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27th November 2021
03:11pm GMT

"I think it was just a massive relief that I got there in the end. But I started that game at 6, and I never got capped again at 6, after that! Same as everyone else that gets capped - very proud day and great to have my family there. It's one I'll cherish and remember forever."McCarthy had a circuitous path to that day in Edinburgh, though. He had trained with Ireland U21s, back in 2002, but ultimately ended up representing England in the Junior World Championships. He would have to wait nine more years before he finally got to wear the Ireland jersey he had first set out to wear. On House of Rugby URC [LISTEN from 24:o0 below] McCarthy spoke with Greg O'Shea and Megan Williams about his long road to winning his first Test cap, 'Plastic Paddy' jibes and singing the Irish anthem.
"I was at Wasps from 2000 to 2003, and I was flying over to Dublin to do the training for the Six Nations. But I wasn't good enough, so wasn't getting in the team or getting in the squad. "I was then missing Under 21 games with Wasps, and I needed to be making a mark. So I stopped travelling over, in the end, because I wanted to be playing games for Wasps. I needed to get that first team contract. "Everyone wants to be playing to the highest possible level. So, I got called up to the World Cup squad, with England. I jumped at the opportunity. "But it was so awkward, because we landed in Johannesburg and we're queuing up in passport control. Ireland were standing right there. I'm queuing here. There's a few awkward stares. Then, to top it off, we get to the hotel and Ireland are staying in the same hotel as us. There was a bit of slagging, but it was all friendly banter. "But I've had stick my whole career. English lads giving me grief for playing for Ireland, and Irish lads giving me grief for having an English accent. I can't win!"Responding to a listener question on singing Amhrán na bhFiann, McCarthy said, "I didn't have to learn off the anthem; not really. I knew it pretty well. I made a good fist of it."
Asked if he sang both the Irish and English anthems, McCarthy shot back, "Both! I'm not singing now, though."[caption id="attachment_242100" align="alignnone" width="640"]
Megan Williams celebrates scoring for Ireland against Italy, in the 2018 Six Nations. (Photo by David Fitzgerald/Sportsfile)[/caption]
Asked by Williams if he was ever called 'Plastic Paddy' - a jibe she was often on the receiving end of - McCarthy replied, "Oh yes, all the time." "A few nights before my first cap," Williams recalls. "I had some of the girls helping me learn Amhrán na bhFiann."Greg O'Shea is Limerick born and bred, but even he admits to nerves at having to belt out the national anthem with plenty of watching eyes. "I was nervous about knowing the words properly," he says. "I remember being over with Ireland Under 18s in Spain, and we were playing Portugal. "We were standing there and it was all our first time singing our national anthem for our country. A massive moment. We didn't know how loud to sing or what to do... we went out and beat them, and in the review we got murdered by Terry McMaster, the head coach, about how unpatriotic we were for not singing the anthem with pride." Stung by the criticism, O'Shea and his Ireland teammates went out and beat a France side containing Gael Fickou after 'belting out the anthem' beforehand. WATCH HOUSE OF RUGBY HERE:
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