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Can the provinces ever hope to emulate the Leinster academy?

24

Comments

  • Posts: 0 ✭✭✭✭ Joe Bewildered Wool


    The schools are supported as well, lets not forget. They don't operate in a vacuum. We, at a 2nd-tier school, had Leinster coaches, particularly S&C, in regularly enough in 5th/6th year when I was in school, and that was a long time ago now. Players as well. When one of our coaches departed short notice to take a professional job we had help from them getting a replacement as well.

    Much more so than the following year for me when I was at a Junior club, although that is better now.

    I went to a Vinnie Murray level school and not to have a go at the teachers who gave up their time but our level of coaching was awful. We had an outside coach for a while but he was a bit of a dinosaur, every training session started with 10 laps of a pitch. S&C was basically non-existent.

    I don't think we had anyone who could have been an elite talent but they wouldn't have made it anyway with the way we went.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,914 ✭✭✭Rigor Mortis


    irishfan9 wrote: »
    Leinster have to compete with Dublin GAA in Dublin and they are probably losing.

    Leinster also have to compete with schoolboy football. If we are talking about player development and not crowds at games, football is a huge rival. Just because there isn't a very strong domestic league, doesn't meant that Rugby is suddenly powering ahead. The truth remains, Rugby is third most popular sport at best and probably fourth if you add in hurling.

    That said, many of the arguments made above are perfectly fair. Leinster have an advantage. They will probably always have first pick from the largest player pool. Encouraging transfers and spending on developing coaches, schools and clubs in all the regions is the best solution.


  • Administrators Posts: 54,110 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭awec


    There is a very small sweet-spot you have to hit if you want to be a pro rugby player, you have to be really good in 6th year of school basically. Of course there are exceptions but if you hit your early 20s and you haven't made it into a professional setup then you basically aren't going to. If people move to Dublin for their career say, post-college, they aren't really increasing the feasible population of people that can play for Leinster.

    I am not talking about people moving here when they are in their mid-teens, I am talking about people's parents moving here with young kids or maybe even no kids who settle here and subsequently have kids.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 3,585 ✭✭✭irishfan9


    I'm very aware of this as a non-Dublin Leinster man myself. I'm personally very keen to see the focus shifted away from schools because I think its a little unfair that not everyone gets the same opportunity to play at that level. The dream for me would be an open competition with clubs v. schools but I'm sure there's great reasons it can't happen!

    the clubs would get embarrassed in the main..


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 37,978 ✭✭✭✭irishbucsfan


    I went to a Vinnie Murray level school and not to have a go at the teachers who gave up their time but our level of coaching was awful. We had an outside coach for a while but he was a bit of a dinosaur, every training session started with 10 laps of a pitch. S&C was basically non-existent.

    Yes, the coach before ours was a teacher and he was atrocious. He quite famously advised Leinster Schools against selecting a lad who went on to be an international. But they ended up changing things and bringing in actual professional coaches for the SCT and then JCT teams, we were one of the first years to get that.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,405 ✭✭✭FrannoFan


    I'm very aware of this as a non-Dublin Leinster man myself. I'm personally very keen to see the focus shifted away from schools because I think its a little unfair that not everyone gets the same opportunity to play at that level. The dream for me would be an open competition with clubs v. schools but I'm sure there's great reasons it can't happen!

    The leinster regional sides would play the schools from time to time. Leinster North-east would play a school or whatever. They attempted it on a wider scale and was pretty 1 sided. Good club players are monitored through those sides. The problem is some of them still feel they have to move to a big school to get a chance. The rock side with Jaeger/Carbery/Oliver was pretty blatant and unfortunate they feel they needed that exposure. That for me comes down to academy managers lacking ability to see past the extras provided to the potential. (i'm not a girvan dempsey fan!)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,616 ✭✭✭✭errlloyd


    The schools are supported as well, lets not forget. They don't operate in a vacuum. We, at a 2nd-tier school, had Leinster coaches, particularly S&C, in regularly enough in 5th/6th year when I was in school, and that was a long time ago now.

    Yeah, I completely agree. As you said earlier some of it is school resources, I was in St Andrews when they started building the program that eventually produced Porter, Larmour and Jones. I think I was in 5th year when they put in the weights room. I remember being the first year who got given a diet plan (I was 14 and playing at a terrible level so I was disgusted at being told I was on low fat jam).

