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Max Deegan determined to get back in Ireland reckoning

Max Deegan on his Ireland debut in 2020
Max Deegan on his Ireland debut in 2020

His second cap came almost three years after his first, and Leinster's Max Deegan wants to get back in the Ireland set-up as soon as possible.

Deegan was named in Andy Farrell's first squad as head coach ahead of the 2020 Six Nations championship.

When he started against Wales in February of that year he was one of a new up-and-coming crop of back rowers.

Now-regular starter Caelan Doris had just one brief appearance to his name at that point, while Jack O’Donoghue had two caps.

Gavin Coombes was uncapped and Will Connors was still eight months away from his debut, which came that October when the Six Nations resumed after the Covid-19 pandemic restrictions.

Josh van der Flier won his 24th cap that day, has added 34 more since and in 2022 was the European and World Rugby player of the year.

Deegan replaced Caelan Doris he won his second cap in November 2022

An ACL injury in October of 2020 halted Deegan’s progress with club and country but since recovering from that knee problem he has gone on to become a regular under Leo Cullen and worked his way back into the Irish reckoning, winning his second cap last November against Fiji, while he also featured on the Emerging Ireland tour of South Africa and the 'A’ game against an All Blacks XV.

Speaking to RTÉ Sport days after making his 100th Leinster appearance in the BKT URC win over the Sharks, during which he scored his side’s second try, Deegan said: "I’m unbelievably motivated to try and get back in the Irish squad. It was this time last year I got my last cap for Ireland.

"It’s been a year now and I couldn’t be more excited to try and get back into it. In and around those Six Nations games there are going to be big games coming over Christmas, European games and big inter-pro derbies.

"I’m just going to put my hand up as best I can and put on performances that I think will hopefully get me in those squads.

"The good thing about the Ireland squad is that they will reward you if you are playing well, it’s not a closed-off squad or anything near that.

"If you are playing well and showing yourself as a contender to be in the squad you’ll get in the squad which is a fantastic way to be."

Deegan and Leinster celebrate after the win over the Sharks

Deegan helped Leinster to their first win of the season last Saturday and admitted that the enormity of the reaching the tonne didn’t kick in until later.

"It’s one of those things that you don’t realise how big a milestone it is until it happens, then you realise, ‘Jeez, 100 games is a lot’," the 27-year-old said.

"When it really hit home was after the game and you think ‘wow, it’s a fair whack of games’; not a lot of people have done it and that makes it extra special.

"The fact that it was at home makes it extra special so that friends and family, everyone was there."

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Watch Leinster v Edinburgh (Saturday 3.05pm) and Munster v Dragons (Saturday 5.15pm) in the URC on RTÉ2 and RTÉ Player

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