
Munster star ‘lived the dream' as he announces retirement in emotional statement after decision ‘taken away from me'
DAVE KILCOYNE has announced his retirement from rugby - admitting the final decision "was taken away from me".
Kilcoyne played 220 times for
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Dave Kilcoyne has retired
Credit: Brendan Moran/Sportsfile
At international level, he won 56 caps for
Rugby
World Cups.
The latter part of his career was plagued with injuries and, announcing his retirement, the 36-year-old put a positive spin on the decision being out of his hands.
Kilcoyne said; 'Growing up living in
Limerick
, my dream was always to play for Munster and Ireland.
"To have done so for so long has been a dream come true.
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'The last two years haven't gone as planned with surgeries to my shoulder and Achilles.
"In a way, it's easier that the decision to play on has been taken away from me.
'I take great pride in knowing that I always gave everything I had and left nothing on the pitch.
"It's almost a fitting way for me to finish up.
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'I want to thank all the coaches that have influenced my career right the way up from UL Bohemians, Ardscoil Rís, Munster and Ireland.
'I want to thank my
family
who have been a constant support throughout my career.
Ronan O'Gara bizarrely ends press conference after 23 SECONDS amid La Rochelle's continued poor form
"I certainly wouldn't have had the career I had if it wasn't for their unwavering support over the years.
'I want to thank all my team-mates that I shared the
battlefield
with over the years, a lot of whom are my best friends today.
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'To the red army of Munster supporters that have cheered and supported me and my career since 2011, thank you – I look forward to joining you in the stands!
'I'd also like to thank the
University
of
Limerick
(and my mother) for encouraging me and accommodating my education over the years.
"After my degree in
Business
Studies, I was able to complete an MSc in Business Project Managment in 2019.
'I am just about to finish a Professional Diploma in Aircraft Leasing and Finance and hope to graduate in the
summer
.
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"This wouldn't have been possible without the help and understanding of the lecturers and University.
'I'm extremely excited for what the
next
chapter brings and using all the skills and life lessons that my rugby career has given me.'

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Irish Times
38 minutes ago
- Irish Times
Munster will need to dip into their reserves of emotional energy in Durban
If Munster are to defy the odds against a Sharks side studded with World Cup winners and X factor in front of a 54,000-capacity crowd in next Saturday's BKT URC quarter-final at Kings Park in Durban, as ever on such occasions the collective performance will have to add up to more than the sum of their parts. To that end, Munster will again need dip into their reserves of emotional energy. Munster's history is, unfortunately at times, sprinkled with examples of them uniting in times of need, most notably in their Champions Cup win over Glasgow at a crammed Thomond Park in October 2016 the day after Anthony Foley's funeral. More recently, the team and supporters were united in their last two regular-season games against Ulster and Benetton to ensure a fitting farewell for Peter O'Mahony, Conor Murray and Stephen Archer, and secure the two wins required to qualify for these play-offs and next season's Champions Cup. That trio's Munster finale will remain a factor, and so will paying tribute to Michelle Payne, wife of former fullback Shaun and a one-time employee of the Munster Branch, and Sheelagh Foley, wife of former player Brendan and mother of 'Axel'. READ MORE In extending 'our deepest sympathies' to the two families, interim head coach Ian Costello said: 'They were two very important people in the Munster community and a massive loss to us this week, and that's very close to our hearts.' Speaking from Durban after the squad's arrival there, Costello added: 'Brendan rang me Sunday morning to almost apologise for not coming and wished us the best. 'Obviously Michelle and Shaun were huge in the club as well. That's really important to the group this week especially as we're in South Africa.' As Shaun Payne was fullback on the 2006 Heineken Cup-winning and also played for the Sharks, tributes to both families are being discussed. 'Rugby is a very, very emotional game and I think any contact sport is,' said Costello. 'People talk about physically and mentally where you have to be. I think the third part of that is emotionally: are you ready to invest everything you have and leave everything out on the pitch? [ Jack Crowley passed fit for Munster's journey to Durban Opens in new window ] 'That's you as an individual and you as a team. And when emotionally you're connected to a purpose or to a cause that comes out in any team sport, especially one as physically demanding as rugby, and then when you add in pride in terms of our province, our identity and what we stand for, what we represent. How much we want to make people proud of our performance, so they can identify with who we are and what we're about. I think all of that amplifies a lot of the good that's there already and a lot of sports teams do it really well. 'We really leaned into it the last couple of weeks to represent people that we really care about and what they mean to the organisation and that came out in the performance. We will continue that on this week as well.' Sean O'Brien of Munster tries to tackle Aphelele Fassi of Sharks at Kings Park, Durban on October 26th, 2024. Photograph: Darren Stewart/Inpho That said, utilising emotion is a balancing act. 