    I don't think a state school could have made that transition. We had a headmaster who had resources and wanted us to be better at rugby. He made a big deal out of it. At the same time they got some help. One of my best mates is a senior coach at a similar school to St Andrews. Another school that produces a provincial player once every 5 years or so, and had a decent cup run a few years ago. He had an all day coaching workshop with Stuart Lancaster recently. Apart from behind helpful, it also sounded genuinely inspiring and motivating. Makes him throw more into his job. That stuff helps too.


  • Administrators Posts: 54,110 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭awec


    IBF, if population and potential player base, as well as the economic / job factors are all irrelevant, why do you think the Leinster academy is miles ahead of all the others?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 37,978 ✭✭✭✭irishbucsfan


    FrannoFan wrote: »
    The leinster regional sides would play the schools from time to time. Leinster North-east would play a school or whatever. They attempted it on a wider scale and was pretty 1 sided. Good club players are monitored through those sides. The problem is some of them still feel they have to move to a big school to get a chance. The rock side with Jaeger/Carbery/Oliver was pretty blatant and unfortunate they feel they needed that exposure. That for me comes down to academy managers lacking ability to see past the extras provided to the potential. (i'm not a girvan dempsey fan!)

    Yeah but even at that level there's guys with huge ability missed and guys with huge potential missed because there's a lot of clubs and they don't share information particularly well in my experience. I haven't worked with an underage side for a few years now though so maybe it's better.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,405 ✭✭✭FrannoFan


    awec wrote: »
    I am not talking about people moving here when they are in their mid-teens, I am talking about people's parents moving here with young kids or maybe even no kids who settle here and subsequently have kids.

    If it was just about population surely Ulster would be second behind Leinster?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 37,978 ✭✭✭✭irishbucsfan


    awec wrote: »
    IBF, if population and potential player base, as well as the economic / job factors are all irrelevant, why do you think the Leinster academy is miles ahead of all the others?

    For the same reason that New Zealand is the envy of the rugby world while England end up doing well to stay ahead of Wales.

    And why Kerry have won 37 All Ireland's while Cork have only won 7


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 3,585 ✭✭✭irishfan9


    FrannoFan wrote: »
    The leinster regional sides would play the schools from time to time. Leinster North-east would play a school or whatever. They attempted it on a wider scale and was pretty 1 sided. Good club players are monitored through those sides. The problem is some of them still feel they have to move to a big school to get a chance. The rock side with Jaeger/Carbery/Oliver was pretty blatant and unfortunate they feel they needed that exposure. That for me comes down to academy managers lacking ability to see past the extras provided to the potential. (i'm not a girvan dempsey fan!)

    given new rules players aren't moving to schools anymore.. is that a good thing? hard to know...

    people have complained about the Michaels players getting academy places under dempsey, but in the main they have all performed when called upon by the senior side..

    Leinster u19 clubs played a non full strength michaels side recently and lost 52-0.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 45,433 ✭✭✭✭thomond2006


    CROOKED Leinster fans deny the RIGGED system that hands them all the players. Sad!


  • Posts: 0 ✭✭✭✭ Joe Bewildered Wool


    awec wrote: »
    I am not talking about people moving here when they are in their mid-teens, I am talking about people's parents moving here with young kids or maybe even no kids who settle here and subsequently have kids.


    So you're just talking about a population issue. The population of Ulster is comparable, admittedly a bit smaller, but comparable to Leinster and it's growing.


  • Registered Users Posts: 24,767 ✭✭✭✭molloyjh


    awec wrote: »
    Lets stop pretending that the provinces are all starting off on an equal footing to start with.

    1. Is there any rugby club in the world that exists in the capital city of a country, with 1million+ people in it's catchment area, that doesn't have a single other professional sports club to compete with never mind another rugby club?

    2. The majority of the population of Ireland live in Leinster

    3. Leinster has more schools than any other province.

    4. The movement of people from other provinces to Dublin further makes things interesting for Leinster. If you looked at all the Leinster players it would be curious to know what percentage of them have Leinster-born parents. I bet this is a lot lower than the other provinces.

    5. When foreign people move to Ireland for work where do you think the overwhelming majority of them move to? When these people have kids, where do you think they go to school?

    6. In the past number of years there has been a huge movement of jobs and people to Dublin from other parts of Ireland. When these people have kids, guess what province they'll be growing up in? Guess what academy they'll end up in.

    People like to blow the Leinster academy horn quite a lot on here and they do deserve a lot of credit, but they have massive advantages over the other provinces that are not through any work of their own, but rather just basic societal and political reasons.

    The problem is going to get worse, not better. I don't want to see the provinces watered down, but I think long term the current model is unsustainable, or at least unsustainable if you want to have 3 / 4 provinces that are actually competitive in elite rugby.

