logo
Jessie Stapleton: My family are a massive part of my journey

Jessie Stapleton: My family are a massive part of my journey

RTÉ News​7 hours ago

It's been a good year for Jessie Stapleton.
The Cherry Orchard graduate has long been on the radar of those keeping tabs on emerging Irish stars, excelling at Shelbourne before making a move to West Ham in the summer of 2023.
A loan spell at Reading was rocky, mainly because of the club's dire financial problems, but a second loan move, this time to Sunderland, proved a real success. Stapleton played week in, week out in the Championship, rounding her game and establishing herself in the Republic of Ireland side under Eileen Gleeson and then Carla Ward.
Still only 20, she'll be back at the Hammers for pre-season in a few weeks' time much better prepared to force her way into the first team and take a highly promising career to the next level.
"I think the loan went as we set out for it to go," Stapleton said ahead of tonight's friendly against the USA in Denver, Colorado (2am kick-off Irish time).
"It obviously benefited me a lot, I got a lot of game time and a lot of experience in the Championship. I'm back in with West Ham now, I'm just going to go to pre-season and see what I can do.
"That's a dream of mine. The WSL is one of the best leagues in the world so I'll do what I have to do to get there. I want to play there, it's whether the manager thinks I'm ready or not."
The leap from the SSE Airtricity Women's Premier Division to the WSL or even Championship really is a signifant one. Stapleton admits that physically, it took her time to make that adjustment, not to mention the challenges of fleeing the nest for the first time aged 18 and settling into new surrounds.
"I think the biggest thing when you move away is fitness levels."
"I think there's a big step when you go to professional football, training every day and playing at a higher level and stuff," she added.
"I feel like because I've been doing that regularly it's come to me now. I do it week in week out so I feel a lot better than when I was playing two years ago.
"I think no matter what you do when you move over, you can train like a mad woman, but I was still in school at the time, I was playing with Shels, which isn't a full-time team. But when you move over, it's training every day at a high level, so it is a big step up. Recovery, nutrition and just getting used to that everyday sort of physical output.
"I think the biggest thing when you move away is fitness levels. They do it consistently week in, week out. They do it every day. The jump from training three days a week to doing it every day is obviously going to be massive."
She'll have her old Shels teammate Jess Ziu for company during pre-season. Ziu is closing on a return from the ACL injury she sustained last August, while the wider Stapleton clan are frequent visitors to ensure she never feels too far from home.
Stapleton is a wise head on young shoulders, tipped by some observers to be a future Ireland captain, but she's the first to stress that her own steel and resilience comes from a tight, protective family unit.
"A lot of people say that I'm way beyond my years. That's a credit to the people around me.
"A lot of people have looked after me growing up. Being in camp from 16 or whatever, you sort of grow up. I still have youth on my side, I'm still kiddish, I'm still childish but yeah I'd say I'm quite mature for a 20-year-old.
"My family are a massive part of my football journey, but a massive part of my life as well. I love the bones off them. Anything that I need, they're always there. They come see me whenever I need them. They come see me whenever I don't even need them! I probably see them too much now! But they are a massive part of my football."
Stapleton's eyes were stung red with tears after Ireland were beaten by Wales in last December's Euro 2025 play-off. The pain still lingers (Stapleton admits she'll find it difficult to watch the tournament this summer), but it's fuelling a deep desire to reach the next World Cup in Brazil and heal some of those scars.
"It was probably one of the worst games to experience, but it's one of those pinnacle moments in my career where I look now and think, I never want to feel like that again after a match," she added.
"I've knuckled down and tried to do everything I can to be in the best condition after that, because I never want to feel like that again. So, when the World Cup comes around I want to be in the best physical shape to hopefully go to the World Cup.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tadhg Furlong raring to go after 'tough' season of injuries
Tadhg Furlong raring to go after 'tough' season of injuries

