

"For me, I always remember because I was playing against one winger who was amazing. It was Simon Geoghegan. "To be fair, he was unlucky not to be in one great generation of Ireland because every time he had the ball, he was amazing and a match-winner. But, unfortunately, he didn't have too much of the ball against us because us, as a French team, we were very, very strong. "I have so many memories as I played with the Baa Baas in Ireland, when we beat South Africa. It was in Dublin, at Lansdowne Road, and think there were a lot of Irish players [in the team]. "But when I was a coach, I drew two times against Ireland but I never won against them. As a player, yes, we beat them seven times but my record in coaching is very, very poor!"
Told that Wood, Popplewell and Geoghegan were Irish rugby fans' three shining lights in a bleak decade, Saint-André harks back to that Barbarians game against a Springboks side that would go on to win the 1995 World Cup.
"Yes, I played with those guys," he says. "South Africa was so strong and, if I remember, they had beat England, Wales, Scotland and France [that year]. I think because Ireland was not strong, at this moment, they decided not to play Ireland but the Baa Baas. "Simon Geoghegan was one wing and I was the other wing. The front row was the Irish front row. "We beat South Africa and, to be honest, it was the first time that the Irish supporters were behind me! I scored a try and they were cheering me. And we beat South Africa. It was the only game that they lost on that tour."On that tour, the Boks played 13 games and won 11. They won their two official 'Test' matches against Scotland and Wales, but were beaten in a midweek game by Scotland 'A'. Earlier that year, they had defeated England in Pretoria but split the series 1-1. That day in Dublin (video below), the Baa Baas went 5-0 and then 15-10 behind, but went on to win 23-15. Saint-André bagged the first try, that day, against a South African XV that contained 13 of the 15 men that would start in the World Cup final triumph. The Boks got back ahead but, early in the second half, Geoghegan's support line saw him dive over to level the scores. Jon Callard's conversion made it 17-15 and the Baa Baas never looked back. "The most popular try of the day," declared former England captain Bill Beaumount, on co-comms. "The golden boy of Irish rugby." That he was, and Saint-André considers himself fortunate to have got the chance to play alongside him. [caption id="attachment_228165" align="aligncenter" width="2048"]
Former French International Rugby captain and head coach, PSA Academies Chairman and current Montpellier head coach Philippe Saint-André pictured ahead of the #TheBigRugbyRun 2021. The run will take place virtually on May 22nd 2021 with the support of Rugby Players Ireland (RPI) and PSA Academies. The funds raised will go towards Tackle Your Feelings initiatives for the rugby community, a mental health and well-being programme run by RRI and Zurich Ireland with the support of the Zurich Foundation. People can register a team for #TheBigRugbyRun 2021 now via www.thebigrugbyrun.com[/caption]
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19th May 2021
06:02pm BST