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Duo set for rugby move after latest Limerick hurling title win

(Photo by Piaras Ó Mídheach/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

Irish rugby is set to benefit from the talent of two valued staff members who have helped Limerick to dominate the All-Ireland hurling scene in recent years as performance psychologist Caroline Currid has been linked with Johann van Graan’s Munster while strength and conditioning coach Mikey Kiely is set for a switch to Dan McFarland’s Ulster.

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Champions in 2018 after a 45-year wait, Limerick have since gone on to become the most envied side on the hurling scene in Ireland and last Sunday’s All-Ireland final demolition of Cork at Croke Park saw them crowned back-to-back champions for the first time ever as they added the 2021 title to the 2020 championship they clinched with last December’s win over Waterford. 

In the process, the Limerick team have become hugely admired for their mental resilience and their levels of fitness, improvements that will now reportedly see two of their staff switch into the professional rugby scene.  

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What sacrifice means to the Black Ferns

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      What sacrifice means to the Black Ferns

      Performance psychologist Currid isn’t a rugby novice as 2009 Lions skipper Paul O’Connell sought her help during the final years of his playing career and she has now been linked by the Limerick Leader newspaper to working with Munster in the coming season in a campaign that begins with a September 25 United Rugby Championship match at home to the South African Sharks. 

      Before her involvement with the Limerick hurlers, Currid worked with the All-Ireland winning Tyrone footballers in 2008, the 2010 Tipperary hurlers and the Dublin footballers of 2011. 

      Strength and conditioning expert Kiely, meanwhile, has already been working for McFarland’s Ulster, splitting his time in recent months between Belfast and Limerick. Kiely was involved in the July start of Ulster’s pre-season and it’s believed he will now work with them full-time after the successful completion of Limerick’s latest All-Ireland title campaign.  

      Both Currid and Kiely were warmly praised for their efforts in the aftermath of last Sunday’s Limerick win. Skipper Declan Hannon said: “The one lady amongst all men Caroline Currid, what she has done for us the last five years is indescribable.” 

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      Team boss John Kiely added: “We timed our return to training work and timed our push right and that is down to Mikey Kiely and Paul (Kinnerk) in terms of them setting the markers along the road of where we want to be at any given time – huge kudos to those guys because they got us right on the day that mattered most.”

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      C
      CO 1 hour 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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