‘Your losses can be definitive, but I don’t let them define how I think about myself’

DOROTHY WALL LAUGHS as she prepares to reveal another chapter of her family’s impressive sporting history.

“You see, there are so many good athletes in my family that I keep forgetting to mention.”

The Ireland back row has previously discussed the sporting lives of her mother, Sophia, a horse rider, and grandmother, Betsy, a talented athlete in her day, as well as her father, Anthony, who once turned down a football scholarship in America.

Today, it’s the turn of Wall’s uncle, Hugh O’Connor, a man whose influence on the young Tipperary woman has come in handy recently.

His name comes up as Wall reflects on Ireland’s mixed Six Nations campaign. A high-scoring win over Wales was followed by something of a reality check against France, before Ireland signed off with a comfortable, if not overly convincing defeat of Italy.

The stadiums were empty, but the team felt there more eyes on them and more words being written about them than usual given the unique situation of a standalone window for the Women’s Six Nations. 

For 20-year-old Wall, who only made her Ireland debut last year, the extra scrutiny and interest had the potential to become a little daunting.

So she leaned on the lessons learned from days at home with uncle Hugh.

“My uncle was an international tetrathlete,” Wall explains.

“I used to do tetrathlon underage with the pony club where you’d ride a cross-country course, swim and run, and you’d shoot a rifle.

“My uncle is probably the calmest person I know. He is so unfazed by anything. But I used to get wound up. I’m probably not a good long-distance runner or a good long-distance swimmer, but I was getting to the best of my ability so I could be fit for my rugby. That was my reason for being there and I suppose I had to compartmentalise the fact that I wasn’t as good as these other long-distance athletes, but I was going to be the best version of me so I could benefit from other aspects of it.

“I’ve had a lot of conversations with him around performance and stuff, and I don’t really get that nervous (now). He’s been a huge part of that. He’d just like, ‘What’s the point? It’s wasted energy, you’re directing your energy in the wrong sense’. And that’s easy to say, but I spent a lot of hours with him in the barn shooting targets and stuff. He was very good for me in terms of the psyche around it.”

As a result, Wall tries to take a more considered view of Ireland’s overall return in the Six Nations.

She wasn’t walking on water after her dominant performance in that opening round destruction of Wales, just as she wasn’t losing too much sleep after Ireland shipped 56 points to a semi-professional France team.

“When I was younger I was quite hard on myself in terms of (playing) basketball in school,” Wall says.

Dorothy WallWall has helped launch Canterbury and the IRFU’s Give It A Try programme.

“I was very hard on myself in how I performed if I didn’t do this or didn’t perform in a certain way. But that wasn’t beneficial for me. That wasn’t good for my confidence, it wasn’t good for how I performed the next day, so I think a certain amount of maturity… Like, your losses can be definitive but I don’t let them define how I think about myself as a player or how our team is.”

With just seven caps to her name, Wall is already a standout performer in Adam Griggs’ team. A destructive ball carrier with a tireless workrate, she has the potential to be a pillar of this squad for the next decade. 

Her progression is all the more remarkable when you consider her path to the game. Basketball was her early love, but she was a regular sight on the sidelines at Fethard and District RFC, where her three brothers all played.

“I kind of thought ‘You know what, I might be good at this sport,’” she explains.

Four years later, she has two Six Nations campaigns to her name.

“I think with every game and every minute you play you learn more about what it is to actually… Like, you can be a good athlete, but to be a good international athlete is very different. It’s how you deal with how the game is going, how you can problem solve on the pitch, and I’ve a lot to learn about that sort of thing.

“But I’m open to learning about it and I think the experience and the gametime of this Six Nations will stand to me because I was handed different scenarios and maybe I didn’t deal with certain (situations well), but I probably did stand up and deal with others.”

This Six Nations also saw Wall contribute more directly to Ireland’s attack. She scored her first try for Ireland against Wales and bagged another against Italy. She also provided some important contributions in open play, including a neat peel off a lineout to play in Amee-Leigh Murphy Crowe against the Azzurre last Saturday.

Wall scored her second international try against Italy last Saturday. Source: Billy Stickland/INPHO

“In the Welsh game I did a lot of carrying and stuff, but I do have that in my artillery to be used, so I may as well use it when I can,” she says of her attacking game.

“But yeah, I think I have more to give. It’s probably confidence in my own ability as well and diversifying how I play rather than just being this physical threat, which I can be, but I probably do have more to offer in that sense.”

The family WhatsApp groups have been hopping for the last month. Messages of encouragement pour into the group chats from Tipperary and the USA, where extended family members have been getting to grips with alien concepts like the sin bin. 

Wall appreciates the support but is also glad to have another social circle who are less interested in her exploits on the rugby pitch.

“My family are a huge part of it. They are my number one backers,” she says.

“You need to have other facets for how you feel about yourself and how you enjoy your life. I definitely would emphasise that, you need other things going for you and need to enjoy other parts of your life.

“Some of my friends absolutely do not care about the fact that I play rugby, they don’t have a clue what is going on, and it suits me lovely”. 

