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Gordon D'Arcy: Leinster should forget about silencing the critics - just listen to the clarion call

Gordon D'Arcy: Leinster should forget about silencing the critics - just listen to the clarion call

Irish Times11-06-2025
Success in sport is rarely a linear pathway. More often there is a fair bit of rerouting after venturing into some culs-de-sac or hitting the odd speed bump or wobble.
In 2009
Leinster
won the Heineken Cup for the first time. The following season we believed ourselves to be equally motivated and hungry to repeat the dose but found out that the theoretical and practical weren't quite aligned.
We topped our pool, squeezed past Clermont Auvergne at the RDS before coming a cropper against Toulouse in a semi-final in La Ville Rose. To compound matters we lost the Celtic League Grand Final to a strong Ospreys team in our backyard, the RDS. I still haven't come to terms with Tommy Bowe's jersey grab that stopped me making a tackle. To make matters worse he was one of their two try-scorers that day.
I remember standing on the pitch, the tension so thick you could almost bite it, our faces serious but we were definitely overcooked – mentally and physically – at the wrong point in the week on match day.
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Shaun Beirne, an Australian outhalf, brought a wealth of experience to Leinster, as well as an appreciation that playing sport was to be enjoyed for the most part, not simply endured. He tried to lift the mood, with words that I can still recall.
'Lads, it's meant to be fun, remember that.'
Just like that, the mood shifted, a couple of smiles emerged. The pressure didn't disappear, but we carried it differently, we learned to embrace it.
A decade and a half later and Leinster find themselves on the cusp of another watershed moment as they prepare for Saturday's
URC
final against the Bulls at Croke Park. Few teams get to be choosy about silverware, so while Leinster might have preferred a fifth star to signify another European crown, it's not the time to be sniffy about winning a different trophy.
The URC might not carry the romance or glamour of a Champions Cup, but it is a brutally tough competition to win, something that Leinster have come to realise over the past four years. They bear the scars of defeat. Saturday provides an opportunity to finish a turbulent season on a high note.
Leinster's Joe McCarthy wins a lineout at the Leinster v Glasgow Warriors URC semi-final game at the Aviva Stadium last Saturday. Photograph: Dan Sheridan/Inpho
Leinster's campaigns in Europe and domestically promised so much but that anticipation and expectation has been replaced by disparate emotions. Criticism has come, piled high – some of it fair, a lot exaggerated – while the vast majority has emerged from the strange, pixelated universe of social media, a space that doesn't reflect real-world sentiment as much as it claims to.
It's a place where nuance dies and reaction rules. Unfortunately, it also tends to become the echo chamber for those that seek out kindred spirits in outlook and opinion. It doesn't matter how small or niche the vox pop.
Leinster, for all their consistency and high performance over the last decade, have found themselves the victims of some serious schadenfreude in recent weeks. There are people, plenty of them, who get a bit of joy out of seeing Leinster fall short.
That's part of the deal when you've set the bar so high. Winning isn't enough when you're expected to prevail. It's treated as if it's a bit ho-hum. But when you don't, critics are gleeful in their disparagement.
What's interesting – and frankly refreshing – is that this time the Leinster players have clearly had enough of it. Joe McCarthy and Jack Conan both came out and made it known that the criticism is being heard, and that they're keen to answer back.
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Leinster driven by siege mentality ahead of URC showdown with Bulls
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Maybe what I've written has be taken in that same vein, but I loved hearing that. Too often the modern professional is in a verbal straitjacket, locked into a script, sanitised, safe, coached to be on-message. It's good to see some emotion every now and then.
But, of course, calling it out brings its own pressure. Acknowledging the digital elephant in the room is one thing, responding to it with a performance is another. That's where Leinster stand now. They have to turn that siege mentality into a fuel source.
While it's nice to hear them get a bit chippy, it's what they do on the UCD training pitches that matters most: how they've trained, talked, recovered, reset. The only energy worth carrying into this final is positive; relying on a faux edge from external criticism to me would not be enough to see them over the line.
Jordie Barrett at Leinster Rugby Squad Training in UCD on Monday. Photograph: Morgan Treacy/Inpho
I'm reminded of Joe Schmidt and what he drilled into us again and again: 'Control the controllables.' When you focus on yourself, all the positives that make you special as a group, it becomes really powerful as a galvanising force.
There were genuine signs of life from a Leinster perspective last weekend in the win over Glasgow Warriors at the Aviva Stadium. A brilliant line from Dan Sheehan reminded us how dynamic he is with ball in hand. Tommy O'Brien brought energy and sharpness, while Ryan Baird was back to being that annoying, athletic pest every team hates playing against. And Jordie Barrett, slipping down the short side, showed exactly the kind of class that can change games in an instant.
The performance wasn't complete, far from it. But there was shape, there was rhythm. The individual quality is still there. The opportunity now is to pull it all together, save the best performance for last, and answer the clarion call.
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Leinster class shines through in bruising URC semi-final that proved familiarity breeds contempt
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This week shouldn't be about silencing critics or snapping in half the proverbial stick people have been beating them with since the Champions Cup semi-final loss. That sort of external motivation burns out quickly in the heat of a match.
It should be about turning inward, playing for each other, playing for the 16,000 or 17,000 supporters who keep showing up, even when the music's gone quiet. This is about giving them a day worth remembering.
The Bulls are no pushovers, a power-based team with pace who will lick their lips at the idea of neutering the Irish province's set-piece launch pad. The Bulls scrum that tore through the Sharks pack will come for Leinster, every lineout contested, every ruck a dogfight. For the home side parity in these areas is a minimum requirement. Then it comes down to desire, individually and collectively.
Leinster need a bit of that this week. Accept the pressure. Embrace it. And remember that they're good enough, if they believe it, to win this final on their terms, regardless of what the Bulls bring. Forget the external noise. Focus on the job, embrace the task with gusto. And enjoy it.
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Redemption song for McCarthy and Cahill as Tipp rule again
Redemption song for McCarthy and Cahill as Tipp rule again