    Completely agree with all of this. We're very lucky in Leinster and shouldn't lose sight of that.


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  • Administrators Posts: 54,110 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭awec


    For the same reason that New Zealand is the envy of the rugby world while England end up doing well to stay ahead of Wales.

    And why Kerry have won 37 All Ireland's while Cork have only won 7

    Which is what?
    So you're just talking about a population issue. The population of Ulster is comparable, admittedly a bit smaller, but comparable to Leinster and it's growing.

    What? Read the rest of my posts.


  • Administrators Posts: 54,110 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭awec


    FrannoFan wrote: »
    If it was just about population surely Ulster would be second behind Leinster?

    Ulster has pretty unique issues when it comes to the player base. Issues that we're thankfully starting to get over, but it will be a long and slow process.

    For one thing you have the fact that 50% of people get absolutely zero exposure to rugby. It's not played in their schools and there are no rugby clubs where they live.

    Another issue being that no matter your political views, 1/3 of Ulster kind of sticks out from the rest of it and for historical reasons many people in those counties have little to no affinity with Ulster Rugby. I recent years that has certainly got better, but it'll be a long time before Ulster see the benefits of that.

    I never boiled this down to PURELY population, others just oversimplified it to that to try and make their point. Population is a factor among many others that have to be considered.


  • Registered Users Posts: 24,258 ✭✭✭✭Buer


    For the same reason that New Zealand is the envy of the rugby world while England end up doing well to stay ahead of Wales.

    And why Kerry have won 37 All Ireland's while Cork have only won 7

    England prioritises hurling over football?!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 37,978 ✭✭✭✭irishbucsfan


    awec wrote: »
    Which is what?

    A whole host of rugby-related things from the people to the processes. But certainly the kiwis don't just point at the 50 million people in England with London as their capital and assume they shouldn't be capable of bettering them.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,967 ✭✭✭✭The Lost Sheep


    FrannoFan wrote: »
    Leinster to be fair hire loads of RDO's and community development officers. I would think there are more in Leinster than in Connacht(granted a bigger population but Leinster looking to tap into that population) The game is growing in Louth/Dundalk etc. But it takes time.

    I think the province will naturally be bolstered by the schools game but it is doing a lot to promote the game outside non-traditional rugby areas.
    The CDOs etc do a lot of work in schools getting kids playing and then helping them into clubs and provinces/IRFU should be doing more to assist clubs about work to put in when you get kids into playing
    Game is developing in Dundalk and will take time. Dundalk went into AIL but dropped down immediately. Major issue up there is youth level and getting more kids playing the sport there.
    irishfan9 wrote: »
    The growth of St. Michaels into a professional rugby gold mine certainly has helped massively... their SCT team this year probably has 7-8 future academy players in it.
    Has helped but Michaels are just part of same set up as already there. Fee paying school in south Dublin. Its great work put in but improvements in Navan RFC/Enniscorthy etc are more impressive and better to promote/highlight
    irishfan9 wrote: »
    the clubs would get embarrassed in the main..
    That misses the point completely.
    FrannoFan wrote: »
    The leinster regional sides would play the schools from time to time. Leinster North-east would play a school or whatever. They attempted it on a wider scale and was pretty 1 sided. Good club players are monitored through those sides. The problem is some of them still feel they have to move to a big school to get a chance. The rock side with Jaeger/Carbery/Oliver was pretty blatant and unfortunate they feel they needed that exposure. That for me comes down to academy managers lacking ability to see past the extras provided to the potential. (i'm not a girvan dempsey fan!)
    They do but these regional sides train together a good bit but wont be able to cope with school training together 3/4 times a weke.
    The problem is about kids moving to a rugby school and thats why restricting movement is a good thing. For better growth of the game you need to improve the structures and training kids receive be that in each club as well as talented club players getting extra training/coaching at a regional/county/provincial level. Thats why restriction on kids moving for schools cup is a great thing overall.
    errlloyd wrote: »
    I don't think a state school could have made that transition. We had a headmaster who had resources and wanted us to be better at rugby. He made a big deal out of it. At the same time they got some help. One of my best mates is a senior coach at a similar school to St Andrews. Another school that produces a provincial player once every 5 years or so, and had a decent cup run a few years ago. He had an all day coaching workshop with Stuart Lancaster recently. Apart from behind helpful, it also sounded genuinely inspiring and motivating. Makes him throw more into his job. That stuff helps too.
    A non fee paying school. Theyre all state schools....
    Can make that transition. You only have to look at work done in Fintans Sutton, Temple Carrig Greystones and they can


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  • Administrators Posts: 54,110 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭awec


    A whole host of rugby-related things from the people to the processes. But certainly the kiwis don't just point at the 50 million people in England with London as their capital and assume they shouldn't be capable of bettering them.

