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1st January 2019
07:49am GMT

'It was a real exciting period,' Fitzgerald adds. I'd just come out of school and obviously I was really ambitious. I trained really hard all that summer, I mean I put on about 10 kilos, so it was everything happening really quickly for me.
"The training was great, I love all that stuff anyway. It was a really exciting period. What I remember was the name getting read out at the meeting. I had an idea and I was thinking, 'Eddie picked me on the right wing' and I was much more comfortable on the other side."Fitzgerald appeared alongside fellow debutants Stephen Ferris and Jamie Heaslip. Paddy Wallace, who scored 26 points, was named man-of-the-match. Ireland won 61-17, then the fun really began. In 2006, the Irish team still went by a much-cherished initiation routine for new players. The player in question was to drink whatever his senior colleague ordered for the two of them. Fitzgerald reveals to dodged the rite of passage.
"Jim McShane [Ireland's team doctor], in fairness, was a life saver that day. He said, "Listen, it looks like he got a bit of a knock on the head, he better head home early." "I hadn't got a knock on the head, he just was saving me because it was looking pretty intense! It was my first experience, although I'd some experience training with Leinster, but there was some big boys there and they'd be well able for their shenanigans. "I was only a young kid, so he saw an opportunity to save me and he did. I was forever thankful for avoiding probably the worst hangover of all time."Close call. Fitzgerald would go on to play 31 Tests for Ireland as well as making 141 Leinster appearances before injury cut his career short, aged 28, after suffering a neck injury in the 2016 PRO12 final. *Updated from story originally posted in May 2015.
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