Andy Farrell on why Byrne and Casey deserve their Ireland starts
Ireland boss Andy Farrell has insisted that rookie half-back pair Ross Byrne and Craig Casey fully merit the opportunity to run the show in Rome. Farrell has made six changes for Saturday’s Guinness Six Nations showdown with Italy, including handing fly-half Byrne and scrum-half Casey their maiden career starts in the championship.
Byrne will deputise for injured Leinster teammate Johnny Sexton in the No10 jersey to continue his international resurgence, while Casey comes in for fellow Munster man Conor Murray. The fledgling pair have combined well from the bench in victories over Wales and France in the opening two rounds of the tournament and Farrell expects more of the same at Stadio Olimpico.
“They have earned the right to start,” said Farrell. “And, from what we have seen so far, it has been a good start to the week. Preparation has been great and yeah, they seem ready for it.”
Speaking specifically of Byrne, Farrell continued: “He has been great. He has earned the right to run the team and transfer everything that we have seen in training to a performance that has got authority and takes his team with him.”
Byrne feared his Test career may be over before returning from 20 months in the international wilderness to kick the decisive penalty in Ireland’s autumn win over Australia. Only two of his previous 16 caps have been won as a starter, while Casey, who made his debut away to Italy two years, has only once before begun a match for his country.
Hooker Ronan Kelleher, lock Iain Henderson, number eight Jack Conan and centre Bundee Aki have also been recalled to face the Azzurri. Just two of the alterations are enforced, with Sexton and Tadhg Beirne ruled out by injuries sustained in the 32-19 success over the French. Farrell dismissed the notion he has shaken things up for the sake of it and expects his Grand Slam-chasing side to produce their best display of the competition so far.
“We have been together for a good few weeks now, so people are certainly up to speed,” he said. “People wouldn’t have been selected if they weren’t in the right place. We are not just turning things around for the sake of it, we are turning things around because we think it’s a strong side for us going forward, for this game and for the future as well.
"I don’t think there are that many changes, to be fair. The reality is, this is our third game of the competition and we expect it to be our best performance of the competition. That is how it should be and that is what we are aiming for.”
James Ryan will skipper Ireland for the seventh time in the absence of influential captain Sexton, while centre Garry Ringrose will win his 50th cap. Farrell believes his in-form side, who sit top of the world rankings, have a squad packed with leaders. “I feel we are in a great place that we would be more than happy for a handful of players to captain the side,” he said.
“James is the lucky one this weekend, but Garry Ringrose is an exceptional leader. I’m sure that he will be captain of Ireland one day. Peter O’Mahony, Iain Henderson, and more and more of those types of players. You look at the development of somebody like Caelan Doris, of Hugo Keenan or Garry, there is a reason why they are playing so well.
"It’s because of how they don’t just lead themselves off the field, they lead others as well. They tend to work unbelievably hard off the field and try and give as much as they possibly can to their teammates so, in that regard, I feel we’re pretty lucky.”
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500k registered players in SA are scoolgoers and 90% of them don't go on to senior club rugby. SA is fed by having hundreds upon hundreds of schools that play rugby - school rugby is an institution of note in SA - but as I say for the vast majority when they leave school that's it.
Go to commentsDon't think you've watched enough. I'll take him over anything I's seen so far. But let's see how the future pans out. I'm quietly confident we have a row of 10's lined uo who would each start in many really good teams.
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