    A whole host of what? Can I have some specifics?

    I gave you various reasons as to why I think Leinster have advantages, you dismissed them as red herrings without explanation. And now are going on about vague things like "a whole host of rugby-related things".

    Do you think the reason Leinster's academy is miles ahead is that the Leinster coaches work harder? Is it longer hours? Obviously the idea that the Leinster coaches have more players of a higher standard to work with has no bearing at all.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 37,978 ✭✭✭✭irishbucsfan


    awec wrote: »
    I never boiled this down to PURELY population, others just oversimplified it to that to try and make their point. Population is a factor among many others that have to be considered.

    You were the first person to mention general population. I asked about playing population, and most of your points have been about that.

    And that's why I asked how different are they really? Surely if there was a massive difference then Leinster would have twice the number of clubs? Unless Leinster have a massively abnormal attrition rate post-school, which again would be interesting to see.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,616 ✭✭✭✭errlloyd


    A non fee paying school. Theyre all state schools....
    Can make that transition. You only have to look at work done in Fintans Sutton, Temple Carrig Greystones and they can

    I'll rephrase, Andrews could not have made that transition if it was a purely state funded school, in my opinion. Fintans are an inspiring success story, but huge credit goes to Suttonians as well as the school.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 37,978 ✭✭✭✭irishbucsfan


    awec wrote: »
    A whole host of what? Can I have some specifics?

    I gave you various reasons as to why I think Leinster have advantages, you dismissed them as red herrings without explanation. And now are going on about vague things like "a whole host of rugby-related things".

    Do you think the reason Leinster's academy is miles ahead is that the Leinster coaches work harder? Is it longer hours? Obviously the idea that the Leinster coaches have more players of a higher standard to work with has no bearing at all.

    The specifics don't actually matter though, is my point. The point is that general population and economic factors are not a precursor to success and New Zealand are a good example of that. The fact I'm not an expert on sports development is totally irrelevant.

    You made points based on no evidence, so I dismissed them with a similar amount of evidence. All I asked was, what is the difference in playing populations? If someone has information along those lines it'd be really interesting to see.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 3,585 ✭✭✭irishfan9


    Has helped but Michaels are just part of same set up as already there. Fee paying school in south Dublin. Its great work put in but improvements in Navan RFC/Enniscorthy etc are more impressive and better to promote/highlight

    if you want to highlight growth of game sure, if you want an example of success in producing professional rugby players then Michaels can't be beat as an example.

    the only enniscorthy play who is a pro is Josh Murphy, someone who played mini's with Enniscorthy but went to school in Michaels... if he had never went to Michaels it's unlikely he'd be in the academy.


  • Administrators Posts: 54,110 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭awec


    The specifics don't actually matter though, is my point. The point is that general population and economic factors are not a precursor to success and New Zealand are a good example of that. The fact I'm not an expert on sports development is totally irrelevant.

    You made points based on no evidence, so I dismissed them with a similar amount of evidence. All I asked was, what is the difference in playing populations? If someone has information along those lines it'd be really interesting to see.

    What evidence do you want for me to support my points?

    Rugby Union is the major sport in New Zealand. This is an advantage for the NZRU. They have the benefit of practically every child playing the sport.

    I am not sure how you think this debunks my points.

    I find it curious that you dismiss my points with little explanation, but can offer no other reason as to why you think Leinster are much better. I can only summise that you think it's down purely to the work of the Leinster coaching staff. The fact they have loads of private fee paying schools is not a factor after all, because economics is a red herring. The fact that more and more people are moving to greater Dublin is not an issue either, because an increased middle class playing population that is capable of sending its kids to these private schools is irrelevant too.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 45,433 ✭✭✭✭thomond2006


    Shoulder injury for Bowe. Les Kiss quoted on PR saying up to 8 weeks out. :(


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,967 ✭✭✭✭The Lost Sheep


    irishfan9 wrote: »
    given new rules players aren't moving to schools anymore.. is that a good thing? hard to know...

    people have complained about the Michaels players getting academy places under dempsey, but in the main they have all performed when called upon by the senior side..

