
Rónan Kelleher parks all thoughts of Lions to focus on winning URC arm-wrestle against Scarlets
Fans can't stand the tedium of multiple collapsed scrums. The grumbling displeasure is audible on the first reset.
Those who operate at the coalface of the scrum get fed up too. However, while they may find themselves tut-tutting, they will soon be trying to bend laws and bodies simultaneously.
Leinster's
Rónan Kelleher not only champions a fair contest but explains the pitfalls in layman's terms.
'To be honest, it's a part of my game I do love, but we need to get to the point where we're able to have that contest. That's the big thing. People are trying to de-power teams by loading up and trying to pre-engage. That's when it becomes messy.
'That is when teams are standing up, that's when you don't have a gap. You need that gap to be able to hit into. To allow both teams to get into a pushing position. Then it just becomes about technique and strength.
READ MORE
'Ask any front-rower and they enjoy that. They want to get into a pushing contest and actually compete. They don't want to be making it messy.'
The conversation turns to the beleaguered supporters who fidget in frustration.
Kelleher said: 'We don't like it either. It's also part of our game that we like, in terms of playing off a stable base, a scrum going forward. If we get a penalty advantage, it allows the backs to throw that extra pass. It's something that we want to do.'
On Saturday, the Scarlets will pose a fresh examination for Leinster at the Aviva Stadium on foot of a recent victory in west Wales. A place in the semi-final of the
United Rugby Championship
is at stake.
One of the questions set is whether Leinster have figured out how to ensure a full-on contest at scrum time.
Rónan Kelleher scores Leinster's first try in their URC victory against Zebre on May 10th. Photograph: Billy Stickland/Inpho
Kelleher explained: 'They're quite good, tricky to manage, to be fair. Someone like Ryan Elias is experienced, he's quite good. Henry Thomas is obviously a very experienced scrummager as well. Alec Hepburn has been around the block. I think the word I'd use is 'tricky', to be honest.
'There has been a bit in the past about how some teams like to load up a lot of weight and you get that load on the neck in the scrum. I think they're a team that probably favours that a bit. It's just about how you manage that with the referee and how you get through that game.
'How you communicate that as well, because it's important that we get clean scrums,' he said in the hope of avoiding a catalogue of collapsed set pieces or frontrows standing up because of the instability.
Kelleher has been selected to tour Australia with the
Lions
. Four years ago, in South Africa, he was called up late but didn't feature.
This time he's in from the get-go, an 'original' in Andy Farrell's squad. He had company at the big reveal. 'I finished up training [at Leinster], grabbed the gear bag, ran home,' he said.
'I live with Hugo Keenan, so it was the two of us just watching it together. It was tense. When I left [Leinster training] I was like 'jeez, it's happening in the next half an hour'. But obviously it dragged on a bit. It was pretty nervy, the two of us just on the couch watching it.
Rónan Kelleher (right) with Lions teammates James Lowe (left) and Maro Itoje. Photograph: Ben Brady/Inpho
'I was absolutely delighted once my name was called – thrilled. We had to wait another couple of minutes until Hugo's name was called, so we could both celebrate together.'
The squad was called out in order of forwards first, then backs, rather than in alphabetical order.
[
Why James Lowe is determined for Cian Healy and Ross Byrne to leave Leinster with a medal this season
Opens in new window
]
[
Munster's Calvin Nash looking to give standout performance in the Shark Tank
Opens in new window
]
He continued: 'As soon as my name was announced, my phone started buzzing. I had to throw it away until Hugo's thing. It was pretty surreal to be honest, but it was unbelievable.'
For now, it's all about Saturday's game. The elation and excitement associated with all matters Lions has been put to the back of Kelleher's mind.
He said: 'It's very much focused on the here and now. We (Leinster) were disappointed with the finish in Europe and now all our eyes are on this competition and trying to win this one (URC).'
