Talking points as Ireland begin two-Test tour

Talking points as Ireland begin two-Test tour

Inpho

With 16 players and head coach Andy Farrell on British and Irish Lions duty, Ireland’s squad for this month’s two Tests against Georgia and Portugal was always going to be almost unrecognisable.

Fresh faces ready to step up

Jack Aungier, Shayne Bolton and Ben Murphy in Ireland trainingInpho

Even before his playing career came to an end almost 10 years ago, Paul O’Connell felt like an Irish head coach in waiting. The absence of Farrell for this trip gives him his first opportunity to lead the side he represented on 108 occasions.

Such is the youthful nature of his summer squad, centre Stuart McCloskey is the only player on the trip who played with or against the Munster legend.

Ireland arrived in Georgia on Wednesday with 13 uncapped players in their number after Ulster prop Scott Wilson was added to the squad just before departure.

Wing Tommy O’Brien and second row Darragh Murray will make their debuts against Georgia, while the uncapped Michael Milne, Jack Aungier, Tom Ahern and Ben Murphy are all on the bench.

Farrell has previously spoken cautiously about the idea of simply handing out international caps although this tour has a different feel with interim attack coach Mike Prendergast saying last week it “would be the intention” to have all of the tourists get game-time across the two Tests.

Auditions open to replace squad stalwarts

Ryan BairdInpho

The 2025 Six Nations brought the curtain down on the long and distinguished Test careers of Peter O’Mahony, Conor Murray and Cian Healy.

The trio have been a mainstay of the international panel for over a decade and earned a combined 376 caps in green. Indeed, nobody in history played more for Ireland than Healy.

Their retirements, which in the case of Murray is solely from the international game, offer up opportunities for others to crack what has been a relatively settled matchday squad.

Leinster’s Jack Boyle had already been putting pressure on Healy after the 23-year-old made his debut against Wales in the Six Nations, and will be in pole position, but Munster’s Michael Milne and Paddy McCarthy, who is the younger brother of British and Irish Lions lock Joe McCarthy, will also be keen to grab their opportunities to impress.

Coupled with the form of Jamison Gibson-Park, Munster’s Craig Casey, who missed the Six Nations through injury, had already largely edged ahead of Murray for both province and the Test side.

The 26-year-old will step up to captain Ireland for the first time on this tour but will be backed up by the uncapped pair of Ben Murphy and Nathan Doak, with the former named on the bench against Georgia.

With usual skipper Caelan Doris injured, and Jack Conan and Josh van der Flier away with the Lions, plenty of back rows figure to be handed the chance to stake a claim to step up in O’Mahony’s absence.

Latest chapter of Crowley and Prendergast debate

Sam Prendergast and Jack Crowley after facing ArgentinaInpho

From the moment Leinster’s Sam Prendegast was named to start against Australia in November, the 22-year-old has been at the centre of the fiercest debate in Irish rugby.

When Johnny Sexton retired after the 2023 World Cup, it was Munster’s Jack Crowley who was given first crack at establishing himself as the former world player of the year’s long-term successor.

Crowley largely impressed as Ireland won the Six Nations Grand Slam in 2024 but, by the end of the calendar year, had appeared to cede the jersey to the young challenger.

Leinster’s Prendergast started the first four games of the 2025 Six Nations, although the more experienced player got the nod for the concluding game against Italy in Rome.

Ireland have not had such a back and forth for their fly-half berth since Sexton began to challenge Ronan O’Gara almost 15 years ago and every selection is scrutinised by the public, a situation only heightened by provincial rivalries.

Chance for Stockdale to reignite his Test career

Jacob Stockdale scores a try against New Zealand at the Aviva Stadium in 2018Inpho

With Ireland having drawn from largely the same pool for the past number of years for their matchday squads, it is natural that plenty of attention will be devoted to those with little or no international experience on this trip.

There are a few others, though, who are looking to offer a reminder of what they can do at this level. Chief among them, the squad’s most capped player – Jacob Stockdale.

It was during a Lions tour, when the invitational side was in New Zealand eight years ago, that Ulster wing Stockdale made a try-scoring international debut against the United States.

His first 18 months as an international included setting a record for tries in a single Six Nations campaign, since bettered by France’s Louis Bielle-Biarrey only this year, and an unforgettable score to clinch Ireland’s first win on home soil against the All Blacks.

Injuries, some questions over his defence, and the qualification on residency of Leinster’s James Lowe, have ensured the 29-year-old has been a more peripheral figure in recent times, making only three international appearances in the past four years.

Scrum test awaits in Tbilisi

Jack Boyle celebrates Leinster's URC victoryInpho

Healy is not the only experienced front row campaigner to be absent this summer.

With the 37-year-old retired, and Andrew Porter, Dan Sheehan, Ronan Kelleher, Tadhg Furlong and Finlay Bealham all with the Lions, Ireland will be without their first and second-choice units from recent seasons.

As a result, Saturday’s Test against a muscular Georgian side will provide a thorough examination of Ireland’s depth in a position recently considered so stretched that performance director David Humphreys placed a temporary ban on imported front row signings.

The emergence of Leinster trio Boyle, Gus McCarthy and Tom Clarkson during the 2024-25 season has eased those fears somewhat and it is those three who start together on Saturday.

Against a Georgian side historically renowned for their scrummaging prowess, and coached by former England hooker Richard Cockerill, the inexperienced visiting group will face a serious test of their mettle.

Related topics

  • Irish Rugby
  • Northern Ireland Sport
  • Rugby Union
  • Ireland Rugby Union

Source: BBC

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