LAST YEAR, AJ MacGinty was playing college rugby in the USA.
Fast forward 12 months and the 26-year-old former Life University out-half is preparing to play a prominent role in Connacht’s Guinness Pro12 final against Leinster at Murrayfield.
His rise has been remarkable.
MacGinty was excellent against Glasgow last weekend. Source: Billy Stickland/INPHO
Dubliner MacGinty came through Blackrock College – where his father Alan is the long-standing principal – and played in the AIL with Blackrock RFC, but was not marked out for stardom.
He moved to New York and played club rugby with NYAC in 2012, while working in a bar, before his father and Tony Smeeth – Trinity’s director of rugby, who is well connected in the States – set him up with a coaching position at Life University in Atlanta, where he also studied for a Master’s degree Excercise and Sports Science.
Three years of diligent hard work later, and after a series of impressive performances for Life U, he was the starting out-half for the US at the Rugby World Cup and subsequently signed for Connacht.
Unfortunately for the province, MacGinty is moving on to Premiership side Sale next season, with the upcoming arrival of South African out-half Marnitz Boshoff meaning Connacht could not keep another non-Irish-qualified player in that position.
Pat Lam says he pleaded with IRFU performance director David Nucifora for an exemption, but instead had to help MacGinty secure a contract elsewhere.
“I knew at the beginning of the season that we were a little bit light for injuries and we don’t really have a lot of money in the sense of the squad that was already in place, so I was concerned,” explains Lam of how he came to sign MacGinty – whose cousin Dave Gannon previously played for Connacht.
“I was actually reading an article that highlighted that he was an Irish boy from Dublin, so in the World Cup, I took an interest in [the USA game against] Samoa and he did really well.
“The thing I liked about him was his physicality and his tackling and I know the Samoan guys and I thought ‘hmmm, okay, this is good’. Then we did a bit of homework and got in touch and realised he had nothing arranged for after the World Cup.
MacGinty arrived at Connacht in October. Source: James Crombie/INPHO
“We had a meeting and we brought him up here, we talked about what we do and he’s loving it. It’s the first time he’s ever been a professional rugby player.”
The idea behind luring Boshoff to Connacht is to provide them with a strong kicking option for their demanding winter fixtures, but it now means MacGinty must leave.
“I’d already been talking to Marnitz the year before and I knew he was available and the bit of Jack [Carty]’s game, his goalkicking… I know what we can do in the first part of the season but in my experience in the Northern Hemisphere in the middle part of the season, you’ve got to be able to win games in December, January.