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The challenge Andy Farrell has set Ireland recall Jacob Stockdale

By PA
Jacob Stockdale at Ireland training last February (Photo by Seb Daly/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

Ireland boss Andy Farrell has challenged Jacob Stockdale to prove he still belongs at Test level during Saturday’s clash with Fiji. Ulster wing Stockdale is poised to win just his fifth cap in four years after Farrell made seven personnel changes to the starting XV which scraped a 22-19 Autumn Nations Series win over Argentina.

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Only five men – Brian O’Driscoll, Keith Earls, Tommy Bowe, Denis Hickie and Shane Horgan – have scored more tries for Ireland than Stockdale, who burst on to the scene during the 2018 Six Nations Grand Slam success.

Yet 14 of the 28-year-old’s 19 international scores came in the first 17 of his 37 caps and he has not represented his country since being overlooked for last year’s Rugby World Cup. “He deserves it, his form has been great,” Farrell said of the opportunity for Stockdale, whose career has been impacted by knee and ankle issues.

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“He has been back in the fold with us, albeit not getting an opportunity, over the last 12 months and we have seen that improvement within his game. He is chomping at the bit and this is his chance to show us what he is about at this level again.”

Farrell has also handed debuts to Ulster back-rower Cormac Izuchukwu, 24, and Leinster hooker Gus McCarthy, 21, as part of an experimental line-up. Izuchukwu was a non-playing member of Ireland’s summer tour to South Africa while McCarthy last year captained Ireland U20s to Six Nations Grand Slam glory and the final of the World Rugby U20 Championship.

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“(They have) loads and loads of potential, obviously,” Farrell said. “I suppose Cormac has been in and around the squad now for a while. The first Emerging Ireland tour (in 2022) is when we first came across his ability, his athleticism, his point of difference and since then the improvement and maturity of his game (has improved significantly).

“The difference between the first tour and the second tour (last month) was chalk and cheese. He deserves a shot to show what he has got.”

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McCarthy only made his Leinster debut in April and was initially selected for Farrell’s squad as a ‘training panellist’. But with Dan Sheehan sidelined and Ronan Kelleher and Rob Herring short of fitness, he is set for a landmark outing. “Gus, what a rise in such a short space of time,” said Farrell.

“Obviously coming from the 20s and being successful there. He has been a captain for a long time and you can see why because you can see his maturity in how he goes about the game. But rugby is a strange thing.

“You think there is a pecking order and all of a sudden a couple of players get an injury, then a kid gets an opportunity and he shows up really well when we take him on the training week with us as a development player. He has forced our arm to keep him in the squad and he deserves a shot to see what he can do.”

Fly-half Sam Prendergast will make his maiden international start after winning his first cap as a second-half replacement against Los Pumas. Full-back Jamie Osborne, centre Bundee Aki and scrum-half Craig Casey also come into the team.

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Speaking of 21-year-old Prendergast, Farrell said: “I’m confident from what we have seen. We took him on the Emerging (tour) and he played in all of those games and the aim of that was for him to grab hold of that team and make sure he treated it like his own, as though he was in charge. He did that in spades and this week we’ve seen the benefit of that. We need to see it transfer obviously.”

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J
JW 30 minutes ago
'Razor's conservatism is in danger of halting New Zealand's progress'

Razor is compensating, and not just for the Foster era.


Thanks again for doing the ground work on some revealing data Nick.


This article misses some key points points that are essential to this debate though;


Razor is under far more pressure than Rassie to win

Rassie is a bolder selector than Razor, and far more likely to embrace risk under pressure than his counterpart from New Zealand.

It doesn't realise the difficulties of a country like South Africa, with no rugby season to speak of at the moment, to get full use out of overseas internationals

Neither world player of the year Pieter-Steph du Toit nor all-world second row Eben Etzebeth were automatic selections despite the undue influence they exert on games in which they play.

The last is that one coach is 7 years into his era, where the other is in his first, and is starting with a far worse blank slate than where upon South Africa's canvas could be layered onto after 2017.

The spread at the bottom end is nothing short of spectacular. Seventeen more South Africans than New Zealanders started between one and five games in 2024.

