HAVING HELPED IRELAND to a bronze medal at the Rugby World Cup 7s in South Africa last month, Andrew Smith took a week-and-a-half holiday in Botswana, flew back to Ireland, had a couple of hours at home, then headed into camp with Emerging Ireland.
A few days later, he was on a plane back to South Africa and today, he starts on the left wing in the second game of this tour against the Pumas in Bloemfontein [KO 4pm Irish time, SuperSport livestream].
It has been a whirlwind time for 22-year-old Leinster academy wing Smith, who spent the vast majority of last season with the Ireland 7s and became a key figure in the squad that claimed bronze.
โIt was a massive ambition of ours to get a medal,โ says Smith, who also featured for Clontarf as they claimed their AIL title back in May.
โIt was a massive squad effort and one weโre really proud of. Personally, itโs a nice reward coming into a camp like this and showing our efforts have paid off.โ
His fellow World Cup 7s star Chay Mullins is also with Emerging Ireland and theyโll be keen to demonstrate that their experiences in the seven-man code have made them better 15s players.
โMy fitness has definitely been a massive factor,โ said Smith of what he feels has improved during his time in 7s.
โPassing and small one-on-one details like the breakdown, your tackle efficiency. Hopefully, I can show what Iโve learned in the game on Wednesday.โ
Smith wasnโt around the Leinster set-up very often last season, getting back only for short periods in between Ireland 7s camps, but he has been capped at senior level by his province.
He got a debut on the left wing against Connacht in January 2021 and came off the bench against the Sharks two months later. He now hopes to follow in the footsteps of Hugo Keenan, who returned from the Ireland 7s to enjoy a remarkable rise in 15s.
Not that Smith is turning his back on 7s for good. He wants to keep his options open, with the 2024 Olympics in Paris an obvious attraction in the 7s game.
โMost players would love to go after it and get to an Olympics, so itโs definitely in my mind that Iโd love to become an Olympian,โ says Smith. โAnd with that group of players, itโs a really special group and I love playing with them.
โSo, itโs definitely on my mind and if thereโs a way to make that work, Iโd love to be involved in it.โ
He is well regarded within Leinster, so it wouldnโt be a surprise to see Smith make big strides with the province this season. Their back three stocks arenโt particularly deep and the former Ireland U20 wing has lots of interesting qualities.
His ability to produce spectacular, rugby league-style finishes in the corner is chief among them. Smith explained that this penchant for acrobatics close to the touchline started during his school days at St Michaelโs College.
โI think I can probably thank Andy Skehan [St Michael's director of rugby] for that. Itโs something he was really big on in school, his attention to detail on position-specific skills.
โWe would practice wingers finishing in the corner and that was a massive help, seeing those pictures. From there, I added to it and you get a good feel for it. Andy Skehan is the main one.
โIt was just going against one defender who would try to smash you as hard as he could to get you out of play while you try to finish. That was one drill we used. You need to soften some of the falls, so we would use padding to make it a bit safer. The idea stays the same and it was something I was able to add to my game.โ
Smith is hoping for a few opportunities to show off those finishing skills against the Pumas in South Africa today.
A good impression with this Emerging Ireland team and Smith would be carrying plenty of confidence back to Leinster.
โThe tour probably couldnโt have come at a better time for me because transitioning back, you donโt know when your next game with Leinster could be,โ says Smith.
โSo for me personally, the timing was great and hopefully I can put in a couple of good performances here and then put my hand up for selection when I get back to Leinster.
โThe plan for me this season is definitely to get a couple of more caps and maybe even solidify a position regularly.โ
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The way Iโm reading the whole thing is: corruption and kick backs have been occurring for years and years in a lucrative un-policeable inter-national industry, this was tolerated until oh oh mighty England were overlooked ahead of a random rich non-western country and hence the lash back.
I think Blatterโs dramatic rise and fall may have taken more than 6 days.