FINLAY BEALHAM HAS been backed by his provincial scrum coach to make a big impact with Ireland after being suddenly called back into the international camp yesterday morning while he was training with Connacht.
The 32-year-old, who was dropped from the matchday squad for the win over Wales after Munsterโs recent signing Oli Jager got the nod, was summoned back to the Irish camp just as he was about to begin a scrummaging session in Galway.
The tighthead prop had been released from Irish camp at the weekend and trained with Connacht on Monday and Tuesday. He was due to play against Scarlets next Saturday at Dexcom Stadium.
And Wednesdayโs change of plans came as a surprise to Connacht.
โIโm not sure why he has been recalled, you can only speculate,โ said Connacht scrum and contact coach Colm Tucker.
โObviously theyโre training themselves on Thursday and Friday, so they might have got a knock or a bang. They obviously need six or seven props in camp if they want to scrum themselves so maybe one of them picked up a niggle in the game at the weekend that we donโt know about.
Iโm not sure of the reason but there certainly would be a valid reason because I know they were keen for Finlay to get minutes this weekend and I think he was released to play 100%, so something must have happened.
Bealham won the most recent of his 38 caps when he started in the win over Italy having come off the bench in Marseille on the opening night win over France, but he was dropped from the matchday squad for the Welsh game after Jager was drafted in.
But Tucker says Bealham will rise to the challenge and continue to make a big impact on the international stage.
โHe was obviously disappointed but such is life as a professional. Youโre in one minute, then youโre not in. Obviously, they wanted to see how Oli Jager went, he has went well for Munster, so Finlay was unfortunately dropped out.
โBut you have to look back against France: he came on and he impacted very positively at set-piece. Against Italy, he impacted very positively at set-piece as well, won penalties and was dominant and he has to be able to fall back on that.
โHe was excited because of the person he is to come back and perform for us this weekend and that was his attitude from Sunday when I spoke to him right through to until he goes back into camp now.
โI think he has to lean on his experience and the reality of being a professional rugby player.โ
The Australian-born Bealham has taken a more circuitous route than most to international rugby having initially left home in Canberra to try make a make with Ulster, but Tucker believes that the manner of his development has been no harm and that the wider Irish public is only getting to know him now, eight years after his Ireland debut.
โI think he is a special character, first of all. He is his own man, very individual. He became a father recently which heโs very proud of and itโs brilliant.
โI think Finlay is the kind of guy who has worked unbelievably hard to get the most out of himself. His preparation, how he trains is second to none. Heโs a brilliant professional and it might have taken him that little bit longer to come into the limelight but thereโs nothing wrong with that.
โEverybodyโs journey is different and sometimes a journey like that can be more beneficial in terms of rounding an individual as a rugby player and a person.
โIn terms of my area, the breakdown, heโs fantastic. Heโs a good ball-carrier, good in terms of how he works on the floor, his ruck is second to none and then as a scrummager, I think heโs up there with the top around the world to be quite honest.
โHis point of difference in terms of how he gets across the line, how he gets the height; heโs a special prop. He really is. Very mobile, good mauler, if you are looking for a really good tighthead then you wouldnโt look further than him.
โHe adds a lot to the scrum, heโs a leader around scrummaging as well and he loves it. He has been brilliant to work with and heโs well able to take criticism if heโs challenged, so hopefully we will see him push more into the front because he deserves it,โ added Tucker.
Notorious isnโt a bad fly on the wall but the father is some whack job
Youโre hardly making things better by writing an article (referencing McGregor by name no less than 24 times) about how other journalists write about the fact he beat Conor. It would be a lot easier to just write an article about Joseph Duffy, no?
Hi Malcolm,
Journalists writing about it isnโt the point of the article, thereโs quite a bit more to it than that. I think thatโs pretty clear.
Hereโs our interview with Joseph Duffy from yesterday: http://www.the42.ie/joseph-duffy-ufc-185-debut-dallas-1978504-Mar2015/
Weโll have plenty more on Duffy throughout the week.
Thanks,
Paul
Thanks for the reply Paul. more an observation than a criticism. Iโm a huge fan of both athletes, but never see Duffy referenced in McGregor articles in the media. As supporters of Irish MMA, weโll forget all that anyway when Duffy annihilates Lindsey on Saturday in Dallas.
Why the quotation marks without any actual quotes?
Interesting podcast on a fanโs first UFC fight experience http://killingthebreeze.com/choppin-episode-5-ufc-183-playcall/