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Redemption song for McCarthy and Cahill as Tipp rule again

REDEMPTION. That was the story of Sunday's All-Ireland hurling final. Twice this summer Darragh McCarthy left the field with red cards. On Sunday the 19-year-old left Croke Park with 1-13 to his name and the Liam MacCarthy cup after Tipp's 3-27 to 1-18 demolition of Cork. Redemption too for Liam Cahill. The season began with some critics questioning his methods. It ends with an All-Ireland after one of the greatest second half displays ever witnessed on Jones's Road. It was the first time Tipperary had beaten Cork in a senior Championship final since 1991. The famine is over, just not the one everyone expected. For Tipp a 29th All-Ireland, for Cork the pain goes on. They came into the game as unbackable favourites on the back of a seven-goal humbling of Dublin, looking to add Liam MacCarthy to League and Munster titles and end a 20 year wait. But this was never going to be a walkover. And there were clear warnings from the past. Brian Murphy wrote in the match programme about the 2018 Under-21 Championship when Cork dismantled Tipp in Munster only to come undone in the final against a Premier side managed by Cahill. Darragh Fitzgibbon, Shane Kingston, Mark Coleman, Declan Dalton, Tim O'Mahony and Niall O'Leary were among that Cork underage team. Eoghan Connolly and Conor Stakelum were in blue and gold. Once again they all faced each other in an All-Ireland decider. Once again Cork were expected to win. Once again Tipp took home the cup. Cork dejected (Image: Mandatory Credit ©INPHO/Ryan Byrne) The day began with a sea of red and white descending on the capital in expectation. It was the kind of day when newspaper editors send photographers out to capture the magic and mayhem of the fans. The kind of day the late Mick O'Neill when would've made hay with his camera on Jones's Road. Hats, flags, headbands were on sale from makeshift stalls. Ponchos too as the clouds gathered, but never burst. John Allen was Cork manager the last time Liam MacCarthy rested on Leeside in 2005. On Sunday morning he read a piece on RTÉ Radio One's Sunday Miscellany about the dressingroom energy in the moments before the players are called onto the pitch. 'Those moments of concentration just before the match begins, when all the preparation is done... The final words dispensed. Quiet. Deliberate. Nothing more to be said.' Cork were out first yesterday, hitting the turf right on the stroke of three o'clock, warming up at the Hill 16 end, ready to bare their souls for the ultimate prize. Tipp followed soon afterwards. Michael D Higgins got an almighty cheer as he met the teams ahead of his last hurling final as president. Next year it will be someone else on the red carpet. At 37 Patrick Horgan is just about old enough to run for the Áras and still young enough to run the show for Cork. Much of the pre-match talk had been about his and Cork's want and they got off to the better start. Horgan, the pride of Cork's northside chasing his first Celtic Cross at 37 years of age, settling any nerves with an early free. When the two sides met at Páirc Uí Chaoimh in April, the day ended in tears for McCarthy after an early red card tilted the balance heavily in Cork's favour. Sunday was different. Very different. McCarthy was moving freely and causing problems for the Rebels, while Cork's much-vaunted full-forward line of Horgan, Alan Connolly and Brian Hayes were not firing like before. Ronan Maher was depriving Hayes of primary ball, but Horgan kept the scoreboard ticking over for the favourites and the Rebels held the early advantage. We expected goals and they came, but the 82,000-plus at Croker yesterday had to wait until the stroke of half-time when Shane Barrett fired to the net for the first. Cork led by six at the break. The Promised Land was in sight. And then it wasn't. 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He paid tribute to Cahill too and shouted, "Liam MacCarthy is coming home" before Bruce Springsteen's Glory Days rang out. McCarthy admitted there was never any doubt in the Tipp dressingroom, even when Cork were leading by six at the break. 'The conversation was all positive. We kinda planned for that. We kinda said, 'If we're five, six down at half-time we're not going to panic. We know what we're capable of,' he said. 'We've come back from worse margins before. We won't panic. If we play our game the way we know we can play, we're capable of beating any team. Stick to the process.' They did. And then some. In the aftermath of his sending off against Cork earlier in the summer, McCarthy's phone was hopping with all 40 members of the panel texting the teenager that night to make sure he was okay. You can be sure his phone was hopping again last night.