'I won't go into what was said but Tadhg (Beirne) and Peter (O'Mahony) over the last couple of weeks, supported by other key guys like Jack (Crowley) and Craig (Casey), spoke so well about using that emotion but also making sure it's balanced with a performance that's built on execution and accuracy and being really smart. 'Same thing as discipline, if you're over-aroused you give away too many penalties but you want to be playing right on that edge. When you've got coaches who are on it the way they are on it, and senior players that have lived it so many times, that really helps.' Although conditions will not be unduly warm at the 6.30pm kick-off local time (5.30pm Irish), Costello said the humidity will make the ball very slippery. 'We'll train appropriately, in having the ball greasy at training and making sure that if the handling skills are difficult that we've contingencies around where we play the game and how we play the game.' Mike Haley of Munster and Eben Etzebeth of Sharks at Kings Park, Durban. Photograph: Darren Stewart/Inpho Munster will be seeking to win three matches in succession for the first time this season but touring also tightens the squad and they lifted the URC trophy two seasons ago by ending long unbeaten home runs at Glasgow, Leinster and the Bulls. The Sharks finished third with 62 points, compared to just 25 points when 14th last season, making them the most improved side this season. 'We obviously know that the quality is there. What we've seen over the last few weeks is how good they are off the ball, a team that's highly motivated, that scramble well, they're off the ground quickly. 'If you make a line break it takes a lot of finishing before you score. That's one of the key differences that we've picked up. Their work off the ball and their non-talent stuff is in a really good place in the last six to eight games anyway,' said Costello, who also singled out the Sharks' ability in transition. Costello maintained this game 'absolutely isn't a free shot'. 'Now that we're here, we're very, very ambitious on what we want to achieve,' he added. He believes the travelling squad is stronger than when beaten 41-24 by the Sharks in Durban last October in what proved to be Graham Rowntree's last game as head coach but admitted: 'We need to get to our best or very, very close to it. We need to be accurate. We need to execute well and physically, mentally and emotionally we need to be at the right pitch. 'If we go out and play as ourselves, if we're clear about our DNA, our identity, we want to play high-paced rugby, we want to keep the ball alive, we want to play with really, really quick rucks, to play in the right parts of the field, do that with a platform of having a really solid set-piece, and then apply our line speed and our contact work; if we can be true to our identity around those, that I think would beat anybody on their day.'


RTÉ News
3 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Ian Costello: Quarter-final not a 'free shot' for Munster
While the pressure of securing Investec Champions Cup qualification is off their backs, Ian Costello insists Munster are by no means in bonus-territory ahead of Saturday's BKT United Rugby Championship quarter-final against the Sharks. A 32-man squad arrived in Durban this week for what could be two weeks in South Africa; if they win on Saturday, they will likely move on to Pretoria for a semi-final versus the Bulls. There was great relief at the province this month when wins over Ulster and Benetton saw them scrape into the play-offs, and crucially secured their Champions Cup place for next season. And although Costello admits that has lifted a weight off their shoulders, he says there is still a pressure for them to deliver in knockout rugby. "It absolutely isn't a free shot," Munster's interim coach said, ahead of Saturday's quarter-final. "There's an expectation we need to be in knockout rugby, there's a lot of pressure to get there. But now that we're here, we're very, very ambitious on what we want to achieve. "We all know that we had to get into the play-offs. We had to get into the Champions Cup, that's the expectation that comes with Munster, rightly so. "I think it was really important that we drew a line under that first. We put an awful lot into that physically, mentally and particularly emotionally in that last two weeks. There was so much to be pleased with in those last two weeks." While the play-offs officially start this weekend, Munster have effectively been playing knockout rugby for much longer, with their season on the line for those games against Benetton and Ulster. And while those games were physically and emotionally draining experiences, Costello says they've come to South Africa feeling fresh after a much needed weekend off. "This group, over the last couple of weeks, have really showed how much they care about each other. It came out in the way we trained, prepared, what we would have seen behind closed doors and what you would have seen in the performances. "You don't get the intensity and physicality of a performance like that unless there is a real deep care and it means a huge amount to this group. "I think that was huge to get that job done, but we've had a taste of play-offs before, we've played a few knock-out this year, more than we would have liked, especially over the last couple of weeks. That's set us up to have a real crack at this week, so it's a fresh focus and just really excited about play-off rugby." Saturday's quarter-final also brings them back to the site of one of this season's low points when they were beaten 41-24 by the Sharks in Round 5 of the regular season, with head coach Graham Rowntree leaving his role just a few days later. But Costello, who has been in interim charge since then, says they aren't motivated by what happened on that tour. "No, that hasn't come into it at all of I'm honest. "I