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7th December 2016
05:19pm GMT

"The reason why it did is that when I went down to Killaloe to see my good friend Axel at his removal and I saw Olive and saw his kids....when I left there, Axel, who was in that coaching environment and when I saw him there and found out what happened and we are so close because we are in the same situation."
As Lam drove home that evening, he was left wondering if his family would have enough financial security if he suddenly passed away which persuaded the 48-year-old to accept the lucrative offer tabled by Bristol.
"What it did for me was when I left Killaloe with Willie [Ruane] and Tim [Allnut] all I could think about was if that happened me, what would happen to Steph and the kids," Lam said.
We've seen time and time again head coaches face unemployment after an unfavourable run of results, and Lam himself notes how he was "a sacked coach for seven months: no job, five kids and wife," after being relieved of his duties as Blues head coach in 2012.
But, make no mistake about it, Lam's decision to leave Connacht was not a simple one to arrive at.
“It wasn’t easy," he insisted. "It wasn’t easy to tell all the people that mean a lot to me and especially to the players.”
Diarmuid Connolly makes his long overdue GAA Hour debut and talks to Colm Parkinson about everything from the black card, his rivalry with Lee Keegan and how he honed the ability to kick accurately with either foot.
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