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Leinster confirm double whammy of injuries for Ireland pair

By PA
Ireland players, from left, Josh van der Flier, Paddy McCarthy, Jamie Osborne and Ryan Baird before the Gallagher Cup match between Ireland and New Zealand at Soldier Field in Chicago, USA. (Photo By Ramsey Cardy/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

Ireland pair Ryan Baird and Jamie Osborne are set to miss the start of the 2026 Six Nations through injury.

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Forward Baird has been ruled out for up to three months with a leg issue sustained during Saturday’s 24-13 loss to South Africa.

Leinster team-mate Osborne will be sidelined for up to four months after injuring a shoulder in his country’s 41-10 victory over Japan on November 8.

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Ireland begin the Six Nations on Thursday, February 5 with a trip to holders France.

Speaking after the loss to the Springboks, Ireland boss Andy Farrell said Baird suffered a suspected fractured tibia.

The 26-year-old initially attempted to play through the pain before being replaced by Jack Conan with 20 minutes remaining.

Following the retirement of former Ireland captain Peter O’Mahony, Baird has started his country’s last six Test matches at blindside flanker, having won 20 of his previous 27 caps as a replacement.

An update from Leinster on Monday afternoon read: ā€œRyan Baird is unavailable for selection after picking up a leg injury in the game against South Africa at the weekend and will be unavailable for up to three months.

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ā€œJamie Osborne will be unavailable for up to four months.ā€

Ireland wing Tommy O’Brien, who sustained a head injury against South Africa, and centre Robbie Henshaw (hamstring) will also miss Leinster’s United Rugby Championship fixture away to Dragons on Friday.

Lock Joe McCarthy has ā€œentered the final stages of his rehabilitationā€ after breaking a foot bone and will undergo further assessment.

Ireland are also awaiting a fitness update on Mack Hansen.

The Connacht back, 27, has suffered a recurrence of the foot issue which caused him to miss the defeat to New Zealand and victory over Japan earlier this month.

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Head coach Farrell has plenty to ponder following a bruising outing against the Springboks but insists he has no concerns about Ireland’s scrum.

South Africa outmuscled the hosts en route to a first Dublin win since 2012, with the majority of their 12 scrums forcing penalties.

Ill-disciplined Ireland conceded 18 penalties across a frenetic encounter during which James Ryan was sent off and Sam Prendergast, Jack Crowley, Andrew Porter and Paddy McCarthy were sin-binned.

ā€œIf you look at our scrum over the last five or six years, it’s been world-class at times,ā€ said Farrell.

ā€œThere’s a (British and Irish) Lions front row in there (Andrew Porter, Dan Sheehan and Tadhg Furlong), so that’s not been an issue for us at all.

ā€œIt’s been a strength for us and we pride ourselves on that. Sometimes they (South Africa) catch you.

ā€œThey’ve caught plenty of other teams and the momentum, they kept on going for the blood, didn’t they?ā€

Ireland’s ambitions of building on wins over Japan and Australia were dealt a major blow when lock Ryan was dismissed in the 20th minute for an illegal clearout on world player of the year Malcolm Marx.

ā€œHe’s gutted, he’s upset, he apologised to the group,ā€ Farrell said of Ryan.

ā€œThere was other things that went on within the game as well that we need to address. It’s not just one man’s doing by far. We’re all in this together.ā€

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unknown 61 days ago

šŸ˜­šŸ‰ sad

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Chris929 1 hour ago
Why the PWR this February is going to be box-office

There are only 9 PWR sides and 1 of those(leicester) is a way off the other teams. Once you take out the current 35-40 england internationals, a few players that have previously been capped or no longer being picked(Sarah beckett,poppy cleall,sophie bridger etc) then you include the huge number of internationals from wales,scotland,ireland,spain,south africa, canada,usa, new zealand-there clearly is not much space for young up and coming players or late developers.Thats the main difference between now and when the current red roses broke through-that group got opportunities to play young and develop-now its much harder. you literally have to be international quality to get a game for the top sides. Where does that leave the youngsters? You wont develop not playing or playing lower level rugby in the champ or in bucs. players do need to be exposed to the highest level regularly to develop.Of course you will still get a few great youngsters-like sarah parry or haneala lutui breaking through but they more the exception.

I dont see what changes when these players finish uni and bucs-they still going to have a canadian international,a scottish international,a black fern blocking their path to the first team. Now we have so many non english in the league the amount of english players coming through is simply going to be far less than years ago. You look around the league and there are hardly many english players right now knocking on the red roses door are there? where are the next generation? they should be already playing in the league but only a few are. Wheres the next great young scrum half? hooker? fullback?



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