Leinster to give Wallaby wrecking-ball first start as James Lowe makes positional switch
Leinster are set to give Wallaby powerhouse Joe Tomane his first start as a Leinster player against ProD2 opposition.
Leinster named their team to face US Montauban in the first Bank of Ireland Pre-season Friendly and it includes a squad of 28 players will travel to France today ahead of Friday night's match against the Pro D2 side at Stade Sapiac.
Rhys Ruddock will captain Leinster Rugby in the game, starting at openside flanker. Ruddock was named as Leinster Rugby's new vice-captain for the season earlier this week, with Johnny Sexton named as the province's new captain.
Ruddock is joined in the back row by Josh Murphy and Max Deegan.
New signing Joe Tomane will make his first appearance in the blue of Leinster when he starts at inside centre. He joins Rory O'Loughlin to form Leinster's starting midfield pairing.
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Meanwhile James Lowe, who is usually found on the wing, will start at fullback.
Speaking to Leinster Rugby TV ahead of the game, Leinster Rugby Head Coach Leo Cullen said:
"The majority of the group that are playing this weekend came back in the middle of June. They did a three-week block at that stage, had another break and came back, so they've done a fair amount. It'll be nice to put into practice some of the things we've worked on over the course of pre-season.
"We have 28 players that are going to travel to France. It's a good opportunity for these lads to put their hand up nice and early in the season."
Montauban finished second at the end of the 2017/18 Pro D2 regular season which meant they qualified for the promotion play-off semi-finals. There they lost out to Grenoble who ultimately won promotion to the TOP 14.
"[Montauban are] a big physical team and it should be a good test. They get good crowds over there as well. Conditions are difficult this time of year in the south of France. Overall it should be a very, very good test for us.
"The teams like Perpignan last season and Montauban, they're a little more advanced than we are in terms of this being the third pre-season game that they've played. It was the same with Perpignan last year. Their season starts next week, so there's a probably a bit more urgency about what they're doing. They've probably built a bit of the cohesion that we're trying to establish now at this stage."
Leinster Rugby
15. James Lowe
14. Adam Byrne
13. Rory O'Loughlin
12. Joe Tomane
11. Barry Daly
10. Noel Reid
9. Nick McCarthy
1. Peter Dooley
2. Bryan Byrne
3. Michael Bent
4. Ross Molony
5. Ian Nagle
6. Josh Murphy
7. Rhys Ruddock CAPTAIN
8. Max Deegan
16. James Tracy
17. Ed Byrne
18. Vakh Abdaladze
19. Mick Kearney
20. Will Connors
21. Jamison Gibson-Park
22. Jimmy O'Brien
23. Dave Kearney
24. Oisín Dowling
25. Conor O'Brien
26. Tom Daly
27. Jack Kelly
28. Gavin Mullin
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Yep, I certainly hope so too, he had a real talent for doing it legally. The more he tries the better accuracy/consistency he’ll get. Like I said though, and for whatever reason, his focus has changed this by the looks for me, so I’m happy not to rush him and wait for 2026, and then it all put together at some point where it’s possible he takes the mantel for the RWC.
Great if he starts including it again midway through SR, or even just for the ABs, but I’d actaully suggest that it was more the criticism that he was just a bully and actually got smashed himself when he took on people his own size that “affected him mentally”. We’ve actually seen him put in a few big hits but they’ve been on players who handled it so seen no highlight reels of them.
Go to commentsFrance using the 7-1, England using the 6-2, Ireland and Scotland have used it a few times as well and many nations are starting to adopt it. The reality is the game is changing. Administrators have made it faster and that is leading to more significant drop offs in the forwards. You have 2 options. Load your bench with forwards or alter your player conditioning which might mean more intense conditioning for forwards and a drop off in bulk. The game can still be played many ways. Every nation needs to adapt in their own way to suit their strengths. France have followed the Springbok model of tight forwards being preferred because it suits them. They have huge hunks of meat and the bench is as good as the starters so why not go for it? The Springboks have also used hybrids like Kwagga Smith, Schalk Britz, Deon Fourie, Franco Mostert and others. England are following that model instead and by putting 3 loosies there who can do damage in defence and make the breakdown a mess in the final quarter. It worked well against Wales but will be interested to see how it goes going forward against better opposition who can threaten their lineout and scrum. All the talk around bench limitations to stop the 7-1 and 6-2 for me is nonsense. Coaches who refuse to innovate want to keep the game the same and make it uniform and sameness is bad for fans. The bench composition adds jeopardy and is a huge debate point for fans who love it. Bench innovations have not made the game worse, they have made it better and more watchable. They challenge coaches and teams and that’s what fans want. What we need now is more coaches to innovate. There is still space for the 5-3 or even a 4-4 if a coach is willing to take it on and play expansive high tempo possession-based rugby with forwards who are lean and mean and backs who are good over the ball. The laws favour that style more than ever before. Ireland are too old to do it now. Every team needs to innovate to best suit their style and players so I hope coaches and pundits stop moaning about forwards and benches and start to find different ways to win.
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