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Brian O'Driscoll gives behind-the-scenes details of viral Michael Cheika moment
Brian O'Driscoll gives behind-the-scenes details of viral Michael Cheika moment

Irish Daily Mirror

time15 hours ago

  • Sport
  • Irish Daily Mirror

Brian O'Driscoll gives behind-the-scenes details of viral Michael Cheika moment

Ireland legend Brian O'Driscoll has revealed all when it came to the viral clip that appeared to show Michael Cheika lambast the former centre. Ex-Leinster boss Cheika is now in charge of the Leicester Tigers and appeared to be on the war path during the Premiership final between the side and Bath. The Aussie boss was on the sideline and looked to have taken exception to an on field decision and with O'Driscoll nearby then said something to his former player. "I've seen this look before!" O'Driscoll joked on TNT Sports' live coverage. "When my mother comes over to me to tell me I've left the immersion on! I didn't give away the penalty; he was actually having a word with one of his staff members behind me, and I was in the firing line. I'm not exactly sure what it was, but he was a bit exasperated. The whole bench in front of us was very annoyed that the penalty wasn't given to them." After that was cleared up, O'Driscoll further explained what happened, and revealed all about a text message he received from Cheika after the game. Speaking on Off The Ball, he said: "It was a sunny day, I was entitled to have my shades on and next thing, Cheiks comes running down from the box and there's a bad call on Montoya who got penalised for hands in the ruck and it looked as though it was a perfectly good poach. 'Anyway, Chieks was kind of pulling some of his staff away from talking to the fourth official, but making a point of pulling him away, saying to 'ignore them, they're useless', blah blah. 'He was kind of roaming around, and then another one of his staff was standing behind me ,and he came over and started giving out about the referee to him, but it almost looked as though it was to me as well. 'It was like I haven't done anything'and I could see the camera panning to us and I didn't know it was on us for as long as it was, but I just started laughing then.' "His wife sent it to him after the game and then he immediately sent it on to me, saying 'I'm glad we're still making memories out there, man'," Cheika coached O'Driscoll and Leinster to a Heineken Cup in 2009 as well as a Celtic League title (now the URC).

This is how Dan Sheehan has scored 12 tries in nine games
This is how Dan Sheehan has scored 12 tries in nine games