Her rugby life will be parked for the time being. A radiography student, Wall will start exams on the day of her 21st birthday next week.

There will be another Ireland camp in six weeks’ time. The Women’s All-Ireland League will hopefully get underway in August. If all goes to plan, Ireland will play their postponed Rugby World Cup qualifiers in September.

It’s a long wait for supporters of the women’s game, but Wall, who was speaking as Canterbury and the IRFU launched their new ‘Give it a Try’ campaign, hopes the last few weeks have at least planted a seed in a few impressionable young heads.

“It’s been wonderful, the media attention we got, I think it’s been very positive to have our own (standalone) tournament.

Wall started in all three of Ireland’s Six Nations games this year. Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

“More people have been talking about it. Considering the pandemic, there’s not much going on so more people have been watching it. More girls and boys have been watching it, and maybe with the new season, when Covid hopefully clears up and the clubs open and the ‘Give it a Try’ campaign is running, you’ll have more younger kids (playing) because they were watching us play, and there wasn’t other clashes, it wasn’t just the men. 

“My hope would be that yeah, we were put out by ourselves, we performed and then we didn’t perform and we got better, it was scrappy etc, but it was realistic. It was realistic of where we are as a team, and I hope that young girls and young boys saw that and are like ‘Yeah, you know what Mum or Dad, I’m going to play.’

“Hopefully there will be a huge influx of youngsters when it opens.”

 Canterbury and the IRFU have launched this year’s nationwide Give It A Try programme – a rugby programme for girls aged 8 to 14 to learn how to play rugby in a safe and fun environment. Clubs can register at http://www.irishrugby.ie/giveitatry

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‘Johnny is absolutely training the house down’ – Leinster back Sexton for Lions

Updated May 5th 2021, 8:27 AM

STUART LANCASTER SAYS Leinster would have no concerns about Johnny Sexton touring with the British and Irish Lions this summer.

Sexton missed the Champions Cup semi-final defeat to La Rochelle on Sunday and remains unavailable for selection as he continues his recovery from a series of head injuries. The out-half was stood down from action after receiving head injuries against Munster, Wales and Exeter this year, and there is currently no timeframe on his return.

His extended absence will be an obvious point of concern for Warren Gatland, who names his 36-man Lions squad this Thursday, with Sexton not having played since Leinster’s win over Exeter on 10 April.

However Lancaster said that Sexton is progressing well with his recovery and would be able, if selected, to withstand the demands of a Lions tour.

“Yeah, I think so,” Lancaster said.

“Nobody can control what happens in any game of rugby, there’s going to be injuries and all sorts of things that happen.

“All I can report, and it’s up to them (Lions selectors) to decide, but all I can report is him training at the moment and he’s flying, doing extras. He’s in as good a shape as I’ve seen.”

Sexton (left) with Lancaster. Source: Oisin Keniry/INPHO

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A number of Leinster players will be concerned that Sunday’s defeat in France will work against them as Gatland sits down to finalise his squad this week. 

Lancaster’s message to those players was then even if they miss the cut tomorrow, the door is never fully closed.

“I think everything in the lead up to the final selection can all play a part in the final selection, definitely,” Lancaster added.

“I’ve been through this picking a World Cup squad in 2015, the warm up games before, everything, the training sessions you see, has an impact on you. But you’d much rather be in those games and playing at this level than sat at home waiting for the phone to ring. I think Leinster have proven that we have big players and they’ve proven it with Ireland.

“The schedule leading into the actual departure (for South Africa) with the English Premiership semi-final and final which will undoubtedly involve some players, these Rainbow Cup games we’re playing in, the Japan game, games against the Stormers, the Bulls, the Sharks…

“I don’t know what the actual (Lions) schedule is, but you look at it and think of how hard it was when we played the Cheetahs in Bloemfontein and how hard a game that was. The Lions have got that Wednesday, Saturday, Wednesday, Saturday, plus South Africa A and three Tests. 

“If I’m not picked, I definitely want to go on my country’s tour and I want to be ready to go. That’s my message to the lads who don’t get picked from any country, a lot of things can happen. There’ll be more than 36 players that represent the Lions.”

Leinster European season ended against La Rochelle on Sunday. Source: Dave Winter/INPHO

Leinster’s squad will be on a day off when the squad is announced tomorrow, but those who travelled to La Rochelle at the weekend will still be together as they continue their mandatory quarantine following the trip to France. 

“I guess everyone will be sat at home, or wherever we are in our hotel and just watching it. Robin (McBryde) will get a bit of an insight. So, I think he’ll have a good idea before Thursday.

“If you went through the lads from Leinster who play for Ireland, the lads in the pack, there are quite a few who would definitely be under consideration.

“If Caelan (Doris) hadn’t had the knocks he had, I think he’d be there as well. The likes of James Ryan and Jack Conan, you know the front rows, Rónan (Kelleher), Ports (Andrew Porter), Tadhg (Furlong), Robbie (Henshaw) obviously, Garry (Ringrose), you know the outside backs.

“And Johnny is absolutely training the house down, he’s trained today, his eye is in, I can tell with Johnny when his eye is in, he just sees the game so quickly.

