THE PROBLEM WITH Ireland getting so many injuries at once, according to Shane Horgan, is not just the loss of great players, its that those who come in from the cold have to immediately adapt to the intensity of a World Cup environment while also getting their heads around tactics, calls, video analysis and the sudden pressure of being thrust centre stage.
The one theme thatโs remained constant throughout Joe Schmidtโs coaching career, however, is his ability to get all 15 players, and those coming off the bench, performing at, or close to, their full potential.
When you think of the variety of egos, family backgrounds, dispositions, age profiles and talent levels in a rugby squad, that is perhaps his most remarkable trick of all.
On Sunday, Ireland put together the best squad performance in our history. We may not have quite as talented a starting XV as in 2009 or 2007, but the ability to cope with departures is far beyond anything weโve seen before.
Reacting to circumstances and thinking our way through games has now become our greatest strength. Passion helps Ireland with their manic style of play, but adaptation is why they win so many tight games.
Schmidt leaves most of the motivational speeches to Paul OโConnell, as he did on Sunday. He often lets the forwards coaches or defence coaches dispense advice at half time (think of Sexton and Greg Feek in the 2011 Heineken Cup Final).
He is rarely seen exhorting his players from the touchline (the most we got on Sunday was an almost silent โcome on Tommy, come on Tommyโ just as Bowe passed to Earls in the first half) or reacting to individual errors.
Players fear him in the Monday morning sessions, not because of the hair dryer treatment, but because of the honesty about to come their way. There are no stories of how he helped a troubled player unlock his true potential. There are no flawed genius heart-to-heart narratives in Joeโs coaching CV.
The key to the New Zealanderโs career, it seems, is the lack of mystery. He is, above all, the master of clarity. He doesnโt see any puzzle as to why the best teams win. He sees the blueprint for rugby success the same way the rest of us read a menu and know what we want to eat.
If you put yourself in the head of a player with a club or country or county that hasnโt succeeded, all they see elsewhere is mystery. Why do Kilkenny keep playing well in All Ireland finals? How did Alex Ferguson win Premier Leagues even in years when he didnโt have the best players? How did Wales beat England with all those injuries?
In sport, nerves usually come from mystery. Players fear cup finals and big occasions because they donโt know how theyโre going to play, how the opposition will play, or what the result will be. They donโt know if their dodgy left-to-right pass will let them down or if their decision making will hold up under pressure.
Schmidt, Simon Easterby, Mervyn Murphy, Greg Feek, Richie Murphy and Les Kiss, we now know, replace that fear with information and preparation. Specific, detailed, relevant information. Information that solves problems and demystifies the whole show. If you know exactly what you have to do and how to do it, and itโs within your capabilities, then whatโs to fear?
This group have now taken many of the elements of bad luck out of games. The injuries suffered on Sunday were all less relevant because the players were so focused on the next task they didnโt have time to dwell on ill luck.
Either way, Irelandโs training will be hampered this week. The loss of strong characters around the camp will be felt too. The realisation that Argentina are more skilful, better coached and more confident than France will also be sinking in. Given those factors, and the injuries, this is now a 50/50 game.
The confidence in Ireland will remain steadfast, however, because these days thereโs almost a guarantee of a performance, irrespective of whatโs thrown at them. Under Joe, rolling with the punches has become a science.
Hardly world beaters, especially going forward
@COYBIG: two evenly matched teams tomorrow so
I think travelling to Georgia will affect them. Itโs a long journey. We have a chance.
@prop joe: good pt. I had not considered that. I think we will beat them.
Havent lost to these since 92. No Bale wine rate since 2012 is 9%.
Believe
Coybig
We will beat this shower tomorrow COYBIG! The welsh think the only have to turn up to beat us!
Whats the team photo about?
@Jane: Itโs something Wales have been doing for a couple of years now as a bit of a joke, they deliberately take terrible team photos. Go back through all their qualifiers and youโll see some with one player kneeling and the rest standing, and the opposite. Leaving gaps like that etc. No idea what itโs about.
@Eanna Costello: Iโd never noticed it before, thanks
@Eanna Costello: I think they did one bad photo by mistake and just kept it going then for a laugh
@Jane:
More examples here. Itโs gas really.
https://www.rte.ie/sport/soccer/2017/1008/910725-the-wonders-of-the-wales-team-photo-what-is-going-on/
Seems like you guys think you have this in the bag already.
To put some perspective here โ Wales have lost 3 games since 2013 when Bale wasnโt playing. Two of those were friendlies when other players including Ramsey were also not available, and the other one was after weโd already qualified for the Euros.
We havenโt lost a game since the 2016 Euros Semi final, weโve kept a clean sheet for the last 3 games which we won, and tomorrow night weโre playing at home.
So despite the dismissive remarks above, Wales may pull off a huge upset.
@Saul Hamilton Evans: โnot world beatersโ โevenly matchedโ โwe have a chanceโ. How is that us thinking its in the bag or dismissive of Wales? I think nearly all Irish fans thinks Wales are favourites but as said above, we go to Cardiff with a chance.
@Paul P OโSullivan: is focain bรณmรกn รฉ.
Heโs a clown