The 42

time01-05-2025

  • Sport
  • The 42

This is how Dan Sheehan has scored 12 tries in nine games

DAN SHEEHAN SAYS his coaches aren't as interested in his try-scoring record as everyone else. The 26-year-old hooker has notched 12 tries in nine appearances, five of them starts, for Leinster and Ireland since returning from a knee injury in January. Sheehan now has 43 tries in 68 appearances for Leinster. He has dotted down 15 times in 32 Tests for Ireland. 58 tries in 100 games of professional rugby is some going. Sheehan has every chance of moving into Ireland's top five try-scorers of all time in the coming seasons. Shane Horgan is currently fifth on 21. He will likely do the same with Leinster, for whom Denis Hickie's 56 tries have him in fifth. 'They're all the flashy stats. Coaches look at different stats,' says Sheehan. Like what? 'Probably contact metres, metres after contact, then obviously scrum and lineout percentages, how well we launch off our attack, tackle dominance, there's millions that get sent out.' All of that is true but it's still useful to have a try-scoring weapon like Sheehan on your side. Hookers tend to get their fair share of scores because they finish maul tries, yet the Leinster man has a real knack for finding his way across the tryline. And while his coaches focus on a lot more than tries, the rest of us can simply enjoy watching Sheehan add to his already impressive record. His first try of this season came just before half time on his Leinster return against the Stormers at the end of January. As Leinster tap a free-kick, we see Sheehan moving out towards the left touchline. This is often Sheehan's role in attack, holding width out in the 15-metre channels where he can use his power and pace to great effect. Every attack needs to have players holding width to keep the defence spread out and Sheehan is always disciplined in fulfilling his role. In this instance, he gets rewarded as Leinster's attack eventually swings out to the left and James Lowe puts him away. Sheehan's pace is obvious here as he finishes from more than 15 metres out. Despite playing in the front row, he is very fast. Ex-Leinster hooker James Tracy recently told The 42 Rugby Weekly Extra podcast that Sheehan has been recorded moving at a speed of close to 10 metres per second, which is faster than many outside backs. Sheehan's second try in this game begins with him throwing into a lineout on the right-hand side. As Leinster play off a maul break into midfield, Sheehan works hard to get around the corner for second phase. Sheehan runs a decoy line as Leinster play out towards the left touchline on second phase. And when they shift back infield, it's Sheehan who gets on the ball and plays a sweep pass out the back. As soon as he has passed, Sheehan is thinking about his next role and whether he needs to hold the width. As we can see below, he glances over his shoulder. Sheehan can see that left wing Lowe has already begun to swing infield, so he backs out to the left touchline to hold the width there. Leinster play wide to the right but when they come back to their left, Sheehan gets his reward as Lowe finds him with a kick pass. Having bagged two tries on his Leinster return, Sheehan immediately went into the Ireland matchday squad for their Six Nations opener against England the following weekend. And in a shock to no one, he also scored on his Ireland comeback. It was a superb effort in which Sheehan had three touches of the ball. First, he draws in two defenders before his clever tip-on pass sends Jack Conan scorching upfield. Sheehan is tackled but fights to stay on his feet before setting off upfield. He doesn't just chase the ball, instead having the presence of mind to move out to the left and set up for the next phase. Advertisement When Sheehan gets the ball agani, he launches a long pass wide to Lowe. And when Lowe beats his man on the outside, Sheehan shows that pace again to burn up on the inside and finish with power. Sheehan went through a two-game try drought in the weeks that followed but was back on the scoresheet in Ireland's defeat to France, having also been restored to the starting XV. Against the French, Sheehan benefited from a strong Irish maul. He times his finish well, allowing the Irish pack to tie in all of the French forwards, leaving him to finish past scrum-half Maxime Lucu. Sheehan's body height is nice and low as he drives for the corner. The Leinster man finished out his Six Nations with a hat-trick against Italy. Sheehan's first in Rome came from another excellent Irish maul. Ireland get great length in their maul to give Sheehan a clear chance to finish untouched, with three of the Irish backs joining in. It's an important try as Ireland take the lead for the first time on the stroke of half time. And the Irish maul delivers again after the break as a period of pressure yields a second try for Sheehan. It's a similar effort as Ireland shift infield and a trio of backs help to get Sheehan over the line for another crucial score. Sheehan's third try is the most spectacular Irish effort of the afternoon. The hooker launches the passage with a throw into the lineout on the right. Sheehan immediately gets off the touchline and accelerates around the back of the dummy maul to make a potent carry over the gainline. As Ireland play infield with another narrow carry, Sheehan works back to his feet and shifts straight back towards the right touchline. He joins right wing Mack Hansen, who has swung wide as Sheehan carried off the lineout. Scrum-half Jamison Gibson-Park has the option of moving the ball left for his forwards to carry on third phase. But Sheehan and Hansen are both calling and signalling for the ball out on the right. And rather than passing, Gibson-Park obliges with a kick pass to his right. It takes remarkable skill from Hansen to seal the deal as he leaps and acrobatically gets the ball back infield to Sheehan before landing in touch. The Irish hooker gleefully takes the pass from Hansen and darts over to finish. Sheehan has scored in all three of his games for Leinster since the Six Nations. An explosive Leinster maul brought about his score in the nine-try demolition of Harlequins. Leinster used a smart close-range play for Sheehan's try the following weekend against Glasgow. Sheehan throws into the five-metre lineout. And just as Glasgow expect another maul effort, Leinster break back into the shortside. Josh van der Flier has Lowe short on his left but instead throws a smart basketball-style pass over the top to Sheehan, who has simply held his position after throwing. It's a snappy finish again from Sheehan into the corner. He notched the third hat-trick of his career two weekends ago against Ulster. Yet again, his first try came out wide after holding close to the touchline following a lineout. Sheehan throws into the lineout in Leinster's half and then holds on the right as they set up to box kick. Leinster win the ball back and surge into Ulster's half. Rather than chasing infield, Sheehan does his job of staying out in the 15-metre channel to give their attack width. He has to be patient as Leinster's phase-play attack initially struggles to make inroads. But when Ciarán Frawley chips behind them and Tommy O'Brien retrieves the ball, Sheehan's positioning pays off. O'Brien glances up to assess his options. Even before looking, he has an awareness that Sheehan is likely to be wide on the right wing, all the more so given that O'Brien – Leinster's right wing – is in midfield. O'Brien delivers a stunning kick into space, finding Sheehan on the bounce, and the hooker gets his 10th try of the season. Sheehan's second begins with him picking off the ball from a botched Ulster lineout. The Leinster hooker's offload attempt is a little loose but Andrew Porter scoops the ball up. This time, Sheehan doesn't return to the edge of Leinster's attack. As he gets back to his feet from the initial involvement, left wing Jimmy O'Brien is moving up onto the left edge having started in the backfield defence, while flanker Alex Soroka is also shifting out there. So Sheehan gets the chance to occupy a midfield position for a change. Sheehan doesn't need to work all the way across to the right, instead holding centrally for when Leinster play back to their left. And when they do so, Sheehan picks a nice line off out-half Sam Prendergast and breaks the tackle attempt of John Cooney to finish. His hat-trick score comes in the closing minutes of the game. This one underlines the work rate Sheehan brings and is a brilliant example of his ruthless ability to finish. Sheehan launches the passage with another accurate throw from the right-hand touchline. He then sets off infield as Leinster use another maul break play. Leinster move the ball wide left immediately and as Prendergast kick passes out to Jimmy O'Brien, we can see that Sheehan continues to work across. Sheehan gets all the way to the left-hand 15-metre line by the time O'Brien passes back infield to scrum-half Fintan Gunne. And that effort off the ball means Sheehan can accelerate onto Gunne's outside shoulder and take a short pass. Sheehan makes the finish look straightforward but it's not. His initial acceleration and choice of running line take him past Ulster wing Zac Ward before Sheehan drives beyond scrum-half Nathan Doak and swerves slightly outfield to evade the tackle of flanker Nick Timoney. Timoney gets Sheehan to ground but he can't tie up the ball and the Leinster hooker calmly uses his momentum to ground it. This probably won't be the last Dan Sheehan try we see this season.