“From my point of view he’s a world class player and he’d be a huge addition, I think, personally. But I know there is huge competition in there as well with Finn Russell and Owen Farrell, George Ford I thought was excellent at the weekend for Leicester against Ulster, Dan Biggar, obviously very good, so it’s competitive but I’d back Johnny for sure.”

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First published today at 06.20

New Japan is “still mad at Impact over Okada”

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‘You don’t carry it around with you all week which I think is a good rule to have in here’

IT WAS A week during which Leinster were forced to quickly dust themselves down.

The disappointment of La Rochelle was at least replaced by jubilation in the case of four players who were called up to Warren Gatland’s Lions squad just days after falling to the coming French force at the Stade Marcel-Deflandre. For others, the pain of defeat was likely compounded by their missing out on Gatland’s 37-man touring party for South Africa.

But for Leo Cullen’s entire squad, whether or not they harboured Lions aspirations as individuals, the focus had to switch from a few days of madness to the job at hand on Saturday: the visit of Connacht, a task to which Leinster eventually emphatically warmed.

“The scar” from a defeat like that to La Rochelle is one that lasts, says back row Josh Murphy, but only in the sense that a scar often speaks to a lesson learned the hard way. “To use it in the correct manner” is the most important thing.

“When you’re playing the game or you’re in the squad for the week, you’re probably your own biggest critic,” Murphy says of Leinster’s European exit. “Whatever about what people are saying outside, people in the building here are just as disappointed that we’ve lost.

“Absolutely, we talk about it, but the best thing I think we do is we go through it and then we move on. You don’t carry it around with you all week which I think is a good rule to have in here. So, we move on and put it into the next game: what our improvements are going to be.”

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Leinster’s Josh Murphy. Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

“A couple of days afterwards, it’s still very much raw for a lot of people,” adds wing Dave Kearney. “Y’know, biggest game of the season and, obviously, losing is a big deal. We reviewed the game, took our learnings from it. But the beauty of rugby and playing games every week is that you can’t take too much time to dwell; you’ve got to shift your focus to what you have the following week. And thankfully, we had the game against Connacht to focus on.

“A great win,” Kearney says of Leinster’s eventual destruction of the western province. “Slow start obviously, I think we were still all probably on the bus. But we had a chat under the posts and turned things around; just played our game, played some good stuff, and it was a pleasing result in the end — especially after a bad start. We put a foot in the right direction and got over things as quickly as possible.”

As for what was discussed under the sticks in a first quarter which saw Leinster trail by three scores, Kearney stresses that it was “just a couple of things.”

“The biggest thing at that time of the game”, he adds, “was that our discipline was really poor. We kept giving away penalties and we just kept giving the ball to them, really. Their attack was good for the first 15 minutes and they played at us and they kept in the game that way. But I’m pretty sure if you look at the stats from the game, Connacht had a lot of possession but it’s that clinical edge, too. I think we know what when we all do our jobs and we have ball in hand, we’ll be clinical and score.

“But like I said, the discipline thing was probably a switch and our defence, for sure, got better, too, after that; there was definitely far more aggression in there.”

Dave Kearney taking on two Connacht defenders. Source: Bryan Keane/INPHO

Commending Leinster’s players’ ability to respond proactively after the digging a hole from themselves early, and particularly at a time when less sure heads would doubtless have dropped, backs coach Felipe Contempomi says he and the rest of Leinster’s staff “have the confidence in the players and how they’re growing together, but we keep on working and talking like that throughout meetings and in training.

“One thing that we’re very pleased about is how they manage after a bad start — to put it lightly. They kept totally to the script of how we planned the game; they went out and did it,” adds the Argentinian.

“I think they’re a very experienced squad now and you have players there who have been through a lot of those situations. That helps, definitely, in those situations: having players who can bring some calmness and say, ‘Come on, boys, let’s get it together and let’s do our job.’”

Felipe Contepomi during Leinster’s 2006 Heineken Cup semi-final defeat to Munster. Source: Dan Sheridan/INPHO

When asked what the difference is — if there is one — between losing a European semi-final as a player and as a coach, Contepomi smiles: “15 years.”

He continues: “It’s not that different. Player or coach, it’s about Leinster. At the end of the day, you’re losing with Leinster in a semi-final in ’06 and now, losing with Leinster in a semi-final in 2021. It still hurts but it’s how you approach it: what I’ve learned in the last 15 years, I’d like to think it made me a more mature person and I could get the learnings out of it. But I think it hurts. It hurts because it’s not about myself or you — it’s about the team losing. It’s something we’ve been chasing in Leinster, the fifth star, so yeah, it hurts. The feeling is pretty much the same. It’s the way you approach it, I would say, is different.”

Contepomi describes his opinion on Gatland’s Lions selection “worthless” but adds of some of the Leinster players who missed out: “I feel sorry for some of them but it’s life and I think, from what I’ve seen, the way most of our players who had an expectation of being selected; the ones who were left out, they approach it really well.

“They’re working harder, even, now, and you never know where you’ll end up in a month’s time. Between now and the plane that takes them to South Africa, many things can happen.”