    Leinster u19 clubs played a non full strength michaels side recently and lost 52-0.
    It is a good thing banning moves to schools but leinster need to ensure clubs players with potential to play to high level can get access to extra training etc through regional squads like expanding shane horgan cup at under 16 level and having an under 18 version for example

    That doesnt mean leinster u19 clubs are bad. They were a scratch side and wouldnt just have been a lot of the under 18 interpro side from prev year and were playing a schools side prepping for cup very close to the cup
    errlloyd wrote: »
    I'll rephrase, Andrews could not have made that transition if it was a purely state funded school, in my opinion. Fintans are an inspiring success story, but huge credit goes to Suttonians as well as the school.
    I really dont believe that. Schools can make transition if purely state funded. With correct level of support from teachers, parents, local clubs


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 37,978 ✭✭✭✭irishbucsfan


    awec wrote: »
    What evidence do you want for me to support my points?

    Rugby Union is the major sport in New Zealand. This is an advantage for the NZRU. They have the benefit of practically every child playing the sport.

    I am not sure how you think this debunks my points.

    I find it curious that you dismiss my points with little explanation, but can offer no other reason as to why you think Leinster are much better. I can only summise that you think it's down purely to the work of the Leinster coaching staff. The fact they have loads of private fee paying schools is not a factor after all, because economics is a red herring. The fact that more and more people are moving to greater Dublin is not an issue either, because an increased middle class playing population that is capable of sending its kids to these private schools is irrelevant too.

    I’ve literally said what figures I’d love to see in nearly every post in this thread today. Not sure how many times I need to say it!!

    As if a bunch of people moving to Dublin is relevant if they’re not playing rugby. If Meath was added to Ulster tomorrow it would provide 0 benefit to Ulster rugby because those lads would try to boil a rugby ball if you gave them one! Playing populations matter, not general populations or economic factors.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,375 ✭✭✭✭prawnsambo


    awec wrote: »
    I find it curious that you dismiss my points with little explanation, but can offer no other reason as to why you think Leinster are much better. I can only summise that you think it's down purely to the work of the Leinster coaching staff. The fact they have loads of private fee paying schools is not a factor after all, because economics is a red herring. The fact that more and more people are moving to greater Dublin is not an issue either, because an increased middle class playing population that is capable of sending its kids to these private schools is irrelevant too.
    I think success has a lot to do with it. Leinster have been very successful in recent years and that gives rugby a very high profile in the province. Then you have the high level of competition at schools level that basically has the schools resourcing their programs to a very high standard. It wouldn't be an exaggeration to say that schools players are being coached and prepared to a professional standard.

    That makes it a very seamless transition to academy and senior professional ranks.


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  • Administrators Posts: 54,110 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭awec


    prawnsambo wrote: »
    I think success has a lot to do with it. Leinster have been very successful in recent years and that gives rugby a very high profile in the province. Then you have the high level of competition at schools level that basically has the schools resourcing their programs to a very high standard.It wouldn't be an exaggeration to say that schools players are being coached and prepared to a professional standard.

    That makes it a very seamless transition to academy and senior professional ranks.

    Ok. So why is it that Leinster can afford to do this and the other provinces cannot?

    IBF says it has nothing to do with economics or an increased population to feed these schools, so I would assume the fact there are lots of private fee paying schools is not the answer here. I am curious as to what exactly Leinster Rugby have done to enable this.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,616 ✭✭✭✭errlloyd


    I really dont believe that. Schools can make transition if purely state funded. With correct level of support from teachers, parents, local clubs

    Yes, if you insist on being unbelievably pedantic, with the correct level of voluntary support and motivation and parents and teachers and local clubs St Andrews could probably win Texas Level High School Football. Nothing is impossible when you have access to that. But Andrews didn't have those supports The Andrews I was in, the years I was there, COULD NOT have put in place the S&C facilities, brought in the overseas coaches they brought in, without the extra funding they had available to them. We had a few motivated teachers, but our best coaches were external. James Winstanley, a South African former pro was brought in. He had been through the Northampton Saints academy, and though he never played at a high level, he was at minimum a professional rugby player once.

    I am fairly sure it was mostly a vanity project on behalf of the principal, and it wasn't a particularly popular one. It was kind of cringy when he'd celebrate rugby mediocrity and ignore international level hockey success. Not all schools principals can do what he did, having money is a massive advantage.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,742 ✭✭✭✭AdamD


    awec wrote: »
    Ulster has pretty unique issues when it comes to the player base. Issues that we're thankfully starting to get over, but it will be a long and slow process.

    For one thing you have the fact that 50% of people get absolutely zero exposure to rugby. It's not played in their schools and there are no rugby clubs where they live.