Tipperary crowned All-Ireland hurling champions after stunning Cork
Tipperary crowned All-Ireland hurling champions after stunning Cork

Sunday World

time2 hours ago

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Tipperary crowned All-Ireland hurling champions after stunning Cork

All-Ireland SHC final: Tipperary 3-27 Cork 1-18 If you were told there would be 15-point winners you could think back to Supervalu Páirc Ui Chaoimh and the Munster Championship in April when that was exactly the margin that Cork won by. Why wouldn't it happen again? Or something like it. If you thought at half-time, when Cork waltzed off on the back of a stunning Shane Barrett goal to give them a six-point lead, that the path ahead was forged for them to bridge a 20-year gap, you'd have been playing safe. It looked like the coronation was in hand. And yet Tipperary are All-Ireland hurling champions for a 29th time, not just champions but dominant champions. The very margin that they lost by in April they won by here, an amazing reversal that said everything about a second half in which there was only one team in it There will be plenty of recriminations in Cork as to how the wheels came off after taking such a dominant position in at half-time. 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For McCarthy it was an amazing redemption story and a real act of faith from manager Liam Cahill after his second red card of the championship against Kilkenny in the semi-final. The young Toomevara man finished with 1-13 from 15 shots. A star has truly been born. McGrath had got the first Tipperary goal in the 46th minute when he hunted a rebound from a Jake Morris point attempt that came off an upright. Typical McGrath he looked in a time zone of his own as he botched the initial ground shot but picked up to calmly push a shot past Patrick Collins for Tipp to hit the front, 1-18 to 1-16. They had begun the second half with vigour and Cork only scored the first of their two points just after that, through Barrett. By then momentum was all with Tipp and every mistake possible was invented by a Cork team being drained of confidence. Willie Connors was a revelation throughout in a half-back role as Tipp opted to leave Bryan O'Mara as sweeper. 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Referee: Liam Gordon (Galway) More to follow….

From day one this season, Bevans saw something 'different' about Tipperary
From day one this season, Bevans saw something 'different' about Tipperary

Irish Examiner

time3 hours ago

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From day one this season, Bevans saw something 'different' about Tipperary

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