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28th December 2022
03:22pm GMT

"Everyone from the north-west of England is from Ireland anyway," he joked, at the time. "Coming to Ireland and living in Dublin is almost like going home for me. Just the people and family-type atmosphere."Farrell and his wife both have Irish 'ancestry that goes back three or four generations' and he settled in quickly, and soon became indispensable to Schmidt. Still, under the Kiwi (and Stuart Lancaster before that), Farrell had his own thoughts on how he would lead whenever he was entrusted with the top job. He succeeded Schmidt after the 2019 World Cup and endured as tough a start as one is likely to have - rebuilding a team with shattered confidence, bringing in new blood and dealing with the impact of Covid-19 on fixtures and training camps. It took 15 months but the tail-end of the 2021 Six Nations showed glimmers of light. The championship was lost after early losses to Wales and France, but Ireland finished on a three-game winning spin, had an unbeaten summer and autumn, which included a thrilling home win over the All Blacks. Ireland won the Triple Crown in 2022 but defeat to France, in Paris, cost them the championship, and a Grand Slam. They headed to New Zealand, last summer, with many supporters, and pundits, fearful of what the All Blacks could do to Ireland at the end of another long season. Ireland, and their midweek side, lost their first two games and whitewash talk was a common topic, but Farrell has made his Ireland team of sterner stuff. 'Tackling the All Blacks' - a documentary set to air on RTÉ One on December 29 - shows two crucial Andy Farrell moments before the engrossing Ireland comeback began.
"I thought it was the most important two hours of our tour," said Peter O'Mahony, "how we broke that game down and saw what we had left out there, at times.""If we could put our game out there," Tadhg Furlong commented, "the way we wanted it to be played, we'd be in the hunt."
"They need to know - when it counts - that we are ON IT, together, physically. "How do we do that? You make sure that every single moment is [once] a minute, it's every, single second. Every, single second. "You've a job to make sure that your teammates, either side of you, can feel that physicality is in your bones. That's what it has to be, as an Irishman when it counts. Because if it means enough, then it will count!"Ireland went out and laced straight into the All Blacks, scoring an early try through Andrew Porter and never looking back. They went on to win 23-12 for their first Test triumph over New Zealand, on their patch. "There were some boys that really stepped up that day," winger James Lowe recalled. "We were on one, that day, and we reaped the rewards."
"What about that game? What about that, eh?! Whaddya think? Aye, Tommy, yes!! "Ireland, IRELAND! See ya big guy! Yes. YES!!"It is a lovely, personal moment and one of the stand-out pieces in the 50-minute documentary. "You'll never do anything better than that," the Ireland coach tells his victorious squad, soon after that call. "You won't. That's the hardest thing in world rugby" Tackling The All Blacks will air on RTÉ One at 6.30pm on Thursday, December 29th. Related articles.
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