    Another issue being that no matter your political views, 1/3 of Ulster kind of sticks out from the rest of it and for historical reasons many people in those counties have little to no affinity with Ulster Rugby. I recent years that has certainly got better, but it'll be a long time before Ulster see the benefits of that.

    I never boiled this down to PURELY population, others just oversimplified it to that to try and make their point. Population is a factor among many others that have to be considered.
    You keep saying this, how is Dublin any different? Outside of private schools rugby isn't big at all. And yes coaching makes a big difference, otherwise your complaints about Kiss et. all would be irrelevant ;)

    Larger population is certainly a factor too but coaching and the academy system has to be recognised too.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 37,978 ✭✭✭✭irishbucsfan


    awec wrote: »
    Ok. So why is it that Leinster can afford to do this and the other provinces cannot?

    IBF says it has nothing to do with economics or an increased population to feed these schools, so I would assume the fact there are lots of private fee paying schools is not the answer here. I am curious as to what exactly Leinster Rugby have done to enable this.

    If it was caused by the number of private schools in Leinster we’d be seeing a massive number of private school produced players from an even distribution of schools.

    So where are Kings Hospital? Where are Headfort? Where are Wesley? These are the schools where the money are if I remember right.

    Instead it’s actually a tiny number of schools producing most players. So your hypothesis doesn’t stand up to scrutiny. We could give Ulster 46/50 private schools and we’d still have most of the quality. So clearly it’s not the number of private schools or their catchment area, it’s what they’re doing with young players when they’re there.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,728 ✭✭✭Former Former



    So where are Kings Hospital? Where are Headfort? Where are Wesley? These are the schools where the money are if I remember right.

    Co-ed schools. Too many distractions...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,967 ✭✭✭✭The Lost Sheep


    errlloyd wrote: »
    Yes, if you insist on being unbelievably pedantic, with the correct level of voluntary support and motivation and parents and teachers and local clubs St Andrews could probably win Texas Level High School Football. Nothing is impossible when you have access to that. But Andrews didn't have those supports The Andrews I was in, the years I was there, COULD NOT have put in place the S&C facilities, brought in the overseas coaches they brought in, without the extra funding they had available to them. We had a few motivated teachers, but our best coaches were external. James Winstanley, a South African former pro was brought in. He had been through the Northampton Saints academy, and though he never played at a high level, he was at minimum a professional rugby player once.

    I am fairly sure it was mostly a vanity project on behalf of the principal, and it wasn't a particularly popular one. It was kind of cringy when he'd celebrate rugby mediocrity and ignore international level hockey success. Not all schools principals can do what he did, having money is a massive advantage.
    Im not being pedantic. And you're just being ridiculous.
    You only have to look at clubs and level of work put in like Bruff rfc for example
    Of course money is a massive advantage but it doesnt at all have to be or is a reason schools cant progress. Schools dont need to or have to put in these expensive s&c facilties etc for success to happen


  • Administrators Posts: 54,110 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭awec


    If it was caused by the number of private schools in Leinster we’d be seeing a massive number of private school produced players from an even distribution of schools.

    So where are Kings Hospital? Where are Headfort? Where are Wesley? These are the schools where the money are if I remember right.

    Instead it’s actually a tiny number of schools producing most players. So your hypothesis doesn’t stand up to scrutiny. We could give Ulster 46/50 private schools and we’d still have most of the quality. So clearly it’s not the number of private schools or their catchment area, it’s what they’re doing with young players when they’re there.
    Why?

    Do you honestly and genuinely believe the number private schools with their large amounts of cash, as well as the large (and ever growing) middle class that is there to fund these schools has absolutely no benefit for Leinster Rugby? Seriously?

    Do you think if you send the coaches from Michaels to Methody they'd start churning out the same number of players that Michaels do now? If not, why not?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,616 ✭✭✭✭errlloyd


    Im not being pedantic. And you're just being ridiculous.
    You only have to look at clubs and level of work put in like Bruff rfc for example
    Of course money is a massive advantage but it doesnt at all have to be or is a reason schools cant progress. Schools dont need to or have to put in these expensive s&c facilties etc for success to happen

    No, you're being massively pedantic, and I am being entirely honest and accurate about a situation that I was closely involved in.

    I said "Andrews could not have made the transition, in my opinion"

    and your response was basically.

