logo
‘I was in a back brace for six months' – Leinster's James Culhane overcomes litany of injuries in time for season finale

‘I was in a back brace for six months' – Leinster's James Culhane overcomes litany of injuries in time for season finale

Today at 21:30
James Culhane could never be accused of not putting his back into his sporting dreams.
It is just three years since the latest talent from the perpetual Leinster back-row conveyor belt threatened to storm the citadel, awarded a pro deal after just eight appearances, as well as appearing on the first of two Emerging Ireland tours.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Leinster coach Tyler Bleyendaal: 'Sam Prendergast is his own harshest critic'
Leinster coach Tyler Bleyendaal: 'Sam Prendergast is his own harshest critic'

Irish Examiner

time2 days ago

  • Irish Examiner

Leinster coach Tyler Bleyendaal: 'Sam Prendergast is his own harshest critic'

Sam Prendergast's season won't end in Croke Park on Saturday. A two-game Ireland tour to Georgia and Portugal awaits in July, after all, but the upcoming BKT URC Grand Final with the Bulls will go a long way to determining how his breakthrough campaign is framed. Behind Ciaran Frawley and Ross Byrne for the No.10 jersey at provincial level last summer, the now 22-year-old was thought to be in a similar situation at Test level where Jack Crowley was very much the man in possession. That changed in November when Andy Farrell turned to the up-and-comer and faith has been kept in him ever since. He approaches the weekend's decider with the Bulls having played eight times for his country and 15 for his club. All bar three of those appearances have come as starts and he has played deep into most of his games to boot. Add in his three starts for Emerging Ireland in South Africa last autumn and the workload Prendergast has been handed is obvious. The out-half's abilities as a playmaker are clear and his kicking from the hand has been excellent with it. The flip side has been too much flimsy defending and a success rate off the tee that just won't cut it long-term. He left eleven points behind him against Glasgow in last week's semi-final but Tyler Bleyendaal, his attack coach at Leinster, can relate given he knows a thing about good and bad days as a No.10 from his own experiences with Crusaders and Munster. 'Jeez, being a kicker myself and sometimes you have a bad day. Sometimes you have a rubbish warm-up, a great game. Sometimes you have a great warm-up, a rubbish game. But he was back to work [Monday] kicking a lot of balls. As far as I'm aware, he wasn't kicking yesterday, but you never know. 'He might have been at home nudging a few. Like I said, he puts in the work, prepares well. He's his harshest critic, but he's got a great workrate. This week is another week. He's enjoying engaging with the planning of the week and putting in his own skill development as well.' More than one Leinster player and coach has insisted that they are blind to opinions in traditional or social media, but none have generated anything like as much debate or dissension as the youngster from Kildare this last eight months. Bleyendaal thought Prendergast played well last week against the Warriors, goalkicking blemishes aside. Leinster applied a lot of pressure and the Kiwi felt that much of that came from the leadership shown on the pitch by their ten. As for any toll from those 26 games and counting… 'I don't think there's any ill-effects. He's getting through the season fine. I don't look at him and think he's getting beaten up or he's slowing down. I feel like he turns up every week, he's got good energy and he's young. He recovers well.' Prendergast certainly has the scope to improve as a player. Alongside him through most of this period has been Jamison Gibson-Park who, at the age of 33, is still operating at the absolute pinnacle of the game at scrum-half. The No.9's performance in the last four was exceptional, not least two fizzing skip passes along the Glasgow line to play teammates in for fall-over tries in a 37-19 win. He must be a dream for any attack coach to work with. "He takes a lot of ownership around it, which is great. I don't think I can dictate to him to throw those passes or not. He's very instinctive, but he's got the skillset and more often than not, executes. So it's not a copy and paste, you can't take what he does and apply it to another nine necessarily. 'Very grateful when he's on the park. He is a different dynamic that teams have to defend. Sometimes I'm not sure what he is going to do, but more often than not he has got a good connection with the players. He just plays like he enjoys rugby, which is nice to see.' Leinster will go into the decider as favourites against a Bulls team that beat them in the semi-final of this competition in 2023, in Dublin, and last season, but Leo Cullen is still waiting on fitness updates on four of their recently-named British and Irish Lions. Josh van der Flier, Garry Ringrose, Hugo Keenan and Tadhg Furlong all missed the semi-final, the first of them with a hamstring problem and the other three with calf issues. Van der Flier and Ringrose are the two most likely to be ready in time.

Connacht's Jack Aungier called into Paul O'Connell's Ireland squad
Connacht's Jack Aungier called into Paul O'Connell's Ireland squad

Irish Examiner

time2 days ago

  • Irish Examiner

Connacht's Jack Aungier called into Paul O'Connell's Ireland squad

Connacht prop Jack Aungier has been called into the Ireland squad to replace teammate Finlay Bealham for the summer tour of Georgia (July 5) and Portugal (July 12). Bealham got the call up for Andy Farrell's British and Irish Lions tour Monday morning for the Scotland's Zander Fagerson who has been ruled out with a calf injury. The uncapped tighthead prop has previously featured for Emerging Ireland on the tour to South Africa last autumn. Aungier trained with the Ireland squad during this year's Guinness Six Nations. The Clontarf FC and Suttonians man joined Connacht in 2020 from the Leinster Academy, where he made five senior appearances, and has made 88 appearances for the Western province. He scored a try in his debut at the Aviva Stadium against Ulster in August 2020.

Unlucky trio to miss out on selection for Ireland
Unlucky trio to miss out on selection for Ireland

Irish Examiner

time7 days ago

  • Irish Examiner

Unlucky trio to miss out on selection for Ireland

Lee Barron The Leinster hooker has impressed on loan with Munster in his two appearances off the bench since joining alongside Michael Milne for the final weeks of the season ahead of their permanent moves to the southern province this summer and Wednesday's Ireland selection may confirm the reasons for his departure. Barron had already been passed out in the pecking order by academy hooker Gus McCarthy, who was first capped by Ireland in November but now he has been overlooked in favour of another Leinster academy player in Stephen Smyth. No wonder the 24-year-old has left Leinster in search of quality game time with Munster. John Hodnett With another impressive, 22-game, seven-try campaign for Munster now in the books, it would not have been a surprise to see the 26-year-old former Emerging Ireland flanker named in a touring party alongside fellow back-rowers from his province Tom Ahern, Gavin Coombes and Alex Kendellen. Yet Hodnett's niche as a genuine, out and out openside, and his comparative height at 6ft 0ins, may have counted against the West Cork man, which a real shame for talented forward with a huge appetite for the hard yards. Tom Farrell Perhaps the cruellest omission of all, Farrell's snub came a day after the uncapped Munster centre was named the URC's Playmaker of the Year, and on the same day he was voted the outstanding number 13 in the URC Elite XV of the year. The citation for the former award reads: 'Adaptability, creativity, and composure under pressure define a true playmaker. The Playmaker award is given to the player who creates chances and tries for his team, with three key metrics used to decide the winner – try assists for his team, successfully completed offloads, and defenders beaten on the pitch.' Throw in a joint league-leading nine tries, then consider the absences of Ireland's three frontline midfielders, Aki, Henshaw and Ringrose, and one wonders what more Farrell could have done to make this squad.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store