KELLEHER<br />

MCGRATH E BYRNE CRONIN<br />

N MCCARTHY<br />

1T<br />

MCGRATH<br />

E BYRNE<br />

HEALY<br />

1T<br />

TRACY<br />

TRACY<br />

N MCCARTHY E BYRNE TRACY<br />

MCGRATH<br />

DOOLEY<br />

CRONIN<br />

2T<br />

MCGRATH DOOLEY TRACY<br />

MCGRATH DOOLEY TRACY<br />

GIBSON-PARK E BYRNE TRACY<br />

MCGRATH HEALY SHEEHAN<br />

GIBSON-PARK<br />

1T<br />

PORTER<br />

KELLEHER<br />

O’LOUGHLIN H BYRNE N MCCARTHY PORTER MCKEE<br />

LOWE<br />

FRAWLEY<br />

2P<br />

SEXTON<br />

2P 2C<br />

FOLEY<br />

E BYRNE<br />

1T<br />

MCKEE<br />

GIBSON-PARK PORTER KELLEHER<br />

102 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


3 4 5 6 7 8 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23<br />

ALAALATOA MOLONY J RYAN RUDDOCK<br />

VAN DER FLIER<br />

1T<br />

ALAALATOA MOLONY RYAN RUDDOCK VAN DER FLIER<br />

ALAALATOA BAIRD TONER LEAVY<br />

FURLONG MOLONY RYAN<br />

DORIS<br />

2T<br />

PENNY<br />

1T<br />

VAN DER FLIER<br />

DORIS<br />

DEEGAN<br />

1T<br />

RUDDOCK<br />

CONAN<br />

FURLONG MOLONY BAIRD DORIS LEAVY CONAN<br />

TRACY<br />

1T<br />

E BYRNE HEALY BAIRD DEEGAN GIBSON-PARK<br />

R BYRNE<br />

1T 1C<br />

TRACY E BYRNE HEALY BAIRD LEAVY N MCCARTHY C FRAWLEY<br />

KELLEHER<br />

1T<br />

SHEEHAN<br />

2T<br />

SHEEHAN<br />

1T<br />

DOOLEY HEALY MOLONY DEEGAN N MCCARTHY<br />

HEALY<br />

1T<br />

ALAALATOA BAIRD RUDDOCK MCGRATH<br />

SEXTON<br />

4C<br />

R BYRNE<br />

3C<br />

OSBORNE<br />

S PENNY<br />

[UNUSED]<br />

RUSSELL<br />

T O’BRIEN<br />

E BYRNE ALAALATOA TONER RUDDOCK GIBSON-PARK OSBORNE VAN DER FLIER<br />

FURLONG MOLONY TONER LEAVY PENNY RUDDOCK CRONIN DOOLEY ABDALADZE DEEGAN CONNORS N MCCARTHY H BYRNE T O’BRIEN<br />

ALA’ALATOA<br />

BAIRD<br />

1T<br />

TONER<br />

RUDDOCK<br />

1T<br />

VAN DER FLIER<br />

DORIS<br />

1T<br />

KELLEHER PORTER ABDALADZE J MURPHY<br />

DEEGAN<br />

1T<br />

N MCCARTHY<br />

R BYRNE<br />

1C<br />

T O’BRIEN<br />

FURLONG<br />

1T<br />

MOLONY BAIRD RUDDOCK<br />

VAN DER FLIER<br />

1T<br />

DORIS SHEEHAN HEALY ALAALATOA TONER DEEGAN MCGRATH J O’BRIEN T O’BRIEN<br />

- - - - - - - - - - - - - -<br />

FURLONG<br />

MOLONY<br />

1T<br />

J MURPHY<br />

DORIS<br />

VAN DER FLIER<br />

2T<br />

CONAN<br />

2T<br />

SHEEHAN<br />

2T<br />

HEALY<br />

ALAALATOA<br />

1T<br />

RUDDOCK DEEGAN MCGRATH<br />

SEXTON<br />

5C<br />

LOWE<br />

1T<br />

ALAALATOA MOLONY MURPHY DORIS<br />

VAN DER FLIER<br />

1T<br />

CONAN<br />

SHEEHAN<br />

1T<br />

HEALY ABDALADZE BAIRD DEEGAN GIBSON-PARK<br />

R BYRNE<br />

2C<br />

FRAWLEY<br />

1T<br />

ALAALATOA TONER J MCCARTHY RUDDOCK CONNORS PENNY 1T TRACY 1T DOOLEY ABDALADZE MOLONY DEEGAN N MCCARTHY H BYRNE T O’BRIEN<br />

