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'Cream rises to the top' - Wales' helping hand in making of Beirne

Tadhg Beirne celebrates Scarlets' Pro12 titleImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Tadhg Beirne ed Scarlets after being released by Leinster in 2016

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Guinness Men's Six Nations: Wales v Ireland

Venue: Principality Stadium, Cardiff Date: Saturday, 22 February Kick-off: 14:15 GMT

Coverage: Watch on BBC One; listen on BBC Sounds, BBC Radio Ulster & BBC Radio Wales; live text and highlights on BBC Sport website and app

Eight years on, it must now be considered one of the most ill-timed holidays in the recent history of Welsh rugby.

Midway through the 2016-17 campaign, with Tadhg Beirne in his first season after leaving Leinster for Scarlets, the Irishman had broken into Wayne Pivac's side and sought the reward of a new contract in Llanelli.

Having arrived with only 39 minutes of senior rugby under his belt, the Kildare native had signed on for relatively meagre and, after impressing early on, was willing to commit for two more seasons should there have been an early pay increase on offer.

"I was very close to g on with Scarlets," ed Beirne last week after finalising his latest contract with the Irish Rugby Football Union (IRFU) which runs through to 2027.

"At the time, January at the end of first year, the guy that looked after the contracts, he was away skiing so wasn't replying to my agent's emails."

At the time of the three-year residency rule in Test rugby, had a new deal at Parc y Scarlets come to , it is likely that Beirne would have been representing Wales rather than Ireland in Saturday's Six Nations game at the Principality Stadium.

Before even arriving at Scarlets, however, another Welshman had already had a huge hand in keeping his rugby dreams alive.

Tadhg Beirne carries against South Africa for the Ireland under-20sImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Tadhg Beirne featured for the Ireland under-20s alongside the likes of Tadhg Furlong

Gwent native Mike Ruddock was five years on from leading Wales to a Six Nations Grand Slam when he took over the Ireland Under-20s in 2010.

In his four years in the job, his sides would include the likes of Tadhg Furlong, Josh van der Flier, Jack Conan, Iain Henderson and Finlay Bealham.

Furthermore, after taking up the reins at All-Ireland League outfit Lansdowne, he would nurture young talents James Ryan, Ronan Kelleher and Dan Sheehan as they made their way in the Leinster academy.

"Back in Ireland, I would tease the lads in Lansdowne that I put a bit of Gwent into the Irish pack," Ruddock told BBC Sport NI.

"So many graduated through the under-20s, I'd tell them, 'that's a Gwent pack, not an Irish one.' Eventually they threatened to ban me if I kept going about it."

Ruddock would work with Beirne for both the under-20s and Lansdowne.

"My big memory of him initially is what an incredible athlete he was," ed Ruddock.

"There wasn't a huge amount of muscle mass on him in those days. He was lean, he was strong, and he was brilliant over the ball. 

"Engine-wise, he would run all day and he was very adaptable. Six or lock, he gave me an extra line-out jumper and another jackler."

Media caption,

Kidnapping their dads, crazy tattoos & hairy shoulders

But while a number of his peers went on to quickly make their mark on provincial set-ups and then the international stage, Beirne struggled to make his own breakthrough.

Adding muscle to his frame was certainly one goal - it was Ruddock who gave Beirne the nickname 'long dog' in a nod to another lean lock, former Welsh international Luke Charteris - while developing his line-out calling was another.

In truth, however, the main obstacle in his path was the sheer depth in Leinster's forward pack. Still, he remained determined.

"The biggest thing I is how laidback he was," said Ruddock.

"But once you scratched under the surface, he was hardworking.

"Sometimes we'd finish training at Lansdowne and he'd hop straight on his push-bike and go off delivering pizzas to pay his way. You could see that he really wanted to do something with his rugby."

Mike Ruddock lifts the Six Nations trophyImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Mike Ruddock won a Six Nations Grand Slam either side of coaching stints in Ireland

As such, the news that there would not be a deal on offer at Leinster at the end of his sole senior season at the RDS was a particularly bitter pill to swallow.

If that ski holiday taken by a Scarlets' decision maker was one sliding doors moment in Beirne's career, another came previously when Ruddock went to bat on his behalf.

"I was fortunate enough to coach Leo Cullen, he's a smashing guy and a dear friend," he said.

"Hopefully he won't mind me betraying a small confidence, but I ringing Leo when Tadhg was told he was released and saying 'look, I've worked with this kid, for the sake of a small contract I think he'd be worth hanging on to. There's definitely something there that's worth persevering with'.

"In fairness, Leo was very complimentary about Tadhg but they had so many resources at the time, that the cards just hadn't fallen his way."

With the door at Leinster closed, Ruddock thought perhaps he could open one in Wales. After lobbying the regions, a future Wales head coach phoned a former one and Beirne's career trajectory was decisively altered.

"Wayne Pivac rang me at home when he was coaching the Scarlets and he said to me, you've put your name to this kid, what's the story with him"Billion Dollar Downfall: The Dealmaker " loading="lazy" src="https://image.staticox.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fichef.bbci.co.uk%2Face%2Fstandard%2F480%2Fsprodpb%2Fc1f3%2Flive%2F64425c60-42e5-11f0-835b-310c7b938e84.jpg" width="385" height="216" class="ssrcss-11yxrdo-Image edrdn950"/>