The next step to beat the Scarlets.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Times
26 minutes ago
- Irish Times
Kerry come away with the spoils after Cork fail to take their chances
All-Ireland SFC: Cork 0-20 Kerry 1-28 Kerry look set for a return to the All-Ireland quarter-finals and Cork are possibly headed for an early championship exit after the Kingdom saw off their Munster neighbours by 11 points in a feisty encounter at Páirc Uí Chaoimh. The winning margin suggests a comfortable walk in the páirc for Kerry, and by the end it was that, but Cork gave them plenty to be concerned about in the first half, after which the home side led by three, 0-13 to 1-7. Cork's problem was they had played with a strong wind and failed to convert three great goal chances. Cork being Cork, they also gifted David Clifford an early goal. Kerry will be just happy to have got out of Cork with a win, but at what cost. Barry Dan O'Sullivan and Paudie Clifford didn't make it to half-time due to injuries, and Paul Geaney didn't come back out for the second half, adding to the concern over Diarmuid O'Connor who didn't make the match day squad. READ MORE And then there were those goal chances given up that Jack O'Connor will know a more ruthless team than Cork will punish. Kerry's Paudie Clifford. Photograph: Bryan Keane/Inpho Cork made a hero out of goalkeeper Shane Ryan who saved brilliantly from Mark Cronin and Matty Taylor, while Taylor was through again late in the first half but was thwarted from getting a shot off. Indeed, the game's only goal came from Cork shooting themselves in the foot when David Clifford intercepted Micheál Aodh Martin's kickout to roll the ball past the goalkeeper and put Kerry 1-2 to 0-1 ahead after six minutes. Kerry were 1-4 to 0-2 ahead by the 12th minute and then Cork found some form with Brian Hurley posting two points, Paul Walsh kicking a two-pointer, and those goal chances being created but not converted. Points from Colm O'Callaghan and Chris Óg Jones evened it up, 0-8 to 1-5, and Cork finished the half well, with Hurley's orange flag after the hooter giving the home side a 0-13 to 1-7 lead at the interval. Playing with a strong wind it hardly seemed enough of a lead, and so it proved. Cronin's free stretched Cork's lead, but David Clifford raked over a huge two-pointer from play, Seán O'Shea converted a free from outside the arc after a three-up breach, and Kerry pulled away after that. Kerry's Micheal Burns and Cork's Seán Brady. Photograph: Bryan Keane/Inpho Killian Spillane came on and kicked two from play, Clifford nailed a two-pointer and a point before O'Shea converted two two-pointers and a free. That had Kerry 1-21 to 0-16 ahead after 53 minutes, and Cork's woes and inability to be ruthless was summed up with Cronin's penalty miss – or rather another Ryan save. Cork head for a neutral venue to face Roscommon in a must-win game for them, while Kerry are all but headed straight to the All-Ireland quarter-finals again. CORK: MA Martin; S Meehan, D O'Mahony, M Shanley; B O'Driscoll, S Brady, M Taylor; I Maguire, C O'Callaghan (0-0-2); P Walsh (0-1-1), S Walsh, S McDonnell; M Cronin (0-0-6, 5f), B Hurley (0-2-3, 2f, 1tpf), C Óg Jones (0-0-1). Subs: S Powter for Meehan (43 mins), R Deane (0-0-1) for McDonnell (50), C O'Mahony for Hurley (60), L Fahy for M Taylor (65), E McSweeney for Walsh (66). KERRY: S Ryan; D Casey, J Foley, T O'Sullivan (0-1-0); B Ó Beaglaoich, M Breen, G White; J O'Connor, BD O'Sullivan; G O'Sullivan (0-0-1), P Clifford (0-0-1), S O'Shea (0-3-3, 3tpf); D Clifford (1-2-4, 2f, 1tpf), P Geaney (0-0-2), M Burns. Subs: M O'Shea for BD O'Sullivan (inj, 21 mins), D Geaney (0-0-1) for P Clifford (31), K Spillane (0-0-2) for Geaney (ht), T Brosnan (0-1-0) for Burns (59), T Morley for Ó Beaglaoich (66) . Referee: D O'Mahoney (Tipperary).