Here's the ex-Ireland man set to replace Joe Schmidt as Australia head coach
Here's the ex-Ireland man set to replace Joe Schmidt as Australia head coach

Extra.ie​

time29-04-2025

  • Sport
  • Extra.ie​

Here's the ex-Ireland man set to replace Joe Schmidt as Australia head coach

When Joe Schmidt's Australia reign comes to an end later this year, one former Ireland backroom coach will fill his position. Ex-Leinster and Ireland head coach Schmidt took over with the Wallabies at the beginning of 2024. However, he has agreed upon a departure ahead of the 2027 World Cup cycle in order to relocate to his native New Zealand to look after his youngest son, who has severe epilepsy – and former Ireland defence coach Les Kiss is set to fill his shoes Down Under. Joe Schmidt will leave Australia later this year. Pic: INPHO/Billy Stickland Kiss is a former Ulster director of rugby, having served in the role from 2015 until 2018. The 60-year-old previously enjoyed success as part of Ireland's coaching staff, first with Declan Kidney and latterly under Schmidt between 2009 and 2015. Les Kiss has worked extensively with former Ireland head coaches Declan Kidney (pictured) and Joe Schmidt in the past. Pic:He was defence coach in both regimes and his work yielded a Grand Slam with Kidney in 2009 as well as a Six Nations title delivered in 2014 under Schmidt. With the pair having maintained a close working relationship, it is believed Schmidt would be open to remaining with Australia in a consultancy capacity if new boss Kiss was to offer a role to him. Kiss is set to become the fifth Aussie head coach in six years as the country prepare to host the 2027 World Cup.

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