ALAALATOA MOLONY J MURPHY MOLONEY<br />

ALAALATOA MOLONY BAIRD MOLONEY<br />

ALAALATOA<br />

1T<br />

PENNY<br />

1T<br />

PENNY<br />

1T<br />

DEEGAN<br />

1T<br />

CRONIN<br />

DOOLEY<br />

ABDALADZE<br />

1T<br />

TONER SOROKA MCGRATH H BYRNE RUSSELL<br />

DEEGAN CRONIN DOOLEY CLARKSON DUNNE RUDDOCK N MCCARTHY A BYRNE<br />

TONER J MCCARTHY J MURPHY LEAVY RUDDOCK CRONIN DOOLEY CLARKSON DUNNE DEEGAN MCGRATH A BYRNE<br />

CLARKSON MOLONY J MCCARTHY RUDDOCK PENNY<br />

ALAALATOA MOLONY J MCCARTHY RUDDOCK PENNY<br />

ALAALATOA MOLONY J MCCARTHY RUDDOCK PENNY<br />

DEEGAN<br />

1T<br />

DEEGAN<br />

1T<br />

DEEGAN<br />

1T<br />

TRACY<br />

2T<br />

LOWE<br />

1T<br />

PENNY<br />

1T<br />

E BYRNE ALAALATOA TONER LEAVY FOLEY O’LOUGHLIN KEARNEY<br />

CRONIN LASISI CLARKSON TONER LEAVY N MCCARTHY HAWKSHAW MOLONEY<br />

CRONIN E BYRNE CLARKSON J MURPHY MOLONEY N MCCARTHY<br />

HAWKSHAW<br />

1T 4C<br />

ALAALATOA TONER DUNNE DORIS VAN DER FLIER CONAN SHEEHAN HEALY FURLONG MOLONY MURPHY MCGRATH FRAWLEY DEEGAN<br />

FURLONG MOLONY J MURPHY DORIS VAN DER FLIER CONAN TRACY E BYRNE ALAALATOA TONER DEEGAN GIBSON-PARK<br />

FURLONG<br />

1T<br />

MOLONY J MURPHY DORIS VAN DER FLIER CONAN SHEEHAN E BYRNE ALAALATOA TONER RUDDOCK MCGRATH<br />

CLARKSON DEENY DUNNE RUDDOCK<br />

PENNY<br />

1T<br />

R BYRNE<br />

1P<br />

R BYRNE<br />

2C<br />

COSGRAVE<br />

FRAWLEY<br />

FRAWLEY<br />

DEEGAN BARRON DOOLEY ALAALATOA J MURPHY SOROKA FOLEY HAWKSHAW MOLONEY<br />

CLARKSON J MURPHY DEENY SOROKA PENNY RUDDOCK BARRON MILNE ABDALADZE DUNNE S O’BRIEN N MCCARTHY<br />

FURLONG MOLONY RYAN DORIS<br />

VAN DER FLIER<br />

1T<br />

CONAN SHEEHAN HEALY ALAALATOA J MCCARTHY RUDDOCK MCGRATH<br />

H BYRNE<br />

1C<br />

R BYRNE<br />

1P<br />

MOLONEY<br />

T O’BRIEN<br />

www.leinsterrugby.ie | 103


matchday<br />

Squads officials<br />

REFEREE<br />

KARL DICKSON<br />

(ENG)<br />

ASSISTANT REFEREE<br />

CHRISTOPHE RIDLEY<br />

(ENG)<br />

ASSISTANT REFEREE<br />

ANTHONY WOODTHORPE<br />

(ENG)<br />

Hugo Keenan<br />

Jimmy O’Brien<br />

Garry Ringrose<br />

Robbie Henshaw<br />

James Lowe<br />

Johnny Sexton [C]<br />

15<br />

14<br />

13<br />

12<br />

11<br />

10<br />

9<br />

FULL BACK<br />

RIGHT WING<br />

OUTSIDE CENTRE<br />

INSIDE CENTRE<br />

LEFT WING<br />

FLY HALF<br />

Thomas Ramos<br />

Juan Cruz Mallía<br />

Pierre Fouyssac<br />

Pita Ahki<br />

Matthis Lebel<br />

Romain Ntamack<br />

TMO<br />

STUART TERHEEGE<br />

(ENG)<br />

CITING COMMISSIONER<br />

BETH DICKENS<br />

(SCO)<br />

Jamison Gibson-Park<br />

SCRUM HALF<br />

Antoine Dupont<br />

Andrew Porter<br />

Rónan Kelleher<br />

Tadhg Furlong<br />

Ross Molony<br />

James Ryan<br />

Caelan Doris<br />

Josh van der Flier<br />

Jack Conan<br />

1<br />

2<br />

3<br />

4<br />

5<br />

6<br />

7<br />

8<br />

LOOSE HEAD PROP Cyril Baille<br />

FRONT PAGE<br />

HOOKER Julien Marchand [C]<br />

TIGHT HEAD PROP Dorian Aldegheri<br />

SECOND ROW Rory Arnold<br />

SECOND ROW Emmanuel Meafou<br />

BLINDSIDE FLANKER Rynhardt Elstadt<br />

OPENSIDE FLANKER Francois Cros<br />

NUMBER 8 Anthony Jelonch<br />

Dan Sheehan<br />

Cian Healy<br />

Michael Ala’alatoa<br />

Joe McCarthy<br />

Rhys Ruddock<br />

Luke McGrath<br />

Ross Byrne<br />

Ciarán Frawley<br />

16<br />

17<br />

18<br />

19<br />

20<br />

21<br />

22<br />

23<br />

REPLACEMENT<br />

REPLACEMENT<br />

REPLACEMENT<br />

REPLACEMENT<br />

REPLACEMENT<br />

REPLACEMENT<br />

REPLACEMENT<br />

REPLACEMENT<br />

Peato Mauvaka<br />

Rodrigue Neti<br />

David Ainu’u<br />

Joe Tekori<br />

Selevasio Tolofua<br />

Thibaud Flament<br />

Martin Page Relo<br />

Zack Holmes


At Sword we know how important the Game is.<br />

We know how important your memories are ....so relax<br />

and enjoy yourself, you're in safe hands.<br />

LEINSTER RUGBY FANS .... Secured by the team at Sword<br />

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Parting Shot<br />

Photo by Harry Murphy/Sportsfile<br />

7 May 2022<br />

Ross Byrne of <strong>Leinster</strong> kicks<br />

a penalty to take his tally<br />

for <strong>Leinster</strong> Rugby past the<br />

800-point mark during the<br />

Heineken Champions Cup<br />

quarter-final match between<br />

Leicester Tigers and <strong>Leinster</strong> at<br />

Mattoli Woods Welford Road<br />

Stadium in Leicester, England.<br />

106 | www.leinsterrugby.ie


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InterContinental Marseille – Hôtel Dieu

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