Father Deccie gives protégé ROG the boot instead of kicking boots

Thu, Feb 21, 2013, 00:00

   

IF YOU ASK ME:The politicians must be chuffed with all the debate this week raging on who should and who shouldn’t be playing number 10 for Ireland on Sunday. A moment of perspective please, we all know the show is over as soon our number 13 decides to wrap it up anyway, so let’s just cool the jets and get a grip. Yikes, maybe that’ll start another national debate.

The debates, such as they were, not surprisingly went around the houses in the usual way. Former Munster players took the loyal stance on the O’Gara question (shocking I know) and on radio, former Leinster players felt Ian Madigan should’ve “at least made the bench”.

Not exactly ground-breaking views, but nonetheless the story received blanket coverage. You know the way it works, TV panels discuss what somebody wrote in a newspaper or said on the radio, newspapers discuss what somebody said on TV and radio, then a radio panel discusses what somebody said on TV and in the newspapers. Is it any wonder they all talk in circles.

For a seemingly conservative type, Declan Kidney’s straight talking has caused quite a stir this season. First there was the gobsmacking decision to relieve the one and only Brian O’Driscoll of the captaincy. But when Jamie H stepped into the breech, up to the plate and most crucially it seems, in front of Mick Corcoran’s RTÉ microphone this week, it all made ahem . . . sense.

MC: Jamie, this is a big one, a lot at stake, what’s the mood in the camp?

JH: Ah it’s just, you know, buzzin’, you know, we’re all psyched, you know. We were just saying there this is like ‘Scotland’ in ‘Edinburgh’ man, you know, so it’s just like whooooooaahh, you know?

MC: Right! (MC looks at JH like he’s an alien and has no idea what he’s just said) Em, you’ve been there, done that, what have you said to the young lads, Jackson and Marshall to ease their nerves?

JH: Ah just you know, we’re all pretty chilled, just told them to do their thing and just go for it, you know? Well I didn’t actually say it to them . . . I tweeted it . . . saves the hassle, you know, so that was pretty cool.

MC: (Lost. Gives up) Jamie Heaslip thank you.

JH: Nice one, cool man.

Kidney certainly doesn’t make it easy for himself. His next task was to negotiate the tricky matter of informing his protégé – with whom the course has not always been smooth – that he is required to play second fiddle to a chap 15 years his junior. Now how did he manage that?

Kicking practice

Carton House. Deccie breaks the news to ROG during kicking practice

February 19th, 11.07am.

An anxious Father Deccie watches as ROG goes through his ritual. the ball placed carefully on the tee, the slow walk back, the turn around the corner, the horse-kick, the hands thing, the look at the posts, the look back at the ball, the nod of the head, the “up-on-the-toes” thing, the run-up, the strike and . . . the ball sails between the posts. this makes it even harder. ROG lines up another one as Deccie approaches.

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