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Published 14:27 23 Aug 2023 BST
Updated 14:27 23 Aug 2023 BST
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"We'd won the Grand Slam in 2018, but we had a poor 2019, you know, and that kind of took the wind out of our sails a bit, and confidence wasn't where we were hoping it would be. That probably passed us by a small bit. "We were still relying on what we did in 2018 to get us over the line in 2019. Rugby moved so quickly, and the game changes so much. There's always little rule tweaks in terms of say, the 50:22 rule, which changes the defence and changes the backfield. The coaches and the players that can adapt to that the quickest are usually well in the mix and we've shown that we can. "We've got probably the best coach in the world and we're kind of setting the standard in terms of how rugby should be played."He feels for France outhalf Romain Ntamack after the "cruel" blow of an ACL [knee] injury just a month before the tournament but still reckons Les Bleus are a big threat. New Zealand and South Africa are mentioned, too, Scotland 'are looking good' and he includes Wales and England in the don't write them off category. [caption id="attachment_249046" align="aligncenter" width="800"]
Andrew Conway of Ireland dives over to score his side's second try against Wales, at Aviva Stadium in 2022. (Photo by Brendan Moran/Sportsfile)[/caption]
"Andy took me out of the Scotland match, during that Six Nations. We beat England in Twickenham and then we were playing Scotland, the next week. "My knee was in a good bit of trouble at that stage, but I was just in that mindset that, you know, nothing was going to stop me getting on the pitch in that Scottish match... On the Sunday after the England match I came back into camp and the knee was in a terrible way, to be fair. "As an athlete, you can get yourself into these places that you can dig in. So deep, at times. Now you're going to pay a price for it, after the fact, but that's not what you're thinking there and then. Andy kind of pulled me aside on the Sunday and said, 'Listen, your knee is not good. We're putting into a hole, and we don't know how deep it is'. "And I pleaded with them to let me play. I've never got so emotional over a selection decision in my life. Reflecting on it, it was because I was so deep in my mindset of how deep I was digging to actually, physically be able to get out... to not just play a match but to get through trainings and to recover that I was in a really heightened state of just like digging in. Not accepting that my body was letting me down... "When I look back on that, if I played in that Scottish match that could have ended my career. The knee was that bad and he understood what was going on. He understood what I was doing, and he understood that it wasn't in my best interest and pulled me out."[caption id="attachment_248397" align="aligncenter" width="800"]
Ireland captain Johnny Sexton, left, stands alongside team-mates Andrew Conway and Tadhg Furlong in 2021. (Photo by Brendan Moran/Sportsfile)[/caption]
"To have been around for my, for my daughter's first 18 months, without any real time away, has been a massive positive. For us as professional athletes... I know Pete [O'Mahony] actually talked on it recently, about being away from his kids and how tough it is. His kids are getting to an age now where they're asking where daddy is, and stuff. My daughter isn't at that age yet but I've not missed any time with her. Whenever I look back on it, in years and years, I've been very fortunate that those two things aligned."The 32-year-old cannot wait to tear back into the new season and confidently states that he has 'jumped straight back into it at a higher level than I've ever been at before'. He is still getting World Cup questions but the likes of Calvin Nash and Jacob Stockdale [if he misses the first cut] are probably the safer bets should a back three pull up before the tournament gets going. Conway met up, recently, with Dublin footballer Dean Rock and the multi-talented Sarah Rowe to be put through their American Football paces ahead of the College Football Classic, which features Notre Dame taking on Navy at Aviva Stadium, this Saturday. The Dubliner is like so many sports fans from Ireland, in that he has more than a passing interest in the game and really gets invested when the Super Bowl race heats up. That interest has been heightened by following the Netflix show 'Quarterback', which featured the game's top QB, right now and over the past five years, Patrick Mahomes. "I know that a lot of Irish people are massive, massive American football fans and both college football and NFL. College football, over there is wild. It's crazy how big it is and how important it is to every part of the country, and how passionate they are." [caption id="attachment_291875" align="aligncenter" width="1280"]
Andrew Conway pictured at the Budweiser Combine event, ahead of the Aer Lingus College Football Classic ,which returns to the Aviva Stadium on August 26. (Credit: Evan Treacy/INPHO)[/caption]
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