Updated at 22.00
IRFU PERFORMANCE DIRECTOR David Nucifora has a right to be proud of his first year in the job.
Since his contract began on 1 June last year key totems of the international team have been tied down to contracts, players have been moving between provinces with increasing regularity and, today, Irelandโs mythical Sevens programme was made real.
The goal for the mix of amateurs and academy prospects included in the squad is to qualify for the Olympic Games. In theory, that can be achieved this summer with successful progress through three tournaments.
However, Sevens tournaments pose a host of new challenges such as opposition who have more 7s minutes on the clock, testing conditions, soaring temperatures and the unpredictability of a make-or-break series played out over a few hours.
Little wonder Nucifora moved to ease some of the weight of expectation as reporters began to make plans for Rio.
โItโs going to be difficult for us. The rest of the countries around the world have had a big head start on us,โ the Australian said in the Aviva Stadium today.
โI think that if we can get ourselves in to that European qualifier [in Lisbon] in July that would be a good achievement. Once youโre in there, anything can happen.โ
Ireland have had a somewhat chequered existence in the shorter form of the game up until this point. Yet despite Nucifora speaking in glowing terms about benefits the game can bring to players, he kept his pride in the establishment of the structure quiet today; not wishing to publicly flog anyone for ignoring the sport while every other major rugby nation were fully invested.
โYou always have to sit back and look at why people do what they do and go about it,โ Nucifora says in a gravelly Brisbane accent.
โOne of the key drivers for us is, when youโve got a small playing population relative to your competitors, you have to think of every opportunity you can to make sure youโre creating internal competition.
We need more players ready to play at the professional level quicker than weโre producing them now. Sevens is a way of doing that.
โSo we will be developing young players through this game. If those players can go on to become internationals in 15s rugby, weโll continue in Sevens, thatโs fine. But if weโve got more competition for contracts, then competition creates performance and thatโs what weโre trying to do.โ
Cost was often a quick and easy reason presented to argue against establishing an off-shoot structure for Sevens. Today, Nucifora simply laughed off a query about the outlay he has been permitted, instead pointing to the value the game would provide.
โEveryoneโs interested in the cost, it must have been an issue in the past,โ he said with a broad smile.
โWe call it our shoestring programme and weโve done it by saving money in other areas of the high performance area. I think itโs a good investment.
โItโs not costing a lot of money โ itโs a camps-based programme, we donโt have the players in here full time โ thatโs adequate for what weโre trying to achieve in the next couple of years. We think we can produce players on a minimal investment thatโs going to add value to what we already spend in other areas.โ
Specifically, that value falls in to two categories for the Australian, player development firstly:
Developing the players weโve already got in a slightly different way and exposing them to different things โ if we keep doing the same thing weโll always get what we got, as they say.
โThis will enable us to put them in to a game that will ask different questions of them as players. And our ambition is to speed up the development of our players so it creates a different pathway for a different group of players doing a different thing.โ
The second benefit is making the game more attractive to newcomers.
Simplistic
โThe beauty of Sevens is that it is a more simplistic version of the game. One of the great thing about 15s rugby is the complexity, but at times it is a challenge for people who arenโt quite across the game.
โSo to be able to offer up a different more simplistic version to bring more players to the game is huge.
โI know weโre talking about the menโs programme here, but weโve got a game weโre developing for our women who are a bit more advanced.
โThatโs already opened the door for female athletes who may come from any of the gaelic sports and thatโs exciting as well. Thereโs no reason that canโt happen for the men.โ
Maybe in year two.
I brought a small fm radio with me to Landsdown rd last night so I could have his commentary in one ear. Heโs truly unbelievable.
Always enjoy listening to him. He is passionate and knowledge. Irelandโs voice of rugby.
Fantastic. I brought a small fm radio with me to Landsdown rd last night so I could listen to him, he unbelievable.
when will ryle nugent step aside for this guy.. i know he is the rte sports boss but he must realise this guy is BOSS
I like Nugent. Corcoran however is magic commenting on a game but heโs made for radio.