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Players must make most of minutes in the Leinster machine

Players must make most of minutes in the Leinster machine

The 4231-05-2025
OPPORTUNITIES CAN BE limited in a squad as deep and competitive as Leinster's.
This is something assistant coach Robin McBryde warned about earlier in the season, admitting the Leinster coaches had discussed the issue of getting enough minutes into their promising young players.
'It is tough,' McBryde said. 'I feel for them sometimes because it does stunt their development. I don't know what the answer is there.'
Leinster try to rotate their squad and use that depth to their advantage, but, particularly as the season rolls into the business end, selection tends to fall into a more settled pattern.
It presents a challenging scenario for players trying to nail down a spot in the squad, most notably those who are also starting to push through at Test level.
Generally speaking, if a player is good enough to get capped in a November window or Six Nations, they tend to be highly important players at their clubs.
For example, it's hard to imagine Cormac Izuchukwu going back to Ulster after winning his first Ireland cap last November and struggling to get into the Ulster 23. Likewise Cian Prendergast at Connacht or players like Munster pair Calvin Nash and Jack Crowley when they were first called in with Ireland. Further afield, Lions-bound Henry Pollock won his first England cap in the Six Nations and has built on that momentum by getting more experience in big club games – starting seven times for Northampton since returning from England camp.
However there's a group of Leinster players who have worn the Ireland jersey this year, yet still been left disappointed on the big days with Leinster.
Take Jack Boyle, who earlier this week was the only Irish player on the 16-strong URC Next-Gen Player of the Season shortlist. The 23-year-old prop is highly rated and came off the bench twice for Ireland in the Six Nations. That would usually be a springboard for greater exposure at club level but he's been stuck in a tough battle for minutes. Since the Six Nations finished, Boyle has started three games for Leinster. He's on the bench again today for the URC quarter-final meeting with Scarlets [KO 3pm, TG4/Premier Sports], with Andrew Porter firmly established as the first-choice loosehead and the soon-to-be-retired Cian Healy also clocking up four starts since the Six Nations.
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Gus McCarthy falls into a similar bracket. The 21-year-old hooker faces some of the stiffest competition imaginable, with Dan Sheehan and Rónan Kelleher, both set to tour with the Lions this summer, ahead of him in the queue.
Gus McCarthy won't be involved against the Scarlets today. Tom Maher / INPHO Tom Maher / INPHO / INPHO
It's been a breakthrough season for McCarthy, who has played four times for Ireland – twice in November and twice in the Six Nations. Yet when Sheehan and Kelleher are both fit, McCarthy feels the squeeze at Leinster. Since the Six Nations he's played three games, with the URC round 15 win against Ulster his only start during that period. Earlier this month he lined out for Leinster A against Ulster A.
McCarthy misses out again today, with Kelleher starting and Sheehan providing cover off the bench.
A player like Jamie Osborne is in a slightly different situation, but can also fall on the wrong side of those selection calls.
