logo
Nick Timoney: It feels like a long time since my last cap

Nick Timoney: It feels like a long time since my last cap

RTÉ News​21 hours ago

Nick Timoney is a persistent man.
A month shy of his 30th birthday, the Ulster back row could be held up as a poster boy for Ireland's embarrassment of riches at flanker and number 8.
It's four years since the Dublin native made his Ireland debut, scoring a try in the 2021 summer hammering of USA, getting his opportunity while others were away on British and Irish Lions duty in South Africa.
That was his first taste of the Ireland squad, and the versatile back row has consistently been part of Andy Farrell's wider plans since. He's been part of the extended squad in 10 of the last 11 Six Nations, Autumn Nations Series and summer tour groups, with the World Cup preparation squad in 2023 the only time he hasn't been selected or later added to the panel.
With 16 Ireland internationals away on Lions again this summer, he's one of the experienced members of this squad - in a sense.
Part of the furniture in the squad as a whole, but the durability and form of Caelan Doris, Josh van der Flier, Jack Conan and Peter O'Mahony has seen Timoney win just three caps in the last four years, with his debut against USA followed by a cap off the bench against Argentina a few months later, while he scored two tries on his most recent appearance against Fiji in November 2022.
"Yeah, it feels like a long time ago. It pretty much is a long time ago now," the Ulster back row says, when he looks back on his last cap, just under three years ago.
"Opportunities don't come easy in this squad because of how competitive it is and certainly feels like back row is always incredibly competitive."
He's not the only one who has had to sit and wait patiently for their chance in this Irish back row. Gavin Coombes also made his debut in that 2021 summer programme, and like Timoney, will be hoping to finally add some more caps in the upcoming Test matches against Georgia and Portugal.
Timoney has had three other outings in the green jersey, featuring twice for Ireland's dirt-trackers against the Maori All Blacks on the 2022 tour of New Zealand, before playing with Ireland A against an All Blacks XV at the RDS in November that year. However, none of those games were full internationals.
"I made my debut during the last Lions tour four years ago, and bar getting called in on the day once when there was a few injuries [against Argentina], I've only gotten picked once since then for an actual cap.
"In my head, there's absolutely no hint of this being anything other than a chance to represent my country, which is a massive honour.
"I'd be lying if I said there wasn't times where I was frustrated, but I certainly have had times where I feel like I'm incredibly close to it, and I've felt like if I had a chance, I would've taken it and run with it.
"Obviously it's tough in my position, but that's part of it."
It would have been hard to blame Timoney if he'd given up on his Ireland ambitions. An abrasive, ball-carrying and versatile back row, he'd be welcomed with open arms into any number of French Top14 sides, where he'd almost certainly be increasing his pay packet.
But he's drawing inspiration from a South African World Cup winner to never park his Test career.
"I just value the goal that's there. It can be tough because, being a realist, you come into a lot of camps and you know that you're not necessarily top of the pecking order.
"And it's still kills you inside a little bit every time you're not announced and you're not in the team.
"But ultimately, if you really value playing for Ireland enough, then there's no choice but to put more emphasis on getting better and working harder. So that's just what I try to do.
"There's examples of it all over. There's the Deon Fouries of the world who are uncapped to 35 and captain their team in a World Cup final.
"Belief still there. Like I still come into every single camp thinking this will be the one I break through and I'll be into it properly then," he added.
Timoney will be among a squad of 32 players who fly to Tbilisi on Wednesday for what will be Ireland's first ever game away to Georgia on Saturday 5 July.
While Ireland have never lost to the Georgians, they were given a bit of a scare when the sides lasts met in 2020 as Ireland limped their way to a 23-10 win.
The Dublin native has only previously played Georgia in Sevens and at underage level for Ireland, although it's been enough for him to appreciate the physicality in store next week.
And as someone who dreamed of becoming a professional player during the mid-2010s, he cites a Georgian great as one of his rugby inspirations.
"I have hours of Mamuka Gorgodze [above] footage watched from when I was a kid. I used to watch a highlight video of his pretty much every week.
"Back in the day when you're a kid, as you would with loads of different rugby players that were in your position, you'd look up some of their clips, their highlights, but there was a 10-minute compilation video of Mamuka Gorgodze playing a lot of European countries for Georgia.
"There's loads of clips from them playing Poland and Russia and Spain and stuff. So I used to watch that a bit when I was younger.
"He was a bit of a tank.
"I was into all my highlight clips when Rugbydump was a website that was going round back in the day, 'Try-savers and rib-breakers 11' was my favourite one."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Australian rugby's incendiary attitude towards nationality needs extinguishing
Australian rugby's incendiary attitude towards nationality needs extinguishing