think the squad is in a different place. You look at the squad that actually travelled over here, we looked at it yesterday and there's a huge difference between the squad that travelled over in October versus the squad that's over here this weekend, or this week. "It feels like there's an awful lot more experience, guys really hitting their form, as I said, really competitive. We've had two weeks and that really helps. "We know them [the Sharks] really well. We've looked at their last half dozen games as we always do. But a huge amount of focus has been on us, if I'm honest. Look at how we've improved over the last period and how we've managed two very, very high pressure games. "Essentially, we're into the third knockout game in a row now because effectively that's what it was. So we've extracted a lot of our learnings around that, that has confidence in the group and it keeps the focus on who we are and what we do well as well." There was positive news this week with confirmation that out-half Jack Crowley (below) will be fit after recovering from a rib injury picked up in Round 18, while Diarmuid Barron and Jeremy Loughman are also back on deck after missing time with injury. And Costello says a healthy squad will be vital if they're to go on a repeat run of their title win from 2023. "I suppose you go back six months and our availability was not where we would have liked it to be. There was a lot of challenges and changes at the club, and we probably didn't have the deep squad to select from those early games and that's what's so pleasing about where we're at now. The squad is really competitive. "That comes out in selection, but it also comes out in training every day, so it means every single training session is better. People are really driven to perform in training, they know that training matters and there's probably 27, 28 guys that are really competitive to make a 23, or even a 15 at the moment. That drives standards right across the board. "Bar a couple of players, we're in a pretty good position in terms of the health of our squad this week, and will need to be," Costello added.


3 hours ago
Costello believes Munster's 'deep purpose' can help province upset odds away to Sharks
Ian Costello believes the 'deep purpose' driving his Munster squad after a difficult campaign can help the province deliver the very best performance he believes will be required to upset the odds and beat South Africa's third-seeded Sharks in Saturday's URC quarter-final in Durban. The 2023 champions will likely have to repeat their remarkable run of three away knockout wins that brought a first trophy to Munster in 12 years two seasons ago, if they are to emerge from 2024-25 with silverware. The first leg of their title bid comes at Kings Park this weekend against a Springbok-heavy Sharks side that beat the Irishmen 41-24 on their most recent visit to Durban last October. That proved to be the final game of title-winning head coach Graham Rowntree's tenure with Munster's Head of Rugby Operations Costello assuming the role of interim head coach for what has been the majority of the season. His side only secured Champions Cup rugby for next term on the last day of the URC regular season, with a second consecutive bonus-point home win, against Benetton in Cork on May 16, sealing sixth place in the final standings and booking a ticket into the knockout rounds. Munster arrived in Durban on Tuesday ahead of their last-eight clash but Costello is under no illusions about the size of the task facing his squad on Saturday evening, describing the challenge as being against 'a serious side… and a very tough place to go and play them.' Yet speaking from South Africa shortly after the 32-player squad's arrival by the Indian Ocean on Tuesday afternoon, the interim boss dismissed the notion that the quarter-final was a free hit for his squad, and though the pressure of European qualification had been lifted, he explained there had been a deliberate shift in Munster's mindset. "I think we probably very explicitly shifted focus over the last couple of weeks to make it about people, make it about people that we care about and individuals within the squad and what they contributed to Munster, and that brings a different type of pressure,' Costello said. 'It's very personal. It's very deep. And then playing at home in front of your fans, your friends and your family, that brings a huge amount of pressure as well. But it also deflected away from maybe the league table and the pressure in the Champions Cup. "And again, this week for us, there are just people who are with the group, that it's their last season. We've been through a lot in the last six, seven months, so there is a real deep purpose and a deep cause within the team. "It absolutely isn't a free shot. There's an expectation we need to be in knockout rugby, there's a lot of pressure to get there. But now that we're here, we're very, very ambitious on what we want to achieve. But again, this is the first test and a really difficult one on Saturday.' Costello insisted the Munster squad, led by captain Tadhg Beirne, was good enough to score a famous result over the Sharks, but added: "We need to get our best or very, very close to it. 'We need to be accurate. We need to execute well and physically, mentally and emotionally, we need to be at the right pitch. If we are, I absolutely believe that we have the ability to. "I have a huge amount of faith in the players. I have a huge amount of faith in the coaches, Mike (Prendergast), Denis (Leamy), Mossy (Lawler), George (Murray), Alex (Codling), the plan that they've put together. So I absolutely do agree. "There's a lot that goes into winning a game of that size against a team of that quality. But if we're close to our best and we execute the way we know we can, we absolutely do believe this squad is good enough to give them a real good crack on Saturday.'