Osborne's versatility is one of his great strengths, and this season he's had starts at inside centre, outside centre, left wing and right wing. The 23-year-old is further along the line that many of Leinster teammates when it comes to international rugby. He memorably started both Tests against South Africa last summer and has added five caps across the November and Six Nations windows. In the Six Nations he earned two starts, at fullback v Wales and on the wing against France, and had been spoken about as an outside bet for the Lions.
He's built on that with more time on the pitch at Leinster, starting five games since returning from the Six Nations, but notably he was left out of the Leinster 23 for their biggest game during that run – the Champions Cup semi-final loss to Northampton.
Today he's back in the starting team, perhaps benefitting from the short-term injuries to Garry Ringrose (calf) and Tommy O'Brien (foot), who both miss out.
It's a challenge not just confined to the province's younger squad players. Jimmy O'Brien, 28, is another Ireland international who watched the Northampton game from the stands, despite enjoying a good run in the team in the URC.
At 27, Ciarán Frawley has been on the scene for some time now and looked to be hitting a new level last season. He was an important part of Leinster's run to the Champions Cup final defeat to Toulouse and played a starring role off the bench on Ireland's tour to South Africa.
His form dipped earlier in this season and it's been a mixed bag since. Frawley was in the Six Nations squad but only got to pull on the Ireland jersey in an 'A' game against England. Lose ground, and it can be tough to claw your way back in.
The Skerries man has had starts at 10 and 15 for Leinster over the last two months but has started the last three games – including today's quarter-final – on the bench. Frawley looked set for a big season coming out of that South Africa tour but as it stands at Leinster, Hugo Keenan is the locked-in first choice fullback, with Sam Prendergast the same at out-half.
That fierce competition is part of the package when it comes to being a Leinster player, but it means that on days like today, they have to step up and make the most of their gametime.
Leinster are expected to get the job done at Aviva Stadium and secure a home semi-final next week. Leo Cullen's side have three games to hurdle if they are to end their trophy drought. For some of those players who have been involved in tight selection calls across the campaign, there's still time to have a big say in how the season ends.
LEINSTER: Hugo Keenan; Jimmy O'Brien, Jamie Osborne, Jordie Barrett, James Lowe; Sam Prendergast, Jamison Gibson-Park; Andrew Porter, Rónan Kelleher, Thomas Clarkson; Joe McCarthy, James Ryan; Ryan Baird, Josh van der Flier, Jack Conan (capt).
Replacements: Dan Sheehan, Jack Boyle, Rabah Slimani, RG Snyman, Max Deegan, Scott Penny, Luke McGrath, Ciarán Frawley.
SCARLETS: Blair Murray; Tom Rogers, Joe Roberts, Johnny Williams, Ellis Mee; Sam Costelow, Arhie Hughes; Alec Hepburn, Ryan Elias, Henry Thomas; Alex Craig, Sam Lousi; Vaea Fifita, Josh Macleod (capt), Taine Plumtree.
Replacements: Marnus van der Merwe, Kemsley Mathias, Sam Wainwright, Dan Davis, Jarrod Taylor, Efan Jones, Ioan Lloyd, Macs Page.
Referee: Hollie Davidson (SRU).
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Obituary: Seán Doherty, imposing captain who lifted Dublin's first Sam Maguire Cup in 11 years
Obituary: Seán Doherty, imposing captain who lifted Dublin's first Sam Maguire Cup in 11 years