Irish Examiner

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

Australian rugby's incendiary attitude towards nationality needs extinguishing

So there we were in the bowels of Optus Stadium in Perth on Saturday night. The post-game media mixed zone is not always the natural home of relaxed, honest repartee, but Sione Tuipulotu is a friendly guy and the British & Irish Lions had just won their opening tour game in Australia. It was a chance for a couple of ritual inquiries and a spot of gentle breeze-shooting. Aside from anything else, it was good to see Tuipulotu smiling. He had missed the entire Six Nations through injury, initially putting his tour participation in doubt. It must have been a particularly tough period given he was Scotland's captain back in the autumn and also grew up in Melbourne. To say he fancied going on this trip would be an understatement. His backstory is also a multifaceted sign of the times. The MacLeods and the Mackenzies have their famous clan tartans; the Tuipulotus not so much. His grandmother hails from Greenock but moved to Australia as a young girl. His father is from Tonga. The family genes, consequently, are more exotic than some and the concept of nationality correspondingly more blurred. Which, on this trip, puts him in the crosshairs of those who insist borders should be hard and fast and national flags nontransferable. Maybe the Western Force stadium announcer thought he was being hilarious as he rattled off the Lions team: 'The Aussie at No 14, Mack Hansen. Another Aussie at No 12, Sione Tuipulotu. The Kiwi now Irishman, James Lowe.' Either way, more fuel was instantly poured on one of sport's more incendiary debates. Tuipulotu didn't hear it – or claimed he didn't – but you could sense the 28-year-old's heart sinking when the subject inevitably came up. 'I knew there would be some 'good humour' coming back home to Australia,' he replied, more than a touch wearily. 'These are all things we've got to take in our stride. Look, I am from Australia. I was born here. I don't know how funny that gag is to everybody but I'm loving playing for Lions.' In other words, he wasn't too impressed. Understandably so. Imagine if the same announcer pulls a similar stunt before England's cricketers play the opening Test of the Ashes series in the very same stadium this November. 'West Indian Englishmen Jofra Archer and Jacob Bethell, Pakistani Englishman Shoaib Bashir …' Harmless banter or something more insidious when all that should matter is the three lions on their caps? The Lions prop Pierre Schoeman has already had to deal with such inquiries, as did Lowe on Saturday evening. Lowe qualified for Ireland via residency and played against the Lions for New Zealand Māori in 2017, but he and his wife are now Irish citizens and he insists representing the Lions 'will make me proud until the end of my days'. It may also be worth mentioning, for balance, that the current Wallaby squad are a similarly cosmopolitan bunch. The Fijian-born Filipo Daugunu qualifies via residency, while the winger Harry Potter was born in England. Tom Lynagh was born in Italy, for whom his brother Louis now plays, and raised in England. Taniela Tupou is known as the 'Tongan Thor' while Hunter Paisami represented Samoa at under-20s level. Noah Lolesio and Will Skelton were also born in New Zealand. Australia's head coach, Joe Schmidt, meanwhile, is a Kiwi revered for his work in Ireland. Yet even Schmidt has had to row back publicly from a 'sloppy' comment in which he pointedly referred to 'the southern-hemisphere centre partnership' of Tuipolotu and Bundee Aki. Schmidt says he regretted the remark and that it was not meant as a slight. Too late, sadly, to douse the jingoistic flames. And if allowed to rage unchecked, where will it all end? A Ryder Cup team – Brexit means Brexit – containing nobody from beyond the white cliffs of Dover? A ban on the naturalised Canadian Greg Rusedski showing up at Wimbledon? A retrospective trawl through the Lions record books to insert asterisks beside Ronan O'Gara (born in the USA) or Paul Ackford (born in Germany)? Life is not always about staying in your notional lane or adhering to other people's old‑school beliefs surrounding nationalism. Nor, furthermore, has a single one of rugby's regulations been broken. Yes, it would help if stricter rules applied around 'project players' and the poaching of youthful southern hemisphere talent. Nor should it be possible, as it theoretically would be, for someone such as Jack Willis – the England international currently based in France – to switch allegiance to Ireland at the end of next year on the strength of a grandparent from Ulster. But where in the Lions tour agreement does it say that a strong Irish, Welsh, Scottish or English accent is a prerequisite to be a fully fledged tour member? Equally ludicrous is the idea being pedalled in some quarters that if, say, Tuipulotu, Hansen and Lowe were to combine to score a series-clinching try against the Wallabies it would somehow cheapen the Lions ethos. Good luck with flogging that theory to Tuipulotu's proud granny Jacqueline, or, indeed, Andy Farrell. Because once they pull on a red jersey with a Lions badge on their chest, there should be no doubting any player's commitment. The eligibility rules are what they are and, until they change, the current whinging is both disrespectful and irrelevant. Those who disagree are entitled to their opinion. But if people think certain members of the Lions squad now in Australia are devaluing the exercise they are very much barking up the wrong gum tree. Guardian