RTÉ News​

time28 minutes ago

  • RTÉ News​

Tadhg Furlong raring to go after 'tough' season of injuries

Tadhg Furlong is raring to go for the British and Irish Lions' tour opener against Western Force on Saturday after being named to start at tighthead prop in Perth. It has been a hugely frustrating season for the Wexford man, who had hoped to feature for Leinster in the latter stages of the season, only for a succession of injuries to keep him sidelined until a cameo appearance in Friday's defeat to Argentina. The three-time Lions tourist has been given the chance to improve his match fitness with a start in the front row following a season that has been heavily interrupted by calf injuries. "There wasn't a big bang moment when you're out for six months and you're trying to scramble back, they were all short-term injuries," Furlong said. "It was tough because as the weeks went on we still thought we had a fighting chance for getting back for Leinster at the end of the season, but it just wasn't right. It would have been very risky to chance something. "As desperate as you are to get on to the pitch, you also have a situation where you can't push. "In some ways you can live with yourself because you're doing everything you can to get out there. When you can't, you can't." Meanwhile captain Dan Sheehan insists his Lions will use their pride in the jersey to match the determination of a Western Force side who are targeting a famous victory on the west coast of Australia. Lions captain Maro Itoje has been stood down for the opening fixture on Australian soil so Ireland and Leinster hooker Sheehan takes charge of Andy Farrell's men at Optus Stadium on Saturday. Henry Pollock makes his first start for the elite of British and Irish rugby after being picked at number eight while Finn Russell, the early favourite to take the playmaking duties against the Wallabies, is given his maiden outing of the tour at fly-half. The Lions know they are being targeted by Super Rugby teams eager to make history but Sheehan, who skippered Ireland against Wales in the Six Nations, declares they will not have a monopoly on passion. "It's important to know where the opposition's mindset is and how they approach a game that only comes around every 12 years, like it does for the Western Force," said the 26-year-old, who is one of nine players in the matchday 23 set to make their Lions debuts. "I'm sure the Force will be 150% of what they usually are. They will be flying into it and that bit of extra hunger can produce some powerful things. "They would have been eyeing this game up since they probably first stepped into that Western Force change room. It'll mean an awful lot to them. "But I don't want them to think that they're going to be hungrier than us. We have to demonstrate back our own mindset because this will be the first time I will be putting on the jersey, along with a few other lads." The Force is the second game of a tour that began with a 28-24 defeat by Argentina in Dublin and while matches will soon come thick and fast, chances to impress Lions boss Andy Farrell will be limited. Farrell, however, has cautioned over the danger of players wanting a Test place too much. "That's desperation and that's what we don't want because desperation leads to people being distorted in the way they go about the game," he said. There are two survivors from the side that faced the Pumas in Sione Tuipulotu and Tadhg Beirne, although they have been switched to inside centre and blindside flanker respectively.

Russell at heart of Irish-heavy Lions side is an exciting prospect
Russell at heart of Irish-heavy Lions side is an exciting prospect

The 42

time33 minutes ago

  • The 42

Russell at heart of Irish-heavy Lions side is an exciting prospect

FINN RUSSELL COULD hardly have asked for a better opportunity to open his claim to be the Lions' starting Test out-half. The creative, clever Scotland number 10 is part of an exciting Lions side to take on the Western Force on Saturday in Perth, with strong Irish representation around him. Russell is excellent at picking out passes and kicks within a sharp, organised attacking framework. He tends to hum beautifully when the pack in front of him gets momentum. A stream of good possession from set-piece allows Russell to weave his magic. He gets those things in Bath and the results have been a delight to watch, but it's less often the case with Scotland. That's what must excite Russell most about this Lions tour – getting to be part of an international team with better players around him. As expected, Andy Farrell has named a Lions side featuring lots of his Ireland internationals, which should help with implementing the style of attack that showed promising signs in defeat to Argentina. Dan Sheehan captains the XV from hooker in his latest big achievement, while Tadhg Furlong will start a game for the first time since 3 May. Sheehan's leadership credentials have been rewarded with the captaincy, but Furlong is already standing out as a leader behind the scenes with the Lions, as he should given his experience. Sheehan, Furlong, and Pierre Schoeman are tasked with continuing the scrum dominance that we saw last weekend in Dublin. They should be helped by the hard-scrummaging Joe McCarthy coming into the second row on Saturday. Ellis Genge and Finlay Bealham were two of the biggest winners from that Argentina game. The scrum standard has been set. Advertisement Tadhg Furlong and Dan Sheehan. Dan Sheridan / INPHO Dan Sheridan / INPHO / INPHO The Lions' lineout had a bad day against the Pumas. Not having a genuine lineout forward in the back row didn't help, so Farrell has addressed that issue by moving Tadhg Beirne to the blindside. It will be interesting to see if Beirne calls the lineout from there, or if Scottish lock and lineout specialist Scott Cummings takes on that role. Either way, the Lions have to be better on their own throw and do more to disrupt the Force's. A maul penalty try last weekend was pleasing for Lions forwards coach John Dalziel, while hooker Luke Cowan-Dickie nearly scored from a close-range maul in the first half, so more encouraging stuff there would also be welcome. It's frustrating for James Ryan that he has to wait until next week to get his tour rolling, the knock he took in the URC final keeping him sidelined. The Irish lock is surely raring to go. If those Lions set-piece platforms are solid on Saturday, Russell and his thrilling backline will almost certainly do damage. Sione Tuipulotu shifts to his best position at inside centre, where his ball-carrying power, deft handling, and skillful kicking are best harnessed, while Garry Ringrose comes in to offer a little more balance to the centre partnership. Having missed out on the 2021 tour, Ringrose is undoubtedly doubly motivated for this chance in red. The back three of James Lowe, Mack Hansen, and fullback Elliot Daly seems ideally suited to playing off Russell. All three of them are intelligent and intuitive in roaming around the pitch and making decisions. The Irish wing pair are excellent at working hard off the ball and arriving late to pop up on inside shoulders or outside shoulders. It's not difficult to imagine Russell, Lowe, and Hansen sparking up an instinctive relationship that results in sizzling attacking rugby. Farrell will obviously demand that the Lions are more accurate with their offloading and passing, but there is real potential in this side. Launching their efforts from the base of the rucks and set-pieces will be Wales scrum-half Tomos Williams, who impressed off the bench last weekend in Dublin. Jamison Gibson-Park is still not ready to go due to his glute injury, but he is worth the wait and still in line to be the Test starter. Crucially, this is a Lions backline full of kicking quality. Their kicking game was weak against the Pumas last time out, the absence of a left-footed kicker in the back three not helping. They have two of those now in Lowe and Daly. Russell has lovely variety in his kicking game, combining long tactical kicking with smart attacking dinks, while Tuipulotu and Hansen will both look to contribute creative touches. Elliot Daly speaks after the Lions' defeat in Dublin. Billy Stickland / INPHO Billy Stickland / INPHO / INPHO Daly is an interesting figure to follow. He started three Tests on the left wing in 2017 and then one at outside centre in 2021 before moving to the bench for the other two Tests. He is vastly experienced and it was interesting to see Daly addressing the team forcefully on the pitch after last weekend's defeat. The 32-year-old was somewhat under the radar for this tour, but his return for England coincided with their uptick in form in the Six Nations, which he ended with starts on the left wing and at fullback. Daly's versatility is useful and after coming on at outside centre last weekend in Dublin, he gets his starting shot at fullback with Hugo Keenan still injured with his calf issue and Blair Kinghorn still in France with Toulouse. Adding to the attacking potential of this Lions team for Saturday are Henry Pollock and Josh van der Flier in the back row. Pollock missed a tackle for one of the Argentina tries after coming off the bench last weekend, but had some strong moments too. He is well suited to one of the wide forward roles in the Lions' 1-3-2-1-1 attack framework, so expect him to have some big moments near the touchlines. Van der Flier can shine in those wide roles, although his well-rounded skillset and power mean he is impactful in tighter spaces too. The Leinster openside makes everything around him tick through his sheer accuracy. If the likes of Russell tear it up in Perth, it's like that a van der Flier clearout or carry will have paved the way. The Irishman looks ready to hit absolute peak form on this tour. There is further Irish influence on the bench, from where Andrew Porter and Jack Conan will get their Lions campaigns up and running. England's Ollie Chessum comes in to cover the second row and blindside flank, Scotland centre Huw Jones is another man set for his first outing, and Marcus Smith offers back-up at out-half and fullback.

