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9th March 2022
04:59pm GMT

Sean O'Brien is still in touch with some of the players in the current Ireland camp, for the 2022 Six Nations, and he notes how different it appears to be from the detail-driven caps run by Joe Schmidt. "We became too rigid," O'Brien reflects. "We didn't evolve, like the [Ireland] boys have now." On JOE UK's House of Rugby [LISTEN from 43:00 below], O'Brien and former England captain Dylan Hartley spoke of how similar camps are under Andy Farrell and current England boss Eddie Jones. [caption id="attachment_252286" align="aligncenter" width="594"]"I speak for the group in saying that it’s been an incredibly enjoyable month. I was chatting inside and having a beer there and it’s just been great fun. We’ve learned a huge amount as a group and the cohesion that we have built has brought us to that next level of friendship which is so important.
“I was chatting with Hugo [Keenan] there, and I have loved the month. It’s probably the most enjoyable one of my career so far, which has been a while now. It’s been great."
Eddie Jones and Andy Farrell pictured at Vicarage Road in 2009, when the Australian was Saracens 'Technical Advisor' and Farrell was his assistant. (Photo by David Rogers/Getty Images)[/caption]
"Eddie is all for the players. I just think the environment that was created before [under Lancaster] was very much school teacher and student. It was very much like, 'This is what we're doing', 'This is what you're going to say at media time'. "Whereas Eddie sat down and said, 'This is going to be your team. We're going to have some non-negotiables on the field, until you guys are good enough to come up with your own stuff. But it's your team - do what you want with it'. "There had been little things, over the years, like post-match functions, days off. It was all so rigid. Everyone else was thought of first, instead of the actual team, or the talent. We just pushed back on a few things - can we do this, can we say that, can we wear this? And, all of a sudden, it was like big wins for the boys, as they had come from such a strict regime. The buy-in was brilliant! "Eddie was so forthcoming with us driving our own environment. When a group of people drive their own environment, this round table, it's more empowering. Everyone feeds into it, rather than being told what to do the whole time. "We came from a tee-total culture to Eddie. He literally put beer on the table, around the week."[caption id="attachment_250864" align="aligncenter" width="800"]
Andy Farrell is now into his third Six Nations campaign as Ireland head coach. (Photo by Harry Murphy/Sportsfile)[/caption]
"It's funny you say that. That's what it is like in the Ireland camp, at the minute. That's the way it is with Faz. "It's an enjoyable place to be when you go in there. It's not like you're thinking, 'I need to do this or that'. You're not rigid.""You can be yourself," Hartley exclaimed. "It was a big change for us [in 2016] but, long-term, I can see the benefits now. Players are driving it themselves, now. Hopefully they benefitted from what we put in place." WATCH HOUSE OF RUGBY HERE:
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