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Bulls stalwart Willie le Roux urges teammates to seize moment in Croke Park showdown with Leinster

Bulls stalwart Willie le Roux urges teammates to seize moment in Croke Park showdown with Leinster

Irish Times11-06-2025
There is a temptation to describe Willie le Roux's thoughts on
Saturday's URC final at Croke Park
as bullish, but a fairer expression is forthright. The Bulls have come to play and to win.
The 35-year-old fullback has never shirked a confrontation on the pitch. He is occasionally spiky, but with that temperament comes a player of sublime attacking instincts. When the Bulls beat
Leinster
in last year's URC semi-final at Loftus Versfeld Stadium in Pretoria, Le Roux helped pick the Irish province apart with his cross-field punting.
It is his running game, though, for which the double World Cup-winning Springbok is acclaimed. He has never shied away from a counterattack, irrespective of field position. It is a course of action that carries its own tariff when things go awry. He preaches this gospel, especially to younger players.
'The bit of advice I can give younger guys is that it (a final) is the same as playing the first game of the season,' he said. 'It's not to put this (final) on a pedestal and make it that much bigger that you go into your shell, you don't want to try stuff, you don't want to run from your own half and you don't want to try something.
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'That is not what got us here in the first place. We got here through taking chances. We see an opportunity, we take it. That is what you must do in those big games as well, whether you make a mistake or not. It's about putting yourself out there, putting yourself in the battle.
You must be able to pull the trigger and take that because you might not get a lot of chances

Willie Le Roux
'You might lose a few battles, but you might also win. That's just the little things that I tell the guys. Try and ask for the ball, get your hands on the ball and do as much as you can. You might lose a few battles but it's about getting back up and putting yourself into as many as you can. And have no doubts.'
He pointed to the disparate strengths of players and the importance of not being overwhelmed by the occasion. 'You shouldn't wait,' said Le Roux. 'If you're a winger, you don't wait outside on the wing to get the ball; you come in and you work off your wing and you get your hands on the ball as much as you can, because it doesn't help not putting yourself into battles.'
Bongi Mbonambi of the Sharks tackles the Bulls' Willie le Roux during last weekend's URC semi-final in Pretoria. Photograph: Steve Haag Sports/Inpho/Christiaan Kotze
In continuing the theme, Le Roux spoke about the fine line in game management when it comes to putting the team in the right areas of the pitch and being swift in the decision-making process. 'I think the balance is knowing when to attack and when to kick,' he said. 'In these types of games, you might only get one or two [opportunities]. That might be a turnover on your try line and that is the time to take your chance.
'It might be in the first minute. You must be able to pull the trigger and take that because you might not get a lot of chances.'
Le Roux emphasised the importance of players making decisions on the pitch. 'You've got a senior group making the calls. It's about making the right calls at the right times, the plays: 'Should we go [for the] posts? Should we go for a lineout?' Do you feel you have them under pressure or do you feel they have the pressure on you?
'So, it's a big thing about making the right calls at the right times as well, and taking chances. And I think that it's a good core group of guys making decisions on the field together, knowing the roles, knowing when to do what.
'I think we are very tight as a group and we understand what our plan is. You can't not go out there, put a smile on your face and go enjoy it on the biggest stage. So, yeah, we're looking forward to it.'
[
Six of the best games between Leinster and Bulls ahead of URC final
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]
The Bulls, who have lost two finals in three years, are hoping it's third time lucky at Croke Park. Scratch that. They are not going to be paralysed by the pressure to end that sequence. It is not a hope thing. Le Roux points to a simple focus, to embrace and enjoy the experience and play for your brothers, one of whom is missing but not forgotten.
He played alongside Cornal Hendricks in several teams
. Hendricks, who died of a heart attack last month aged 37, was a friend as much as a teammate.
'He would light up a room when he walked in,' said Le Roux.
The Bulls might have taken a little umbrage with the phrase 'mission impossible', which has been used in some quarters to describe Saturday's assignment. Bolstered by a strong belief in their ability, uncertainty shouldn't be a factor. Leinster know that from past experiences.
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Conor McManus on the Donegal team: Profiling the men tasked with avenging 2014 All-Ireland final loss
Conor McManus on the Donegal team: Profiling the men tasked with avenging 2014 All-Ireland final loss

