Not unlike Luke Fitzgeraldâs career to date, a large chunk of yesterdayâs sitting was taken up cataloguing war wounds.
âThey donât get me to do talks about rugby anymore, just about injuries,â he said of a recent visit to the Santry Sports Clinic to lecture âabout ACL injuries to physios and doctorsâ.
âThey were asking about the mental side of rehabilitation.â
Of this he knows too much for a man aged 26.
The would-be, could-be successor to Brian OâDriscoll, in both blue and green, has lingered on such thoughts for hours upon unwanted hours.
Guinea pig
He has become the ideal guinea pig, really. Child prodigy, snapped up by Leinster straight out of school in 2006, capped by Eddie OâSullivan at 19, Lions Test winger by 21.
But also never been to a world cup, butchered by two cruciate tears and a neck problem that contributed to the IRFU retracting a contract offer in March 2012 (he is still only on a Leinster deal).
The fourth coming has proved an instant success and left wing looks almost certain to be filled by Fitzgerald when Joe Schmidt announces the Ireland team to face Scotland on Friday.
Fitzgeraldâs candid 35-minute interview with the daily media yesterday began with a tip of the hat to his prematurely retired team-mate Eoin OâMalleyâs new venture (a pub on Dublinâs Dawson Street) before showering praise on Brian OâDriscoll. For his off-field guidance.
Itâs no great secret that Rob Penney tried to tempt Fitzgerald south last year. âI thought he was a really nice guy and it seemed like he had a bit of a vision going forward. I think you can see that now.
âI talked to Brian, on my dadâs recommendation. He is a smart guy, who has managed himself really well. His advice was really surprising. He was really unbiased on why I should stay (with Leinster). He was really honest. For a guy who has been at the club a really long time it would be easy to get caught up in the blue army thing but he didnât.â
Mute
partner
OâDriscoll is
a mute partner in Ikon management, who just negotiated the most valuable contract in Irish rugby history for Jamie Heaslip.
We kept coming back to the issue of injuries and whether itâs about a lack of access to iron-pumping as teenagers or simply bad luck. Or both.
âIâve thought about that and how guys progress from their last two years in school and what theyâre focusing on in terms of exercises and things. I would say you can probably prevent a couple of injuries that a lot of those guys have had.
âThe neck thing was a degenerative thing. Iâd say I could have prevented it. Thatâs where you get into a discussion of what kinds of exercises guys are doing. You look at all the kids today and theyâre huge. But can he stand 10 games in a row?â
Fitzgeraldâs neck problems showed him the bright lights of retirement. He turned away.
âAt the end it was the doctor who said to me, âLook, itâs an increased risk on a negligible riskâ. âThere was definitely a mental hurdle to jump there. I suppose it was down to that unfulfilled part of my mind, where I felt like I wanted to come back. All those kinds of things come into play and I feel like Iâm justified in this point of time having come back. There was some serious risk involved in coming back.â
Not that he wants to dwell on such moments. He was in fine form yesterday, even addressing a criticism consistently hurled at him by the untrained eye. That he is too good sometimes.
âPeople would say âover-runningâ, Iâd say yeah, thatâs definitely right, I definitely did that quite a bit.
Hard to stop
âAnd I suppose Iâve tried to be more of an option for longer because I feel once I have the ball Iâm going to be hard to stop.
âI can come off either foot, I can get stronger in the upper body and I can hand off as well and brush out of tackles a bit more this year which has helped me as well.â
One day he may even play at the world cup.
Article source: http://uk.eurosport.yahoo.com/news/rugby-cipriani-backed-england-return-060947490--spt.html
Ireland calls once again for returning Luke Fitzgerald
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