RTÉ News
28 minutes ago
- RTÉ News
Déise record historic Kilkenny victory
Camogie history was made at UPMC Nowlan Park today, as Waterford recorded their first ever senior championship victory over Kilkenny since their introduction to the senior competition in 2015. The 0-17-to-0-10 win blows Group 2 of the Glen Dimplex All-Ireland series wide open. Since gaining promotion back to senior in 2015, the record between the two counties made for grim reading for Déise supporters and players, with eight defeats and one draw in nine games in all competition. An early 0-04 to 0-01 lead for Tommy Shefflin's home side suggested that another similar encounter was in store here, but Waterford completely took control, with Niamh Rockett and Beth Carton quickly establishing themselves as the key players that would dictate the flow of the game. Eimear O'Neill also got on the scoresheet as Waterford rattled off seven points in a row, while Aoife Norris was just about keeping Kilkenny afloat with some incredible saves to deny Lorraine Bray, Annie Fitzgerald and Maggie Gostl goal attempts. Midway through the second half Kilkenny briefly got the deficit back to two points, but on an afternoon when they mustered a mere three points from play, Laura Murphy's free taking wasn't enough to get them the scores they needed. Carton finished with 0-04 while Rockett, who has taken over placed ball duties from the former player of the year, shot the last three points of the game to bring her tally to 0-09, ensuring that Mick Boland's charges powered over the finish line to give themselves a dream start to the championship, having had a bye in week one. At The Ragg, in the big game in Group 1, it took Amy O'Connor a mere 14 seconds to open the scoring for Cork against Tipperary, and the All-Ireland champions didn't let up from there as they ran out 3-21 to 1-09 winners in a real statement victory. The Rebels had the aid a tricky diagonal breeze in the opening half and Tipperary had some positive aspects, including a strong showing from their half-back line. However, once the ball got in behind, they struggled to contain a classy Cork attack and three green flags in the first ten minutes ensured that the home side always had a huge lead to chase. Katrina Mackey broke a tackle to set up Clodagh Finn for a close-range goal in the eighth minute of the game, O'Connor scored the second on the back of great work from Orlaith Cahalane and Saoirse McCarthy, with Finn repaying the favour to Mackey by setting up her inside forward colleague for goal number three. Mary Burke goaled in response for Tipp but seven points in a row from Ger Manley's crew made it 3-13 to 1-02 at the break, with no way back for the blue and gold. O'Connor continued to be a constant threat for Cork, ending the game with 1-13 in total, 1-05 from play, in a superb individual display. Ashling Thompson and Hannah Looney also played leading roles in controlling midfield, and Cork already look like they have a firm grip on top spot in the group and the automatic semi-final berth that comes with that. The battle between Limerick and Wexford at Rathkeale looked on paper like a vital contest in the battle for the last knockout spot alongside the two traditional Munster powers, and all roads now lead to Ennis for the meeting of Limerick and Clare next week, after the Treaty County secured a crucial 1-10 to 0-10 win today. Caoimhe Costelloe hit three first-half points but a pair each for Anais Curran and Joanne Dillon meant Wexford took an 0-06 to 0-04 advantage into the dressing room at the interval, though that looked inadequate given the strength of the breeze that blew down Mick Neville Park. Sarah Gillane's excellent save just before the break was to prove crucial, all the more so when Laura Southern hit the game's only goal five minutes into the second half. Limerick were heavily dependent on Costelloe for scores, with 0-8 coming from the stick of the Adare camog, but that proved to be just about enough as they bounced back well from their heavy defeat against Cork last weekend. In the other game in Group 2, Galway had things all their own way in Owenbeg as they ran out 4-25 to 0-05 winners on the back of a dominant attacking display against Derry. Mairéad Dillon's goal in the 15th minute and another from Aoife Donohue three minutes later left Derry on the back foot, and when Sabina Rabbitte added a third shortly before half-time, the hosts were shipping water all over the field. Orlaith Hull was the only scorer for the Oak Leaf County in the opening half, while Galway had nine scorers overall, with seven different players raising flags as they built up a 3-16 to 0-03 interval lead. Caoimhe Kelly got their fourth goal while Carrie Dolan (0-08) and Niamh Mallon (0-07) continued to do the bulk of the scoring damage.


Irish Independent
42 minutes ago
- Irish Independent
Camogie round-up: Waterford skin Cats to make championship history
Camogie history was made at UPMC Nowlan Park today, as Waterford recorded their first-ever senior championship victory over Kilkenny, the 0-17 to 0-10 win blowing Group 2 of the Glen Dimplex All-Ireland series wide open.