Ryan Bailey reports from the Sportsground
DOUBLE DELIGHT FOR Connacht on a memorable afternoon in Galway, but a return to the Pro14 play-offs and top table of European rugby very much feels like the start of something much bigger under Andy Friend.
The miserable conditions ensured this was a tense shootout and a stressful occasion for all involved, yet it felt fitting that Connacht were able to seal the deal with their backs against the wall, defending their seven-point lead against Cardiff Blues as if their lives depended on it.
The Connacht dressing room after Saturday’s win. Source: James Crombie/INPHO
In recording a fourth straight Pro14 victory to secure a top-three finish in Conference A and with it a Champions Cup place for next season, Connacht showed immense maturity to manage a game of such magnitude and ensure they fell on the right side of the ledger when it could have so easily turned out differently.
With so much on the line for both sides, the tension amongst the capacity crowd was palpable all afternoon and after a rollercoaster 29-22 win, the outpouring of relief — a mixture of delight and utter relief — showed just how much it means to Connacht.
A bonus-point win, courtesy of tries from Caolin Blade, Gavin Thornbury, man of the match Jack Carty and Matt Healy, brings Connacht’s tally to 61 for the season, compared with just the 39 points they finished last term with as the province finished sixth under Kieran Keane.
The development and improvement under Friend has been rapid and exciting in equal measure, Connacht rediscovering their direction and qualifying for the Champions Cup for the first time since 2016/17 in the Australian’s first season in charge is a huge achievement.
It means all four provinces will be in the top-tier European competition in 2019/20, while similarly, Connacht are back in the Pro14 play-offs for the first time since winning the title three years ago. They’ll face Ulster in a mouth-watering quarter-final inter-pro in three weekends’ time.
“I think you can see from the response of the crowd that it means a hell of a lot,” Friend said. “We’ve had great support this year, I’ve had great support this year in my first year. I said when I started that you could see I’d walked in to an organisation that was hungry and ambitious, and had good people, good behind the scenes staff, we had good coaches and we’ve got great players so I think it’s just reward for the work that has gone in, and it’s the start.
“As I said, we’ve got a great coaching staff. We really do, and I just think we’ve got a playing group that’s got quality across the board. I think one of the things we’ve done this year is given the fellas licence to express themselves to play. I’ve got Caolin [Blade] sitting here beside me and he’s one of a few players that you’ve just seen a new level of player come out this year.
“This is not the ceiling either, and that’s the important thing. We’ve got some more growth in us, we’ve got some really good depth coming through, academy players coming through, and a strong academy, and we’ll just keep building those boys through. There’s some good work going on here.”
Blade, who along with Carty has typified Connacht’s form and renewed confidence this season, said one of the big factors has been the mentality within the dressing room, with Friend bringing a more holistic approach, cultivating a strong culture within the club.
“We probably learned from our mistakes, to be honest,” the scrum-half says. “We’ve had many of them. But, I don’t know, I can’t really pinpoint anything. I think, this year, it’s been a good place to come. Whether you win or lose you come into a happy workplace.