    "Yes they could, if they had all of these **list of resources that they didn't have** at their disposal"

    It was the second time in a row you called me out on this board for not qualifying a statement to your satisfaction. In your most recent post you seem to imply that I said something I definitely did not. I never said "schools" needed money. I said "my school needed money". I don't know why you feel the need to point out that there are other ways to succeed when at no point did I say it was the only way for any school or club to succeed - I merely suggested it was the only way that Andrews were going to succeed right then.

    If you wish, you can continue to list all the conceivable ways in which Andrews could have got better at producing rugby talent, that didn't involve investment. And I can explain why each one wasn't likely to happen there in 2007.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 37,978 ✭✭✭✭irishbucsfan


    awec wrote: »
    Why?

    As I said, we could send you 46/50 schools and still get almost all the quality. Think about it... That clearly shows the number of private schools is not relevant, the (rugby) quality of those schools is, or rather the quality of players they produce.

    And there’s no real reason whatsoever Ulsters schools couldn’t get there given the same support and development that saw Michaels get there in recent years.

    Either that or they put something in the water fountains in Blackrock and Michaels. Which is also reproducible for Ulster I guess.


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  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    awec wrote: »
    Why?

    Do you honestly and genuinely believe the number private schools with their large amounts of cash, as well as the large (and ever growing) middle class that is there to fund these schools has absolutely no benefit for Leinster Rugby? Seriously?

    I can't speak for all rugby playing school but the ones I'd know well enough haven't noticeably increased their enrolment in decades.
    awec wrote: »
    Why?
    Do you think if you send the coaches from Michaels to Methody they'd start churning out the same number of players that Michaels do now? If not, why not?

    I'd say that's exactly what would happen... eventually. Schools are great for sports for two reasons. Unlike a club, you can't just stop showing up on a Saturday so schools tend to hold onto WAY more of their players through the years.

    Schools team players also tend to spend a lot of non training time with each other socialising or in school but often with a rugby ball floating around.

    But the big thing with the top rugby schools in Leinster is that they are all used to dining at the top table and they expect to be there. Lads who are good enough to make the top teams in the top schools know that they may potentially be good enough to get into an academy and a career as a professional rugby player is not a pipe dream.

    In places where it's less likely you will start losing loads of lads from junior cert on.

    It's not that different in the GAA, some clubs are much bigger feeder clubs to the Dublin panel than others and this comes down to coaching but also track record and belief in my opinion.

    Getting that culture right and crystallising the expected standards with coaches coming from a top school to another would take time but with the same raw ingredients I'd back it to happen eventually.

    I think Leinster just have a perfect storm of ingredients that has delivered a good generation of players. Things may improve or we may find that this is a golden time for the academies.

    It's not that long ago that we couldn't produce forwards but efforts were made and now were certainly the top back row factory in the world, whatever about other forward positions.

    I don't know anything about the Ulster academy so I don't want to comment on what they are doing right or wrong, but the wider game at grass roots would look to need an overhaul which gets pushed down the priority list when the first team is struggling with more immediate problems.


  • Administrators Posts: 54,110 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭awec


    Excellent news so, all the IRFU need to do is move some of the Leinster schools coaches to the other provinces and we'll all be overflowing with elite talent in a few years time. It's that simple.

    The Leinster schools coaches must be the most talented bunch of individuals of any sport on the planet. It's amazing they haven't been poached by professional sides at this stage because their coaching ability must be off the charts.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 37,978 ✭✭✭✭irishbucsfan


    awec wrote: »
    Excellent news so, all the IRFU need to do is move some of the Leinster schools coaches to the other provinces and we'll all be overflowing with elite talent in a few years time. It's that simple.

    They don’t have to move coaches, the coaches themselves aren’t the silver bullet.

    It’s PDOs and PROs and CROs and all kinds of other Os. And that is something Leinster did very early on to great effect. So we’re seeing schools become massively efficient, we’re seeing clubs become far more productive. And it’s not something that was given to us on a silver platter.

    Michaels didn’t just get lucky and hire a great coach, no one here is claiming that even though you clearly would prefer if that was our argument.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    awec wrote: »
    Excellent news so, all the IRFU need to do is move some of the Leinster schools coaches to the other provinces and we'll all be overflowing with elite talent in a few years time. It's that simple.

    The Leinster schools coaches must be the most talented bunch of individuals of any sport on the planet. The amount of talent they produce with so little is incredible.

    Given how much you moan about Les Kiss, it's pretty odd that you would then completely dismiss the benefit of good coaching.


  • Administrators Posts: 54,110 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭awec


    They don’t have to move coaches, the coaches themselves aren’t the silver bullet.

    It’s PDOs and PROs and CROs and all kinds of other Os. And that is something Leinster did very early on to great effect.

