Northern Edition
Select Edition
Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

Why Richie Mo'unga and Ronan O'Gara 'didn't really speak for four months'

CHRISTCHURCH, NEW ZEALAND - JUNE 17: Richie Mo'unga and Assistant Coach Ronan O'Gara (L-R) take part in a drill during a Crusaders Super Rugby training session at Rugby Park on June 17, 2019 in Christchurch, New Zealand. (Photo by Kai Schwoerer/Getty Images)

Before leading La Rochelle to titles in France, 128-cap Ireland playmaker Ronan O’Gara served under Scott Robertson at the Crusaders. During his tenure at the Kiwi club, he played a key role in helping Richie Mo’unga develop into the star he is today.

ADVERTISEMENT

Ireland’s second-highest points scorer, O’Gara had nothing but positive things to say about his time with the serial Super Rugby champions.

The 48-year-old, currently providing commentary on the British & Irish Lions Tour in Australia, summarised his time in Christchurch as “24 months of just rugby chat. So I loved it.”

While he described himself as nothing more than a “blow-in” who spent his time picking the brains of everyone in the environment, the Irishman wasn’t afraid of upholding standards, something Mo’unga learnt early on.

The story came about after O’Gara was asked about the greatest player he’s ever coached.

“Every single time you go into that Crusaders environment, I hit it at a time when you had such great All Blacks retiring, so you get such great learnings when you see what happens to a player when it comes to the end, and then they actually give their soul and their spirit to the team as opposed to themselves,” O’Gara explained on The Aftermatch with Kirst & Beav.

“With Kieran Read, with (Matt) Todd, people like that, it just blew my mind, (Ryan) Crotty.

“I think from a personal relationship, it was Richie Mo’unga, but I had a difficult start with him because I asked him for his kicking program, and I just said to him, ‘Richie, that doesn’t stack up to be world-class to me. I thought you said you wanted to be world-class?’

ADVERTISEMENT

Related

“So we didn’t really speak for three, four months. It was really difficult. But I had to stay true to what I thought was world-class to push him, and know every time he wins a title, he rings me and we have such a strong relationship, and I’ve seen him progress.

“That makes me very, very happy. Very proud. Because the one thing that happens when you get older, you get a little bit wiser, and you try and impart that on the guy and at first, there’s a little bit of push back, which there was from Richie, but now, we have such deep respect between us… that fills your heart with such joy that you have that connection with a guy for all your life.

“I’m happy with that, but I could say that for another 14 boys because that place is so special.”

O’Gara signed off on the topic by humbly downplaying his role in the Crusaders dynasty once more, and again expressing gratitude for his relationships within the club, before speaking once more on Mo’unga in particular.

ADVERTISEMENT

“Hopefully he’ll get back into the Test arena. It’d be good to see it.”


News, stats, videos and more! Download the new RugbyPass app, in collaboration with the British and Irish Lions, on the App Store (iOS) and Google Play (Android) now!

ADVERTISEMENT
Play Video
LIVE

{{item.title}}

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

2 Comments
G
GP 17 days ago

Great interview with Ronan O’Gara. Knew him when he worked as a coach with the Crusaders. Great guy. Really interesting about his relationship with Richie Mo’unga, which ended up being a close one. Love what he says about men like Kieran Read, Matt Todd and Ryan Crotty. How they gave their“soul and spirit “ to the team. Players and people I have so much respect for. No surprises that Matt and Ryan have been a big part of this years rejuvenation of the Crusaders.

S
SadersMan 17 days ago

Old news. Richie spoke about this at length in NZ media in 2019. And in Irish media. And in UK media.

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Long Reads

Comments on RugbyPass

LONG READ
LONG READ
Tour fortunes of English Lions blur selection picture for Borthwick