YOU MAY REMEMBER Tomás Quinlan from his match-winning penalty for the Ireland U20s against Argentina at the 2015 Junior World Championship.
With the last action of the game and Ireland trailing 16-15, Quinlan took on a truly difficult penalty shot at goal from wide on the right. And he nailed it.
“Fair balls to ya boy! Well done Tomás Quinlan,” tweeted Ronan O’Gara, a fellow Cork and Munster man who knows more than most about holding his nerve from the tee with the pressure on.
Quinlan joined Munster’s full academy after that tournament, in which he featured four times having been a late injury call-up, and his future with the province looked very bright.
But within a year, the former Christians Brothers College student had been released, Munster opting to look elsewhere for out-half potential.
Still only 22, Quinlan has been shining with Cork Constitution again this season, guiding them into the final of Ulster Bank League Division 1A for the second year in a row and kicking eight points in last weekend’s Bateman Cup success, a fifth consecutive success in that competition for the club.
Quinlan will be pivotal to Con’s chances of wrestling the UBL title from Clontarf in Sunday’s decider at the Aviva [KO 2.30pm] and his continuing good form only makes his team-mates wonder all the more how Munster let him go.
“It was definitely a shock,” says Cork Con prop Gavin Duffy. “He has it all, with the skills and the kicking and he is a great defensive player as well. He wouldn’t be a slight out-half either.
“He is well able to stand up for himself and give a good account for himself in defence, so we were all kind of shocked that he didn’t make it. We were only expecting him to be in Con for one or two years but it just didn’t work out for him for whatever reason.”
Many others in the club game in Munster and further afield share that surprise, particularly with Quinlan’s form remaining so consistently strong.
His left-footed place-kicking has been hugely reliable once again this season, with the IRFU’s stats having him down for 180 points in the league during the current campaign, while he has run the Con attack and chipped in willingly in defence.
An Ireland international at U19 level, as well as a Munster player right up to the ‘A’ team, Quinlan is a fine example of the playing quality that will be on show this Sunday in Dublin.
“We have all seen him grow,” says Duffy. “He came into us after secondary school and he has become a real leader now. Everyone listens to him.
“He kind of bosses things and he has a savage boot. He has become a really good player for us.”
Of course, Cork Con have been the launchpad for several promising Munster youngsters in the recent past, with Darren Sweetnam featuring at fullback in last season’s final defeat to Clontarf.
No one in the club has been surprised to see the Dunmanway flyer going on to bigger things.
“He is a class player,” says Duffy. “He was after playing inter-county hurling with Cork so he was used to high-level sport. Not surprised at all. We are delighted to see him go so well with Munster.”
And Duffy is convinced that there are more Con players with the talent to break through into the professional game in the coming years, particularly with a handful of them in the Munster academy at present.
“You’ve got the likes of Evan Mintern, Rory Burke, Liam O’Connor, Ned Hodson and all of them.
“You’ll see at the weekend that they are all fantastic players and I would have no fear of them going at it for a professional team like Munster or whoever.”
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Can anybody talk about Sweetnam without mentioning hurling? Hopefully Con will do the business this weekend . A lot tougher opposition in this final though. Best of luck.
@Tony Walsh: what’s your issue with it?
@Ailín Ó Céileachair: No issue really but I’d say at this stage people know he used to play GAA. No need to keep saying it. It’s like clubber and his niq medical joker comments. No brain power to come up with something new.
@Tony Walsh: it’s just stating facts though. Not many players these days can boast to playing two completely different sports at the highest level whilst still at a relatively young age. I see no issue with it being mentioned, Cork Hurling’s loss is Rugby’s gain (unfortunately)
@Tony Walsh: I wouldn’t hold out much hope if you have a problem with it. Still mentioning Shane Long was a county minor back in 2003.
@Johnny 5: I suppose your right. It still comes up about Tomás O’Leary whenever he’s mentioned too.
Its the reverse side of the coin in that players are getting their chance at the top level at an earlier age but they are also getting discarded at an earlier age. 21 seems to be very young for an outhalf of his ability to basically be told he has no future at the top level.
@Garrett Mccolgan: but on average they are entering academy structures and better coaching at an earlier age so it’s natural to expect the upward progression at that time. If they aren’t matching it the structures can’t keep them indefinitely surely. If you’re a poor professional in a job the boss will hire someone else. They can’t really be kept on especially with the 15 year-ish playing career.
@Garrett Mccolgan: I’d imagine with Bill Johnstone and Blyendaal in the senior squad already, its possible that Munster thought they could use the academy contract for a player in another position were they are lacking. Quinlan’s only failing may be that he’s not as good as the 10s already in the senior squad.
Ya Tony?
Why in every article about a rugby player do they have to mention the school he went to??
Very surprised quinlan wasn’t given a shot at munster especially considering blayendaals and bill johnstons injury profile, Johnny Holland retiring and he plays for con