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3 veterans, including Peter O'Mahony, confirm Ireland career end date

Peter O’Mahony on Ireland duty last Saturday in Wales (Photo by Seb Daly/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

Ireland veterans Peter O’Mahony, Cian Healy and Conor Murray have confirmed they will all retire from international rugby following next month’s completion of the 2025 Guinness Six Nations.

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O’Mahony and Healy have added that they will quit playing rugby completely at the end of the season when they finish their respective 2024/25 club campaigns with Munster and Leinster, while Murray has revealed he will take up an opportunity to continue playing overseas at club level next season.

All three players are currently involved in Ireland’s unprecedented quest to win a third successive Six Nations.

The announcement of their Test retirements came on Thursday before an open training session at Aviva Stadium in Dublin ahead of the March 8 round four game versus France which will be followed by the Test career-ending trip to Italy on March 15.

An IRFU statement read: “Three of Ireland’s most decorated and distinguished players – Peter O’Mahony, Cian Healy and Conor Murray – have today announced their decision to call time on their illustrious careers in green following the conclusion of the Guinness Six Nations next month.

“Former Ireland captain O’Mahony and Healy, Ireland’s current most capped international, will retire from professional rugby at the end of the current 2024/25 season, while scrum-half Murray will pursue a playing opportunity abroad following the conclusion of his Munster contract in July.

“All three players have made seismic contributions to Irish rugby throughout their careers in green, all reaching the landmark of 100 Test caps for Ireland, winning five Six Nations titles, including two Grand Slams, and they will hope to draw the curtain in style at the end of the 2025 championship.

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“O’Mahony, who was outstanding in an 80-minute performance against Wales last weekend, has won 112 caps since making his Test debut against Italy in 2012, last year captaining Ireland to Six Nations glory.

“A Munster senior schools cup winner with PBC Cork in 2007, the Munster back row has been an ever-present in green over the last 15 years, featuring at three consecutive Rugby World Cups in 2015, 2019 and 2023 and making consistently invaluable contributions to the successes achieved under Joe Schmidt and, more recently, Andy Farrell.

“A key leader on and off the pitch, O’Mahony, who captained the British and Irish Lions in the first Test of their 2017 tour to New Zealand, has made 193 appearances for Munster having made his debut against Ulster in January 2010 and won two Celtic League/URC titles.

“Healy, meanwhile, will hang up his boots as Ireland’s current most capped player having surpassed Brian O’Driscoll when coming off the bench during the 150th anniversary Test against Australia at Aviva Stadium last November.

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“The prop has featured in two of Ireland’s three championship wins this season, moving him to 136 caps in green, and he is now also Ireland’s most capped player in the Six Nations on 66 appearances.”

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Comments

5 Comments
R
RedWarriors 101 days ago

Three great servants to Irish rugby. All getting time on the first team and contributing to the squad until the end.

J
JC 101 days ago

All three world class in their prime, with Healy and Murray being in the top three in their positions world for long periods. They’re going at the right time and have helped with the bench experience beyond what could have been expected of them. Three Irish ledges alright.

B
Bull Shark 101 days ago

Has O’Mahony confirmed the book release date yet?

J
JC 101 days ago

I think it has been held back as he tried to get Rassie to write the foreword, but Rassie is still heavy on the sauce and not very coherent at the moment. Hence why he has about 50-80 staff members and has called Felix back to hold his notepad and i think Felix is writing his foreword now. It’s really heartwarming. The home help is back.

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C
CO 27 minutes ago
Whose ship has sailed before the first All Blacks squad?

Based on last weekend there should be no Hurricanes loose forwards in the mix, they all seemed poor with the Brumbies once again fantastic at playing and executing as a team. The Hurricanes were also poor in the halves with the ten invisible and Cam Roigard trying to play up tempo, Helter skelter rugby which is what the Brumbies wanted.


Roigards passing was telegraphic with his running game and sniping non existent, Ratima also appears to be getting metronomic, devoid of flair and his ten went invisible as well.


If you can't step up at finals then you need to be punished, yes the blues were poor at times this season but they were right on either the last two games when it really matters.


CWL is a bit larger but both him and Lakai are down on size for an eight and aren't freaks like Savea. Sotutu has to be in the mix and Dalton, but only if they front this Friday night.


However six is an ongoing issue, Josh Beehre could be an answer to the lack of height in the loose forwards at Allblacks level, his driving try to ice the contest through a decent Chiefs pack was raw determination even with support.


As for the previous try being ruled out on the flimsiest of technicalities that highlighted everything wrong with the TMO, it wasn't ‘rabbiting’, his knees dropped one after the other and he then brought his shoulders forward to extend and score, big guys can do that, that's why Sotutu has to be in the mix.


Sititi looked short of a gallop and the Chiefs might be acting a bit too cute with their bench, the coach is saying all the right things but he's in the departure lounge and the signs are there that the Chiefs expected to be the best team in finals simply because they had the best bench.


They're now under the pump and the winner of this year's super final will almost certainly be whoever wins this Friday in Christchurch.

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