Kilkenny legend gives honest All-Ireland prediction for the Cats ahead of Tipperary semi-final clash
Kilkenny legend gives honest All-Ireland prediction for the Cats ahead of Tipperary semi-final clash

The Irish Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Irish Sun

Kilkenny legend gives honest All-Ireland prediction for the Cats ahead of Tipperary semi-final clash

KILKENNY legend Eddie Keher believes the Cats are poised to end a ten-year All-Ireland drought. Derek Lyng's side will face neighbours Tipperary in Sunday week's SHC semi-final. Advertisement 2 Keher was the all-time leading point scorer in the National League up until March when Patrick Horgan broke his record 2 The Cats have not lifted the Liam MacCarthy Cup in 10 years And while Keher believes Dublin can 'shove it up to Cork' in the other last-four clash, he expects the Rebels to contest the July 20 decider. Kilkenny and Tipp are preparing to face each other in the Championship for the first time since the Premier won the 2019 final. Keher said: 'There's a great rivalry there but a great admiration for both teams as well. I think it'll be a solid battle. 'We were looking at Tipperary early on Advertisement Read more on GAA 'If we do, we could be coming up against a tremendous Cork team. Of course, there's great rivalry there as well over the years. 'But it'll be all to play for and it'll be all on the day. Hopefully our lads will get over it.' While Kilkenny have not claimed the Liam MacCarthy Cup since 2015, Keher has been encouraged by the performances of a side who have He said: 'They're a fine team, Kilkenny. I think they'll make a good run of it and that they'll do well. Advertisement Most read in GAA Hurling Comment 'It's very hard to call any game between Kilkenny and Tipp. It'll depend on who turns up most on the day. 'But I'm very happy with the Kilkenny team that will probably be starting against Tipp.' Brendan Cummins defends time-keeping in Munster GAA hurling final between Cork and Limerick Keher insisted that 'the game is beautiful' when asked for his thoughts on the state of modern hurling. Short passing in the defensive half of the field is a bugbear for the Rower-Inistioge man, who won six All-Ireland medals before retiring in 1977. Advertisement But he said: 'As someone who has played in the forwards, I'd be telling them that the faster you get the ball up there before the defence is set, the better.' EDDIE KEHER is an ambassador for 24th annual Circet All-Ireland GAA Golf Challenge. This year's event, in aid of GAA-related charities, takes place at Killarney Golf and Fishing Resort on October 16 and 17.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store