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Peter O’Mahony has earned the chance to finish with Ireland on a high

Published 16:53 11 Mar 2024 GMT

Updated 16:57 11 Mar 2024 GMT

Patrick McCarry
Peter O’Mahony has earned the chance to finish with Ireland on a high

Homerugby

The Ireland captain has looked entirely human in two of his side's toughest losses, in the past six months.

Not long after Brodie Retallick had sought him out, at Stade de France, to bellow, "Oi, Peter! Four more years, you ****wit!", Peter O'Mahony was asked in a tough post-match interview if he would play on with Ireland.

Many of the Ireland players were left reeling by their World Cup quarter final defeat to New Zealand, last October. O'Mahony did not follow Johnny Sexton and Keith Earls into retirement, after that heart-breaking defeat, but he did seriously consider if in the days and weeks that followed.

Back in January, Andy Farrell played down him reaching out to O'Mahony for a post-World Cup chat. "I didn't have to persuade him [to play on], no," Farrell confirmed. 

"I always speak to players, no matter what. To me, it's the same as anything. It's about how you're performing and how your'e playing. Certainly, whether your form warrants getting selected and whether your body can do that. I think those type of decisions as far as that's concerned becomes pretty obvious if you're allow what's pretty natural to happen."

The Cork native, in that same ITV interview, said he would not be around for the 2027 World Cup in Australia [when he would be 38]. Most O'Mahony games one looks at, he looks so dinged up and needs treatment on different ailments that one is amazed when he makes it to the end of another season.

Farrell needed a few senior men to sign up for another season in green, even though many of their friends and colleagues had moved on. O'Mahony would have left the stage an Ireland legend, already locked in, last October but his head coach had a job in mind - sticking around just a while longer before handing over the reins.

Peter O'Mahony deserves chance to finish the job

Peter O'Mahony has astutely dealt with all contract talk by referring back to the honour of being asked to captain his country. At the Six Nations launch, in Dublin, he reminisced on a time when Ireland call-ups used to come through the post-box.

"You get an email [now] to say you’ve been selected for the Six Nations. It’s one of the best feelings.

"I still have some of the old letters at home. You’re driving up the road to meet up with the best 35 players in the country. Not everybody gets to feel that… if you can’t get excited for that, you’re in the wrong room."

Interestingly, Peter O'Mahony has, so far, captained Ireland for 165 minutes in this Six Nations. Caelan Doris has captained the side for 162 minutes [including seven minutes after the clock turned red]. When the transition comes, Doris will already have a decent fist of the captaincy experience.

When will that change come? I had initially felt it could be at the end of the summer tour to South Africa. There had been a lot of talk about O'Mahony not being offered an IRFU central contract and only getting an extension offer from Munster. Maybe that is with good reason, and with input from the man himself. He may enjoy a final season with Munster, and Munster only, before leaving it over to the young fellas.

This Saturday at Lansdowne Road could yet prove to be the last dance for Peter O'Mahony in an Ireland jersey.

If it is, we may not even realise it until it is all over. For a guy that loves better than winding up his opponents and causing as much havoc as he can get away with, O'Mahony doesn't like making much of a fuss (when it comes to himself).

Ryan Baird could easily start in that 6 jersey and, in time, will be battling for it with the likes of Cian Prendergast and Tom Ahern. For me, though, O'Mahony deserves to lead this team out against Scotland and finish the job.

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