ULSTER HEAD COACH Dan McFarland admits he’s been impressed by the work that former team-mate Jerry Flannery has been doing with Harlequins ahead of their Challenge Cup last-16 tie on Sunday.
Dan McFarland and Jerry Flannery. Source: Inpho.
The pair played together at Connacht at opposite ends of their respective careers — McFarland as his was coming to an end and Flannery’s just as it was getting started — before the eventual Ireland and British and Irish Lions hooker would go on to forge an exceptional career at Munster.
But now, 18 years on from the last time the pair shared a dressing room at the Sportsground, they will meet on conflicting coaching staffs as Ulster travel to the Twickenham Stoop for their first ever match in the Challenge Cup.
It promises to be one of the ties of the second-tier competition as arguably the two best teams in the knockouts clash in London, and one of the key battles will come up front, where McFarland and Flannery deploy their talents.
While McFarland’s coaching remit is broader as head coach, Flannery has been able to specialise as lineout coach at the Stoop and has added some much needed structure to their pack effort, turning them into one of the most dangerous sides from the set-piece.
And this week, the two former team-mates will test their respective regimes against each other, and while there will no doubt be some bragging rights on the line, McFarland is highly complimentary of Flannery’s success with Quins.
“Their set-piece has been excellent in the Premiership. Jerry does a brilliant job over there, their line-out has been exceptional, worked really well. Their maul defence has been really good as well,” praised the Ulster head coach.
“Adam Jones is a fantastic scrum coach, too, they have a really destructive scrum. It’ll be a big ask for us.
“I know Jerry well, I played with him at Connacht and he’d be a good friend of mine. I’ve always respected him as a coach who is really hungry to learn. He knows his own mind and I admire that about him.
“Any time I get a chance to talk rugby with him, it’s an exhausting process because you feel like he’s squeezing every drop of information out of you – getting a question in sideways to get any information out of him is bloody difficult!”
So, that probably rules out any midweek phone calls between the former team-mates to catch up, right?
“No,” grins McFarland in confirmation. “He’s pretty short on the old text messages anyway! It’ll have to wait for pre-game when I’ll try and psych him out a bit!”
It’s something of a blast from the past for McFarland in another regard, too, given he is a former Richmond man – a team not known for being all that conciliatory when they faced local rivals Harlequins when both were in the top tier.
The former prop played during an era when Quins boasted a front row that included Keith Wood and Jason Leonard, and he recalls a few less than mild-mannered meetings when it came to scrum time. But, at the end of the day, there was always that underlying respect at the heart of the rivalry.
“It was a huge rivalry. Back in those days Richmond would have had the upper hand,” recalls McFarland.
“The interesting thing was John Kingston, my ex-coach at Richmond who really got me into rugby and gave me my first opportunity to step into the world of paid sport, he was a Harlequins man. That’s where he grew up and ended up as head coach at Richmond.
“There’s an added spice to it that I was aware of. They’re only a mile down the road, so you always had that rivalry. I admire clubs that, when you look at them, you know what they’re about, they have a character. We’ve described it as a DNA and I’d say that’s probably right. Harlequins are one of those, they’re a club that has to be admired.”
The Ulster team. Source: James Crombie/INPHO
That admiration will only last until kick-off on Sunday night when Ulster begin what many see as being their best opportunity in recent years to end their 16-year trophy drought, and that starts by booking a quarter-final place against either Northampton Saints or Dragons by beating Harlequins on their own turf.