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Conor McManus on the Donegal team: Profiling the men tasked with avenging 2014 All-Ireland final loss

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How Donegal's defence can cope with David Clifford
How Donegal's defence can cope with David Clifford

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How Donegal's defence can cope with David Clifford

There was a moment of levity during Jim McGuinness's press conference ahead of the All-Ireland final. The Donegal manager was asked when he knew that Finnbarr Roarty, the fresh-faced teenage defender who has been one of the revelations of this summer, was ready for senior inter-county football. 'I would say about a year ago I thought he might have been good enough, but I was a day out on my calculation!' McGuinness smiled, a reference to how he handed Roarty his senior debut in a McKenna Cup game, despite him still being a minor, which was against GAA rules and resulted in Donegal getting a slap on the wrists. But it did show how long the youngster, a clubmate of the manager in Naomh Conaill, has been on the radar. One of the big questions that surrounded Donegal ahead of this season was how McGuinness would adjust his team's defensive structure and shape to the new rules. While much of how they defend remains based on a system — and how they like to set up zonally just inside the arc — they have adapted it to the new game. Even with 11 v 11, he has trusted his team's shape. Finnbarr Roarty has been one of the revelations of this summer. Pic: INPHO/James Crombie 'That is probably the one thing that has surprised me about Donegal this season,' says Eamon McGee, the All-Ireland-winning corner-back in 2012. 'McGuinness came back last year and loved his defensive shape, and I wondered if he would remain true to that there or is he going more to a hybrid approach where he is getting out and putting the pressure on. 'But he's stayed true to that. I'm surprised that he's able to work it out, and they've been very brave, in fairness to Donegal, how they defended those zones and how they're leaving that third zone, nearly man-free. There's one man keeping an eye on it, but they're getting across so quick. 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One-on-one defending still matters. Roarty's ability to strip the ball from an opponent — most clearly seen in dispossessing Meath's Keith Curtis in the semi-final to start the move that led to Ciaran Moore's goal — is reminiscent of Karl Lacey in his pomp, as both McGuinness and McGee have pointed out. 'He punches above his weight in many respects and doesn't fear anybody,' McGuinness said of Roarty. 'There's an innocence to that but a courageousness as well. He's a brilliant tackler. I can see him taking the ball off Aidan O'Shea in Roscommon that day, that's not an easy task. Karl Lacey in his pomp. Pic: Brendan Moran/Sportsfile 'When he gets you in that grip, a bit like Karl Lacey, he can get the hand in and the hand out. It's clean and it's crisp and it's strong. He's fair. He's been brilliant, the Donegal people love him. They absolutely love him. When he gets a turnover now, I think it's as big a cheer as you're going to get for a point because he is so honest. ' McGee agreed with those sentiments. 'He is so good at sniffing danger and getting to the danger. His ability to rob a man reminds me of Lacey, who was like a boxer with quick hands and able to get the ball without getting the foul on. You watch Finbarr when he gets near the man. How many times we've seen it this summer, where Finbarr's getting the hand in, gets it away. 'He's brought so much to that defensive unit. And remember, Finbarr's coming from an era where he's been brought up in blanket defences, so a lot of those defensive skills were neglected, they weren't coached, it about getting everybody back, and the group, rather than the individual. For him to come out, and in the manner that he has, it's a testament to his club and his coaches and to himself.' Brendan McCole will likely be assigned the most difficult job in Gaelic football and asked to limit the damage that Clifford does in the final. 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'If you look at the players who are dubbed man-markers most of them aren't able to do that, they are just focused on their direct opponent. But McCole is able to read the game, he's always aware of where his man is and when to stand off. He's hands-on at times, but he doesn't bring any of the sledging or verbals nonsense.' McGuinness has re-designed parts of his defensive shape to fit into the new game, but he still trusts his players in their individual battle. McCole has the hardest job of all on Sunday, but if his teammates sense trouble, their system means they can move at speed to help — and how they try to nullify the Kerry threats is just one of the reasons Sunday's game is so intriguing.

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