    Michaels didn’t just get lucky and hire a great coach, no one here is claiming that even though you clearly would prefer if that was our argument.
    Indeed, while taking advantage of the fact it has a lot of private schools that can afford to coach players to the level that they need, and a large middle class able to afford those things.

    No wait, sorry. Having schools that can afford to coach at a high level and having a middle class able to pay for it is irrelevant.

    Leinster could have sent those PDOs to any school in the province and they'd be churning out talent now.


  • Administrators Posts: 54,110 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭awec


    Given how much you moan about Les Kiss, it's pretty odd that you would then completely dismiss the benefit of good coaching.
    Absolutely nowhere have I done that.

    My point is the Leinster coaches have a lot more to work with than any other province. It wasn't Leinster Rugby that made this so.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 37,978 ✭✭✭✭irishbucsfan


    awec wrote: »
    Indeed, while taking advantage of the fact it has a lot of private schools that can afford to coach players to the level that they need, and a large middle class able to afford those things.

    No wait, sorry. Having schools that can afford to coach at a high level and having a middle class able to pay for it is irrelevant.

    Leinster could have sent those PDOs to any school in the province and they'd be churning out talent now.

    You’re just not listening to the points. The number of private schools is not relevant, that’s very clear. Surely you can understand that after it being explained right?


  • Administrators Posts: 54,110 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭awec


    You’re just not listening to the points. The number of private schools is not relevant, that’s very clear. Surely you can understand that after it being explained right?

    Well, that's what you keep saying, yet are unable to back it up. Can you explain how you think having more private schools is not advantageous for Leinster?

    Look at the Leinster senior cup. Compare it to Munster and Ulster. That's not advantageous?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,967 ✭✭✭✭The Lost Sheep


    I can't speak for all rugby playing school but the ones I'd know well enough haven't noticeably increased their enrolment in decades.


    I'd say that's exactly what would happen... eventually. Schools are great for sports for two reasons. Unlike a club, you can't just stop showing up on a Saturday so schools tend to hold onto WAY more of their players through the years.
    But there then is issues with schools and retention into the adult game. Not always an issue with the "stronger"/"better" kids but is with the more social players who may play a year or two after school at 20s but then "retire" aged 20/21
    In places where it's less likely you will start losing loads of lads from junior cert on.

    It's not that different in the GAA, some clubs are much bigger feeder clubs to the Dublin panel than others and this comes down to coaching but also track record and belief in my opinion.
    Yes but if you can have clubs also playing it helps retain kids. Playing 3rds or 4ths can demoralise some but if theyre in a club and are on main team/only team in an age group it could be difference between them playing and not.
    I think Leinster just have a perfect storm of ingredients that has delivered a good generation of players. Things may improve or we may find that this is a golden time for the academies.

    It's not that long ago that we couldn't produce forwards but efforts were made and now were certainly the top back row factory in the world, whatever about other forward positions.

    I don't know anything about the Ulster academy so I don't want to comment on what they are doing right or wrong, but the wider game at grass roots would look to need an overhaul which gets pushed down the priority list when the first team is struggling with more immediate problems.
    Considering the schools game is still quite strong in Ulster there is an overhaul needed and perhaps a change involving more integration between schools and clubs is needed as well as change to the actual schools cup format. and integration of players into adult rugby. there is virtually no under 20 rugby in ulster which is a good thing IMO but perhaps there should be more age graded 20s or even under 22/23 rugby to try keep more playing rather than once you leave school you're in open grade rugby


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    awec wrote: »
    Indeed, while taking advantage of the fact it has a lot of private schools that can afford to coach players to the level that they need, and a large middle class able to afford those things.

    No wait, sorry. Having schools that can afford to coach at a high level and having a middle class able to pay for it is irrelevant.

    Leinster could have sent those PDOs to any school in the province and they'd be churning out talent now.

    Cash and investment is one thing, but coaching and track record are a good deal important. Have a look at the secondary schools GAA champions list in order of titles won.

    No surprised there is just a handful of schools hoarding most of the titles. Is that because those schools are in wealthy middle class areas? I didn't realise Longford was the centre for capitalism in Leinster.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 37,978 ✭✭✭✭irishbucsfan


    awec wrote: »
    Well, that's what you keep saying, yet are unable to back it up. Can you explain how you think having more private schools is not advantageous for Leinster?

    Look at the Leinster senior cup. Compare it to Munster and Ulster. That's not advantageous?

    I have backed it up. Either you’re not reading it or you don’t understand.


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