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McMahon – Irish Rugby: ‘There’s an Environment For Players To Back Theirself’| ‘There’s An Environment There For Players To Back Themselves’ – McMahon
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McMahon – Irish Rugby: ‘There’s an Environment For Players To Back Theirself’| ‘There’s An Environment There For Players To Back Themselves’ – McMahon

Irish Rugby | ‘There’s An Environment There For Players To Back Themselves’ – McMahon

Edel McMahonShe believes her Wasps team-mate Sam Monaghan has the ability to kick on and become a regular starter for Ireland, following an impressive TikTok Women’s Six Nations debut for the lock.

The IQ Rugby forward was a big draw against Wales last weekend. He scored eight lineout wins and displayed some amazing offloading, including one that set up. Linda Djougang for Ireland’s second try at the RDS.

Part of an unchanged squad this week, the Meath native is hoping to make her presence felt against France, the world’s third-ranked team, in the cauldron that is Toulouse’s Stade Ernest Wallon.

Asked about Monaghan’s progression, which saw her make her Ireland debut during last September’s Rugby World Cup qualifiers, McMahon said: “Sam is brilliant, she’s an athlete. From the first day we met at Wasps, you could see her eagerness to learn and her raw talent.

“It was just about getting game-time and game-time and game-time so that she could get more comfortable into her position, and she’s really, really starting to shine.

“There’s an environment there for players to back themselves. Sam can perform those offloads. I see it in training.

“I’m actually not surprised she gotten a few charge-downs because she’s a bit of a charge-down queen now. We instil that belief in each other so then it just becomes a habit.”

Clare woman McMahon is also hoping to get a run of Test matches under her belt after an untimely knee ligament injury, combined with the Covid-19 pandemic, broke up the momentum built by her Ireland Players’ Player of the Year nomination in 2020.

While disappointed to start the 2022 Championship on a losing note, she was still encouraged by how the back row combination fared – she had Dorothy Wall Brittany Hogan alongside her – and Ireland’s return of three tries off limited possession.

“I definitely came away from the game knowing that a lot of things went right for us,” insisted McMahon. “Even just looking at the possession, between 60 (for Wales) and 30, and then how much we converted was very positive.

“There were a lot of things that we could fix, a lot of things we were already working on. You can see that we could make some improvements to the structure of attack and defense.

I believe we all got the game-plan down. Greg (McWilliams) wants us to set out with very quickly in the last two weeks. It’s a very new system, everyone’s bought in very well.

“We had glimpses there where we had the shape and we were set up and we were exactly where we needed to be, just execution or turnover ball that just coughed up easy possession.

“Disappointed (with the result), it’s never easy to lose but certainly it was easier to take away knowing that we were trying very well to execute the plan that we just picked up.”

McMahon, who made a debut against the Welsh during the 2018 Six Nations, was very busy throughout. She ran 27 metres on four carries and landed 16 successful tackles, the dominant one being one.

Given Wales’ success at set-piece time and France’s own strengths in that areas, improving Ireland’s maul defence is simply a must according to the openside flanker.

“Just decision-making for competing in the air. Just looking at different tactics that we probably could have decided differently in the (Wales) game and how we would have executed those,” she acknowledged.

“There’s so many elements of the game that you have to work on – breakdown, lineout, lineout attack, maul set-up, maul D. There’s a lot of things that we still need to tick off.

“The last three weeks we’ve been learning so, so much. We’re hoping to build on every element of those over the campaign. That’s certainly one area we need to fix heading into a powerful French pack.”

The 28-year-old Kilmihil native first rose to prominence in Galwegians’ All-Ireland League when, as a NUI Galway Biochemistry student, she was the star of Kilmihil.

Despite her move across Ireland, she is still a strong fan of the AIL. She was impressed by the quality of rugby it produced this year, especially since it provided regular game-time for players pushing for international selections under a new coach.

Asked about her own build-up to the Six Nations, she said: “Unfortunately I picked up an injury in December, so I had been out for a while and it was good to get a run-out against Harlequins before coming into the Six Nations.

“I needed that high-level test game in the Prem to kind of help me get straight back into international level. The league (in England) has been good, but it’s actually been really positive to see that the AIL is back up and running.

I watched the AIL games while I was at home, and I also watched them live on TG4. From both ends now it’s been great just to get games. Greg has been really pushing this as well.

“I know we’ve had probably a shorter window of camps but he allowed the opportunity for players to get game-time, both home and away, so I think that’s been quite valuable for players this time around.”

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