Colin Sheridan: A reflection on the Irish sporting landscape in the summer of 2000
Colin Sheridan: A reflection on the Irish sporting landscape in the summer of 2000

Irish Examiner

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

Colin Sheridan: A reflection on the Irish sporting landscape in the summer of 2000

A quarter of a century ago, in the summer of 2000, the Irish sporting landscape was a bit of a desert. The odd oasis gave hope of the better tomorrows that would come, but, with an Olympic Games in Sydney offering the chance of, perhaps, two medals at best, we are talking about times of great austerity, which is ironic, because it was right about then that Irish banks started doling out credit cards like communion wafers. This is exclusive subscriber content. Already a subscriber? Sign in Take us with you this summer. Annual €130€65 Best value Monthly €12€6 / month

Ireland miss out on promotion at European Athletics Team Championships
Ireland miss out on promotion at European Athletics Team Championships

RTÉ News​

time5 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

Ireland miss out on promotion at European Athletics Team Championships

Ireland finished fifth in Division 2 of the European Athletics Team Championships in Slovenia on Sunday, narrowly missing out on promotion to the top tier of the continental competition. Strong performances from the likes of Sarah Lavin (Emerald AC), Nicola Tuthill (UCD AC), Cian McPhillips (UCD AC) and the mixed 4x400m relay team kept the 43-strong team in contention right up to the last few events. Lavin took Ireland's only win of the weekend, earning maximum points in the women's 100m hurdles. The Limerick sprinter clocked a time of 12.82 seconds to claim victory. Team captain Marcus Lawler (Clonliffe Harriers AC) was sixth in the men's 200m, while in the women's event Lauren Roy (City of Lisburn AC) finished just outside her personal best, clocking 23.32 seconds to finish fifth. The mixed 4x400m relay team of Jack Raftery (Donore Harriers), Cliodhna Manning (Kilkenny City Harriers), Callum Baird (Ballymena and Antrim AC) and Sharlene Mawdsley combined to clock a time of 3:14.81, finishing second in their heat and fourth overall. Cian McPhillips (UCD AC) made a strong return from injury to finish third in the men's 800m. The Longford native closed strongly in the final 100m to cross the line in a time of 1:46.37. In the women's 1500m, Laura Nicholson (Bandon AC) finished fourth on her Irish senior international debut, the 25-year-old clocking 4:20.48. Finley Daly (Sligo AC) ran bravely to also place fourth in the men's 3000m steeplechase. The Galway-based athlete clocked a time of 8:51.89. In the field, Nicola Tuthill (UCD AC) fouled her opening two throws but composed herself well to finish the competition in third position, her best throw coming in the fourth round at 70.50m. Team captain Niamh Fogarty (Raheny Shamrock AC) produced a lifetime best of 14.29 metres in the women's shot put to finish seventh, while Conor Callinan (Leevale AC) also recorded the best result of his career, clearing 4.90 metres in the pole vault. In the men's javelin, Conor Cusack (Lake District AC) impressed to claim a eighth-place finish, throwing a best of 72.43 metres.

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