
UNDER DIFFERENT CIRCUMSTANCES Sean OâBrien would be in Carton House preparing for Paris.
Or failing that he might have been part of the annual exodus to the Cotswolds as the proud owner of a leading Cheltenham contender.
Instead heâs chatting to the media as an outsider looking in on a massive week for Irish rugby.
âIt is different when you are not involved,â he admits. An understatement for sure.
Rehab on the shoulder injury that ruled him out of what could be a momentous Six Nations campaign is going well, OâBrien explains, and his recovery is ahead of schedule.
There were setbacks â the damage was too severe to allow for keyhole surgery and then he picked up an infection â but nothing too serious.
But if Leinster fans had any faint hope of seeing their destructive flanker back in blue during the business end of the season, or if Joe Schmidt had saved a spot on the plane to Argentina, they need not have bothered. OâBrien has no plans to play again until next season.
Meanwhile, all eyes are on Saturday and the Six Nations decider against France. How hard has it been to miss out?
âI popped in to see some of the lads every now and again and there was just a great buzz around the squad. Thatâs what Iâm probably missing as well, being involved and having that feeling.
âThe opportunity they have now is brilliant. You work hard for a couple of years trying to improve things and when days like next Saturday come, they are the ones you want to be involved in.â

Source: Dan Sheridan/INPHO
Set against the backdrop of Brian OâDriscollâs retirement the fairytale finish is within grasp. The Grand Slam dream died in Twickenham but for a country that only has one Championship win since 1986, the consolation prize isnât half-bad.
Thereâs just one minor issue â Irelandâs terrible record in Paris â but OâBrien agrees that Ireland have been the best team in the tournament so far and if they continue in the same accurate manner, they can rightly believe.
âWeâre playing some nice rugby. Weâre physical, our breakdown is good, all the little aspects are working well.
âThe team are very clear on how they want to play and what their jobs are. Hopefully this weekend it will all go well for us.
âThe lads that are in there are probably used to winning, bar the England game, and the younger fellas will have especially grown in confidence.
âThey shouldnât be afraid going over to France. It was always a thing years ago where you never really wanted to go to France for your first cap or your second cap. Youâd be waiting years for another one.
âI donât think thatât the case any more. Weâve grown up a lot over the last five or six games.â

Source: Billy Stickland/INPHO
âGrowing up is realising that we can be the best team,â he continues when pressed to expand. âWe can be one of the superpowers of world rugby.
âBefore we probably accepted at times that we would just be satisfied with competing.
âThe players we have and the squad we have now, we can beat anybody. Thatâs what we had to realise after the All Blacks game. We should all be thinking that we should beat anybody in the world.
âItâs probably better now that we have Joe there. Weâve no excuses. We have the best coaching staff, we have the best players and the best squad weâve ever had in the Six Nations.
âYou see the replacements coming in and upping the pace of matches. Youâre going to need those replacements against New Zealand and South Africa. Theyâve all had it for years now. I think weâre in a way better place now.
âItâs something we all feel. I donât think you need to talk about it. Itâs a thinking thatâs there and you can start to feel it build and grow the whole time.
âA lot of the younger lads, even after the All Blacks game, got confidence from that. They realised that they could do a job on these lads. Thatâs what I mean about growing up â realising that we can beat the best teams in the world.â

If OâBrienâs negotiations with the IRFU had taken a different turn, he might realistically be sitting here with his bags packed for the Top 14.
Heâs delighted with the two-year contract extension he signed but laughs off the suggestion that heâs a homebird who could never leave the farm.
They have cows in France too, after all.
âIt wouldnât bother me to go. Everybody thinks thereâs no hope of me ever going anywhere and thatâs not the case.
âI manage myself and I make my own decisions. But certainly at some stage in my career, and Iâve said it before, I want to experience something different and itâs just now isnât the right time for that.
âThe player welfare programme weâve set up here was a big factor as well. Youâve seen in France, depending on what squad you go into, mind you, you could be playing every week or you could be swapped around every week.â
As Irish eyes turn towards Cheltenham for the next four days conversation inevitably turns towards The Tullow Tank, the five-year-old multiple Grade One winner that OâBrien co-owned with his friend Paul Duffin before selling on to Barry Connell.
The horse should have been one of Irelandâs leading chances this week but Connell decided not to send the Philip Fenton-trained novice.
Does he regret the decision to sell?
âWe liked him as well but we couldnât refuse what we were offered for him at the time. Thatâs the way it goes.â
In horse racing, as in rugby and in life, OâBrien will take it in his stride.
âCheck inâ to your local pub with the GUINNESS Plus App for a chance to take part in a rugby masterclass with Irish international Sean OâBrien
Sexton trusts in Schmidtâs game plan ahead of Parisian cup final
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Article source: http://www.walesonline.co.uk/sport/wales-sport-live-welsh-rugby-6791059
Schmidt"s Ireland believe they can be a world rugby "superpower", says envious ...
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