It didn’t feel like a squad that Andy Farrell announced yesterday, more like a first draft of history. For if expectations are going to be lived up to, this 2023 World Cup will be remembered in Ireland forever, and so by extension will the names of those who played in it.
Ireland is a country addicted to sporting nostalgia, filmmakers and newspapers forever dipping into the archives to commemorate anniversaries of past achievements, the 30th anniversary of Italia 90 generating not one but two sporting documentaries to mark the occasion.
For context, Jack Charlton’s football team reached a quarter-final, the same ceiling Andy Farrell’s side are seeking to smash. They can. Even if history is against them, even if injuries have denied them the presence of Cian Healy, the veteran prop who can cover all three front-row positions, there is every reason why Ireland should travel to France with expectation rather than hope.
“We have evidence which gives us a bit of confidence,” said Sexton, “but we also know that it is the toughest group we have ever had, the toughest quarter-final draw if we manage to get through the group. So it is all to do.”
In this regard, the 33 who made the cut for Ireland yesterday have every right to feel the hard work isn’t over but in fact is only about to begin. Never before have Ireland carried such high expectations into a World Cup. Never before have there been so many close calls for a place on the plane.
The pack alone contains Jeremy Loughman, Tom O’Toole and Joe McCarthy, who often are second choice with their provinces. Yet they are included by Farrell for a reason, Loughman because of Healy’s injury primarily, but also because he, along with O’Toole and McCarthy, left a deep impression on Farrell on last year’s tour to New Zealand.
Farrell’s mission in New Zealand, he repeatedly said, wasn’t just to get results but also to find characters, hoping to see if five uncut gems could be unearthed.
That was a tour filled with challenges, a five-match itinerary packed into three weeks, injuries mounting right through it. “That’s life, isn’t it,” Farrell constantly said. “I want to see what we are made of, how we react to challenges.”
His mission, he repeatedly said, wasn’t just to get results but also to find characters, hoping to see if five uncut gems could be unearthed. It’s interesting that O’Toole, McCarthy, Loughman, Craig Casey and Jimmy O’Brien are in this squad now, because they were his dirt trackers, lining out against the New Zealand Maoris on filthy nights in Wellington and Hamilton, when the stands were empty and the rain beat down.
Yet they never complained.
And this is their reward.
So even if Ulster often prefer Marty Moore to O’Toole, if Loughman, Casey and McCarthy have spent meaningful time on provincial benches rather than starting XVs, their presence in the squad is not going to lead to demonstrations.
We’re talking about the battle to be third choice, the right to be back-up to the back-up. With the exception of Jacob Stockdale and Joey Carbery, whose omissions stem from loss of form, there aren’t any cause célèbres.
The 2015 World Cup quarter-final defeat to Argentina exposed a lack of depth and led to a complete reevaluation of how Irish teams were going to prepare from thereon in. Regarded as a conservative selector, Joe Schmidt – Farrell’s predecessor – proved, in the last four years of his tenure, to be a risk-taker.
Still, it was an interesting selection.
It is worth remembering that Ireland went to the 2015 World Cup with just 14 backs and just five props. This squad has 15 of the former, six of the latter. They also have options.
The 2015 World Cup quarter-final defeat to Argentina exposed a lack of depth and led to a complete reevaluation of how Irish teams were going to prepare from thereon in. Regarded as a conservative selector, Joe Schmidt – Farrell’s predecessor – proved, in the last four years of his tenure, to be a risk-taker.
And the seeds of that investment are visible now. Sixteen of Farrell’s squad earned their first caps under Schmidt and yet this is not Joe’s team. Rather it is a upgraded model of what he produced, Farrell retaining much of the ruck-obsessed detail which defined the Schmidt sides, while proving to be a more relaxed man-manager.
The Englishman has never been shy to promote players who aren’t first choice with their provinces – Jamison Gibson-Park being the most obvious example of that, but also Byrne, O’Toole, Loughman, Casey.
Significantly he also advanced Dan Sheehan’s case before the world knew what Sheehan could do. Now look at him, the world’s best hooker, arguably Ireland’s best player.
An injury to Furlong wouldn’t result in Farrell turning to a journeyman like Nathan White, Mike Ross’s back-up in 2015. O’Toole and Finlay Bealham have proved their worth in the last 12 months.
So Ireland expects even though they should be reminded that reaching World Cup finals is not an easy thing to do — only five countries have managed it in the history of the sport — but as Schmidt discovered eight years ago, when players such as White and Mike McCarthy fill out his squad, success won’t happen with journeymen. This Irish squad is better than that, deeper in quality than any in the country’s history.
They dream of something big. And it can happen. The only trouble is the Springboks, All Blacks and French share the same dream. Two of this quartet will be home by the quarter-finals. Will that be Ireland once again? Not this time.
Ireland squad: Forwards Ryan Baird, Finlay Bealham, Tadhg Beirne, Jack Conan, Caelan Doris, Tadhg Furlong, Iain Henderson, Rob Herring, Ronan Kelleher, Dave Kilcoyne, Jeremy Loughman, Joe McCarthy, Peter O’Mahony, Tom O’Toole, Andrew Porter, James Ryan, Dan Sheehan, Josh van der Flier. Backs Bundee Aki, Ross Byrne, Craig Casey, Jack Crowley, Keith Earls, Jamison Gibson-Park, Mack Hansen, Robbie Henshaw, Hugo Keenan, James Lowe, Stuart McCloskey, Conor Murray, Jimmy O’Brien, Garry Ringrose, Johnny Sexton (Leinster, capt).