That said, I think the balance needs to be at least somewhere in the middle. I don't know how much that is going to be down to Razor's courage, and New Zealands appetite however.


Sadly I think it is going to continue and the problem is going to be masked by much better results next year, even forgotten with an undefeated season. Because even this article appears to misconstruing the..

known quantities

as being TJP and Sam Cane. In the context of what would need to change for the numbers above to be similar, it's players like Jordie Barrett, Beauden Barrett, Rieko Ioane, Sevu Reece, Ethan Blackadder, Codie Taylor, where the reality needs to be meet face on.


On Jordie Barrett at Lienster, I really hope he can be taught how to tackle with a hard shoulder like Henshaw and Ringrose have. You can see in these highlights he doesn't have the physical presence of those two, or even the ones behind him in NZ like ALB and AJ Lam. I can't really seem him making leaps in other facets if he's already making headlines now.

6 Go to comments
J
JW 1 hour ago
The All Blacks don't need overseas-based players

I'm not sure you realise how extreme it is, previously over half of SR players ended up overseas. These days just over half finish their career at home (some of those might carry on in lower leagues around the world).


1. Look at a player like Mo'unga who took time to become comfortable at his max level, thrust a player like that in well above his level, something Farrell is possibly doing now with Pendergrast, and you fail to maximise your player base as a whole. I don't think you realise the balance in NZ, without controlling who can leave there is indeed right now an immediate risk from any further pressure on the balance. We are not as flush as a country like South Africa I can't imagine (look at senior mens numbers).


2. Your idea excludes foreign fans, not the current status, their global 1.8mil base (find a recent article about it) will dwindle. Our clubs don't compete against each other, it's a central model were all players have a flat max 200k contribution. NZR decides who is worth keeping for the ABs in a very delicate balance of who to let go and who not. Might explain why our Wellington game wasn't a sellout.


3. Players aren't going to play for their country for nothing while other players are getting a million dollars. How much does SARU pay or reimburse their players?


4. I don't believe that at all. Everything so far has pointed to becoming an AB as the 'profile' winner. Comms love telling their fans some 'lucky' 1 cap guy is an "All Black" and the audience goes woooh!

The reality is much more likely to be more underwhelming

But the repercussions are end game, so why is it worth the risk?

Hardly be poaching uni or school boys.

This comment is so out of touch with rugby in NZ.

European comps aren't exactly known for poaching unproven talent ie SR or up not down to NPC.

So, so out of touch. Never heard of Jamison Gibson-Park, or Bundee Aki, or Chandler Cunningham-South, what about Uino Atonio? Numerous kiwi kids, like Warner Dearns, are playing in Japan having left after some stardom in school rugby here. Over a third of the NRL (so basically a third of the URC) are Kiwis who likely been scouted playing rugby at school. France have recently started in that path with Patrick Tuifua, and you hear loosely about good kids taking up offers to go overseas for basic things like school/uni (avg age 20+), similar to what attracts island kids to NZ.


But that's getting off track, it's too far in the future for you to conceptualize in this discussion. Where here because you think you know what it's like to need to select overseas based players, because of similarities like NZ and SA both having systems that funnel players into as few teams as possible in order to make them close to international quality, while also having a semi pro domestic league that produces an abundance of that talent, all the while facing similar financial predicaments. I'm not using extremes like some do, to scare monger away from making any changes. I am highlighting where the advantages don't cross over to the NZ game like the do for South Africa.


So while you are right in a lot of respects, some things that the can be taken for granted, is that if not more players leave, higher calibre players definitely will, and that is going to weaken the domestic competitions global reach, which will make it much hard to keep up or overtake the rest of the world. To put it simply, the domestic game is the future. International rugby is maxed out already, and the game here somehow needs to double it's revenue.


This is what you need to align your pitch with. Not being able to select players from overseas, because there are only ever one or two of those players. Sometimes even no one who'd be playing overseas and good enough for the ABs. You might be envisioning the effects of extremes, because it's hard to know just how things change slightly, but you know it's not going to be good.

94 Go to comments
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LONG READ Will overseas selection make the difference for British and Irish Lions? Will overseas selection make the difference for British and Irish Lions?
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