Paul O'Connell's 18-year-old nephew primed to make Munster debut
Evan O’Connell, the 18-year-old nephew of legendary Ireland and Lions skipper Paul, is set to become the youngest player to play for Munster in the professional era after he was named on their bench for Saturday’s URC game versus Ulster.
An injury crisis has hit the Irish province at second row and they have included the relation of O’Connell, the 43-year-old who these days works as an Ireland assistant to Andy Farrell, as a replacement as they look to bounce back from last weekend’s away loss at Leinster.
The Munster team announcement statement read: “Evan O’Connell and Cian Hurley are included among the replacements with 18-year-old O’Connell in line to make his Munster debut. If he features, UL Bohs man and former Castletroy College student O’Connell will become the province’s youngest player of the professional era, beating the record Ruadhan Quinn set earlier this season. Hurley is in line for his second Munster appearance.”
The rookie’s bio in the academy section of the Munster website read: “Evan O'Connell joined the academy ahead of the 2022/23 season and plays his AIL rugby with UL Bohs. A former Castletroy College student, Evan lined out for the Munster U18 schools team at the start of the 2021/22 season.
“He captained Castletroy in the Pinergy Munster Schools Senior Cup later that year before lining out for Ireland in the 2022 U18 Six Nations festival. O'Connell featured for the Munster U19s in the 2022 interprovincial campaign.”
The inclusion of the 6ft 7in, 109kg O’Connell on the bench was confirmed on Friday shortly after Munster had announced the signing of Kiran McDonald as injury cover on a three-month deal after he was made redundant by Wasps on October 17. “The second row will link up with the province this weekend,” Munster said before elaborating on the scale of their engine room injury situation.
“On the injury front, there was disappointment for Jean Kleyn and Tom Ahern following scan results for respective rib and shoulder injuries sustained against Leinster last weekend. Kleyn will be unavailable for the next number of weeks while Ahern is due to meet with a specialist next week.
“The duo join Fineen Wycherley (shoulder), RG Snyman (knee) and the uncapped Paddy Kelly (head) on the unavailable list, while Tadhg Beirne is with the Ireland squad for the Bank of Ireland Nations Series.”
Munster (vs Ulster, Saturday)
15. Mike Haley; 14. Shane Daly, 13. Malakai Fekitoa, 12. Rory Scannell, 11. Patrick Campbell; 10. Jack Crowley, 9. Paddy Patterson; 1. Dave Kilcoyne, 2. Diarmuid Barron, 3. John Ryan, 4. Edwin Edogbo, 5. Eoin O’Connor, 6. Jack O’Donoghue (capt), 7. John Hodnett, 8. Alex Kendellen. Reps: 16. Niall Scannell, 17. Josh Wycherley, 18. Roman Salanoa, 19. Evan O’Connell, 20. Cian Hurley, 21. Neil Cronin, 22. Ben Healy, 23. Simon Zebo.
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I think the best 15 we have is DMac. Jordan at 14.
Go to commentsIt certainly needs to be cherished. Despite Nick (and you) highlighting their usefulness for teams like Australia (and obviously those in France they find form with) I (mention it general in those articles) say that I fear the game is just not setup in Aus and NZ to appreciate nor maximise their strengths. The French game should continue to be the destination of the biggest and most gifted athletes but it might improve elsewhere too.
I just have an idea it needs a whole team focus to make work. I also have an idea what the opposite applies with players in general. I feel like French backs and halves can be very small and quick, were as here everyone is made to fit in a model physique. Louis was some 10 and 20 kg smaller that his opposition and we just do not have that time of player in our game anymore. I'm dying out for a fast wing to appear on the All Blacks radar.
But I, and my thoughts on body size in particular, could be part of the same indoctrination that goes on with player physiques by the establishment in my parts (country).
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