RHYS RUDDOCK HAS primarily played his rugby either side of the scrum but after Saturday’s man-of-the-match performance at number eight, he is ready to fill Jamie Heaslip’s boots if called upon this weekend.
With Leinster’s medical staff closely monitoring the fitness of Jack Conan ahead of Saturday’s Champions Cup quarter-final against Wasps, Ruddock offers Leo Cullen another option in that position.
Conan is struggling with a calf injury which kept him out of the weekend’s Guinness Pro12 win over Cardiff Blues, with Ruddock deputising at the back of the scrum in his absence.
The 26-year-old was outstanding all afternoon, particularly with ball in hand as he carried explosively, and the 13-time capped Irish international deservedly collected the glassware afterwards.
“It was nice to get the accolade. It something I’m not that familiar with. I don’t get that many of them,” Ruddock joked in the post-match press conference.
“I knew it was a big game for me. But, everyone is in the same boat. It is very tight. I would have known anyway, from how well everyone has been playing this year, that I am certainly not guaranteed selection this weekend.
“It is probably one of the main things that’s driven us this year, how well some of the young guys have done stepping up. The competition for places is probably the best I’ve seen it.”
Source: Billy Stickland/INPHO
Certainly Leinster are blessed with a wealth of talent in the back row, in particular, with Sean O’Brien and Josh van der Flier now returning from international duty and injury respectively to strengthen resources further.
Ruddock’s selection at eight against Cardiff could give an insight into Cullen’s thinking, with the head coach weighing up his options ahead of the biggest test of Leinster’s season.
“Hopefully, it means they would consider me there,” Ruddock added after playing at number eight for just the second time this season.
Whoever starts for Leinster at the Aviva Stadium on Saturday afternoon will come up against an in-form and formidable Wasps side, who are arguably playing some of the best rugby in Europe at the moment.
The back-row battle will be fascinating, and potentially defining, with the likes of James Haskell, Nathan Hughes and Alex Rieder bringing dynamism and huge physicality to Dai Young’s side.
Leinster are all too aware of the damage the Premiership leaders can cause when given the space, with the eastern province suffering two chastening defeats to Wasps last year.