Rugby World

JAMES RYAN

JAMES RYAN has had a charmed existence as a professional rugby player, a trophy-laden two years that have seen him become a European champion with Leinster, a Grand Slam winner with Ireland and the recipient of so many other awards that you fear for the stability of the shelving system in his place in Dublin.

He’d done all of that by the age of 22. He’s now 23 and has seen a little more of life in the game of late, some new exposure to its crueller realities. Though he was exceptional in Ireland’s 2019 Six Nations campaign – he was second only to Billy Vunipola in terms of carries, despite playing just four games, and swept the boards at the Irish Rugby Players Awards – the team slumped into a hole they never emerged from. From Six Nations to World Cup, things slowly unravelled as the Joe Schmidt era ground to the most anticlimactic end.

Most Ireland players don’t want to revisit Japan. Many have

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Rugby World

Rugby World3 min read
Courtney Lawes
FOR A while it looked like Courtney Lawes would finish as a one-club man. They are now an all-too rare commodity in a modern game where opportunities abound and loyalty is not always rewarded on both sides of the coin. Forward Lawes has been synonymo
Rugby World2 min read
Herbst Fiasco Was Human Error
MOST REFEREES don’t like to grab headlines or have their officiating put under scrutiny. Usually, the best compliment a ref can get is for no one to notice they were at the game and there’s nothing about them in the media. When officials do make the
Rugby World1 min read
We Are So Lucky To See Generational Talents
THROUGHOUT A recent trip to Hong Kong, it was interesting picking the brains of the athletes. Many sevens players, you see, are very proud of how hard it is to transition to their game. Wallaby great Michael Hooper, for example, is up against it to h

Related Books & Audiobooks