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Obituary: Seán Doherty, imposing captain who lifted Dublin's first Sam Maguire Cup in 11 years

That success, sudden and unexpected, had a revolutionary impact in popularising the game in the capital, where it had suffered from public apathy and disinterest. Soccer, which was enjoying increasing television exposure, had been the more pervasive influence on young followers. The team managed by Kevin Heffernan and captained by Doherty offered a compelling and home-grown alternative. For those accustomed to the popularity and success of the Dublin football team now, the difference then could not be more pronounced. Dublin defender Robbie Kelleher told the story of a teacher in Fairview in the early 1970s who asked a class of 15- and 16-year-olds to name one Dublin footballer. Nobody could. After GAA president Dr Donal Keenan presented the Sam Maguire Cup to Doherty in the Hogan Stand in September 1974, that indifference evaporated. Doherty had come into the Dublin set-up in the late 1960s when their stock was low. That gave him a deeper appreciation of success when it arrived. When he lifted the cup in 1974, he was already 28. 'I think one of the worst years was probably 1972,' Doherty said last year of the lean times. 'We played Cork in Croke Park in the league and there were only three guys on the Hill.' Hill 16 soon became transformed into a feverish, heaving mass of Dublin football worship. Doherty made his championship debut against Longford in 1970, and before the breakthrough he featured on teams that lost four out of six Leinster games across four seasons. ­Heffernan was appointed after another failed harvest in 1973 took Dublin in a new direction. Heffernan wanted players he could trust: ideally, strong-minded types, highly motivated and intelligent. He did not chose his first captain lightly. Paddy Cullen had been nominated by UCD, but Heffernan decided Doherty was best suited. Soon after the first meeting with the players, Heffernan called Doherty aside at training and told him the news. 'I was very surprised at that,' admitted Doherty, who became known as 'the Doc'. 'I was still an intermediate footballer. I hadn't played at the levels that Tony Hanahoe or Brian Mullins or Jimmy Keaveney or Pat O'Neill, who had played with UCD — those players had much more experience than I had.' Doherty, physically imposing, strong in the air and uncompromising on the ground, went on to win three All-Ireland medals, adding further All-Ireland medals in 1976 and 1977, as well as six Leinster titles. Heffernan's personality was all over the team. 'He wasn't that interested in fancy footballers,' Doherty said. 'He wanted honesty. A good hard-working group that were big and strong and capable. And that were prepared to work their butt off for the duration of the game. At that stage we were training for matches lasting 80 minutes, and we caught a lot of teams on the hop with our level of fitness.' Doherty played in five successive All-Ireland finals and was a sub for the sixth in 1979, after which he retired. His performances in the breakthrough year in 1974 earned him an All-Star award at full-back. He captained the side again in 1975 when a youthful Kerry team caused a surprise by beating them in the final. After that loss the Dublin captaincy went to Tony Hanahoe, but Doherty remained a steadfast figure in the back line until his final year, the last of his 105 games for Dublin coming against Wicklow in the 1979 Leinster quarter-final.​ The 1975 All-Ireland final began a riveting rivalry with Kerry, a match remembered for an incident involving Doherty and his Kerry counterpart Mickey 'Ned' O'Sullivan. The Kerry captain made a weaving run in the first half, shipping a succession of heavy challenges before Doherty stopped him in his tracks. The Kerry captain ended up unconscious and spent the night in hospital, missing the trophy presentation. The teenage Pat Spillane stepped into the void as vice-captain. Doherty and O'Sullivan became extremely close over the years, and perhaps the most symbolic example of the friendship that developed between Kerry and Dublin despite being fierce rivals on the field of play. The two remained in close contact and were centrally involved in a 50th golden jubilee reunion in Kenmare this year. Doherty did speak in the past about the incident in the 1975 final to explain that it wasn't his intention to end O'Sullivan's part in the game. O'Sullivan, remarkably, said that the incident never came up in their numerous subsequent conversations. 'We never talk about it at all,' the Doc confirmed this year when I asked him about the incident. 'We met up and shook hands. Things happen and they happen in the spur of the moment and it's not something that is done behind the referee's back. It's a split-second decision.' They were, he said, 'the best of pals'. Seán Doherty was born in Glenealy in Wicklow in 1946. In the early part of his life he moved to south Dublin and became involved with Ballyboden Wanderers, which later became Ballyboden St Enda's. Before he joined the Dublin panel, he had played with Wicklow at under-21 level. He also had a spell as a player-manager with St Anne's. Having started out as a plumber, building up his own business, he later bought a pub in south Dublin in 1983. In recent years he remained active in helping organise reunions and was in the process of arranging the annual Dublin players' trip to the Algarve when I met him before the Dublin-Kerry reunion. It was evident how much he cherished those enduring friendships. He was a popular and personable personality. After he retired he became involved in a Dublin senior management team with Mullins and Kelleher, serving just one year in 1986. When that management team dissolved, Doherty stayed on as a selector with the next manager, Gerry McCaul. In their first year they won a terrifically exciting national league final against Kerry on a baking hot day in Croke Park, and in 1989, they dethroned Meath in Leinster before losing the All-Ireland semi-final to Cork. Doherty married Teresa Curran in 1971 and spoke appreciatively of her support. 'I was playing football, and hurling with the club, I had three or four sets of gear. And Teresa always had the bag in the hallway, one for the county and one for the club. When I was going out I never had to ask.' Seán Doherty, who died on July 7, is survived by his wife Teresa and his children Michelle, Seán, Julianne and Anthony.

'I feel sorry for Portugal' - Paul O'Connell
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'I feel sorry for Portugal' - Paul O'Connell

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