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Barretto dreams of green

26/04/01

By Tom Keogh
 

While unfortunate Munster were still licking their wounds after a second successive Heineken European Cup disappointment, Leinster were still in training and planning to nudge the mighty Reds off centre stage and bring the focus of Interprovincial rugby back to the Pale, back to Dublin which has been in danger of becoming a stagnant back water instead a sparkling spring gushing invention and talent.

Leinster's European Cup bid disappeared in a mist of what might have been, in promises half kept, a sorry tale of missed opportunities of chances grasped and then let slip away. It was an outcome which hurt, which left Leinster on the ropes but certainly not slack jawed and glassy eyed, a la Lennox Lewis. Lewis may never again have an opportunity to enjoy a really massive payday or, perhaps regain his World Heavyweight title.

But Leinster want their share of the limelight which has, they feel, bathed Munster for a bit too long. Mick Galwey has played in every single one of Munster's European Cup ties, Peter Clohessy has missed out on just one. Surely these iron men of the game have done more than enough for club, province and country and will soon step into the shadows where the legends of their deeds will grow rather then recede.

The time has come, Leinster folk will tell you quietly for men like Lions Malcolm O'Kelly and Brian O'Driscoll to lead Leinster back into the promised land with the help of the desperately unlucky Denis Hickie and a platoon of hungry, talented troops.

Just look at some of the names that are regulars in Leinster sides ­ Girvan Dempsey, Shane Horgan, Shane Byrne, Eric Miller, Victor Costello, John McWeeney, Derek Hegarty, Peter Smyth, Trevor Brennan and Rory Sheriff. While Munster were stampeding their way into the Heineken semi finals, Leinster were "failing" yet again.

But in Pool l, it's worth noting that they beat Northampton, the reigning Champions twice and Biarritz. And when the dust had settled coach Matt Williams was far from being totally deflated. He reckoned that, given time, Leinster would produce a team that would make people sit up and take notice. Whether or not Williams will be able to produce the goods in the up coming season remains to be seen and it may be a little too soon. But he certainly has a squad bristling with talent and just as importantly perhaps, with ambition.

Players like Leo Cullen the talented Blackrock College lock cum back rower, Mark McHugh the St. Mary's centre and place kicker are typical of Leinster's likely lads. And there are a lot more who might at the moment have people scratching their heads at the mention of their names and searching their memories for players who impressed in Schools matches in the recent past.

But if Williams has a bit of luck with the talent that continues to flood out of Schools, Academies at both club and Provincial level, Leinster's days in the wilderness may be numbered. There is a hunger in the Province, which will only be sated by success. And Steve Barretto represents the new face of Leinster rugby.

Steve who?, I hear you ask. Patience, all will presently be revealed.

He's South African Irish, he's broad, he's bright and bristling with an ambition to mix his talents with the best. And perhaps the Terenure College prop will get his chance sooner than he thinks. Barretto's is the story of a lad who dropped into a rugby club three years ago and asked if there was any chance of a game.

There was and after one look at his beefy frame, the lakesiders grabbed him and he became a "Nure" man. "I had come over with a friend, Jason Sivi to spend a year here and asked my gran Joan Gaw ­ they were a big swimming family ­ where I should go to get a game of rugby. She told me how to find St. Mary's and Terenure College, so we walked down by the lake and were invited into the clubhouse to join a Christmas party. The rest is history," he grinned.

Gerry Murphy the former Ireland team boss was then coaching Terenure and was quickly made aware that young Barretto had, at eighteen, been in the South African National Under 21 squad.

"It was a big scene for a youngster " Steve admitted " and while I did not get to play I worked out with some great players and got to practise with the Sharks, it was all wonderful experience, every day was a learning day and that's how it still is."

Coach Murphy soon had Barretto working hard to get his game in shape and within a year the rest of the Barretto family, Mother Christine, a Dubliner and younger brother Jonathan followed him to Ireland and Terenure.

Sister Christine, a Springbok water polo player, stayed in South Africa but young Jonathan enrolled in Terenure College and was on the winning side which beat Blackrock College to win the Leinster Schools Senior Cup just a few short weeks ago.

Steve followed suit by winning a Senior Cup winners medal with Terenure and getting into the Leinster squad. He had missed out on the Terenure club Academy which is run in conjunction with the School and the I.R.F.U. Academy but is a huge fan of the "school of excellence" route to the top. "It's the way to go," he enthused, "and from what I have seen of the alliance between the school and the club, there will be some very talented players coming through but having missed out on that route, I have to concentrate on progressing within the Leinster structure."

And he has done so to such good effect that he as already earned six full Ireland Under 21 caps, five full and one as a sub.

"The World Cup in Argentina may not have been a huge success as far as Ireland was concerned but it was another huge influence on my continuing development and I'm sure of a lot of other players. I want to be able to prop on either side of the scrum and while it's a tough ambition I'm determined to get there, perhaps I got the right start in South Africa as a schoolboy but I have been very impressed with the Leinster set up, its very professional but its also fun and there is a wonderful mutual respect between the management side and the players."

"Getting into the Leinster squad was almost like a job interview with each player having a one on one session during which the player gets an opportunity to spell out his ambitions and to let the management side know what he expects from them, it was all very thorough, very frank and I found very revealing, we all learned something about each other and our expectations and I think that's a pretty good basis for a relationship whether its in business or sport."

And Barretto makes no secret of his ambitions, he wants to make himself an automatic choice for Leinster and one day earn himself a place in the front row of an Ireland team competing for the Six Nations Championship.

"I have the Irish qualifications through my mother, grandmother and all that but that won't be much good unless I can prove myself on the field, that's the difficult part." T

he rising tide lifts all boats and if Leinster who have their sights trained steadily on the top can match their ambition with achievement, Barretto the boy from South Africa who dropped into the Lakelands Park clubhouse looking for a pint and a game of rugby may realise his dream and wear the green.

Only Northampton, by a single point and Stade Francais, with the help of the referee, have managed to knock Munster off their proud pedestal in the last two years. Leinster's attempts to shunt them into touch will be riveting stuff, a coming attraction not to be missed.

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© Tom Keogh 2001

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