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20th March 2018
11:48am GMT

In December, the 30-year-old opened up about his near career-ending injury.
“The papers were signed to retire before that World Cup (2015),” he said. “It is a medical sign-off, yeah. You’d be lost. There was a little chance. I was 27-28 and rugby was pretty much everything to me since school.
“Joe [Schmidt] gave me a few days off in the middle of the warm-up Tests and I went away to Italy and just switched off and chilled out.
“I got a bit of movement back in my hand and felt a bit of nerve twitching in my arm. From what the neurologist had told me any sensitivity is good sensitivity and it’s not fully dead. Once there is a glimmer of hope you have to chase it.
Chase it he did. After overcoming his medical woes, Healy has re-established himself as a leader for both Leinster and Ireland, playing an important role for Joe Schmidt in the Grand Slam-winning side. Standing on the edge of the abyss of early retirement just three years ago, thumping England at Twickenham to take the clean sweep was a particularly sweet moment for Healy. Following the win, Leinster Rugby media manager Marcus Ó Buachalla aptly summed up Healy's journey up with the tweet below. https://twitter.com/ohfadabee/status/975056538573443072 Struck gold is right. While not everyone will get as lucky as Healy, his journey is a reminder of how one can rise from the depths of despair. Given a new lease of life in rugby, Healy has taken full advantage, rounded by a fresh dose of perspective. It was great to see every player in green have their moment but, when Healy celebrated with his wife, Laura, it felt particularly poignant, a fitting reward for his perseverance through a gloom-ridden period.Explore more on these topics: