Rotation not in Andy Farrell's mind despite surgery for Wales
CHANGING IT UP: Ireland head coach Andy Farrell at the squad announcement for Friday's meeting with Wales Pic: ©INPHO/Laszlo Geczo
Andy Farrell insisted rotation was not part of his vocabulary as he rang the changes for Irelandâs Guinness Six Nations clash with Wales at Aviva Stadium on Friday night with the claim that none of his players were ever capped for the sake of it.
Five changes and an additional positional switch to face a winless but improving Welsh side searching for its first championship win since 2023 point to the sort of surgery that once greeted a fixture at perennial wooden spooners Italy in years gone by.
A first Six Nations start for Nick Timoney at openside flanker and a potential milestones off the bench with a possible debut for scrum-half Nathan Doak and maiden championship appearances for hooker Tom Stewart and centre Tom Farrell strengthen that perception.
Yet if anything, the head coach should be applauded for continuing to broaden the depth of his squad as he has done throughout the 2026 competition. The new additions for this penultimate game will, if they are sprung from the bench, bring the total number of players used by Farrell in this window to 33. Injuries to a string of frontline stalwarts have undoubtedly forced his hand in selection terms but this has been a valuable period for a widening group of players, any of whom may be needed on World Cup duty in 18 months.
Farrell addressed that on Thursday when the dreaded âRâ word was raised in a question around his selections over the last four matches.
âObviously, that is an obvious one why these type of things could happen,â he began, âbut at the same time, honestly, nobody gets capped just for the sake of it, they've got to earn it.
âThat's why I don't like the word rotation, it's not. You've got to earn it. You don't just get a freebie at rotating just because that's what we think needs to happen.
âWe do those type of things because people have earned the right to do that, we think and at the same time, we're hoping that they're able to deal with the occasion and the big game that it is for some of them coming in who are new to this type of level, that they're able to flourish and therefore able to carry on competing.âÂ
Significantly, Farrell has kept faith with his starting half-backs and centres with Jamison Gibson-Park set to earn his 50th cap at scrum-half following his man of the match performance against England, partnering fly-half Jack Crowley, while Stuart McCloskey gets another opportunity to cement his status as first-choice inside centre alongside fellow midfielder Garry Ringrose, and despite the availability of Bundee Aki following suspension and Robbie Henshaw after injury. Neither of those 50-cappers are in the 23 to face Wales with another centre, Tom Farrell, getting the nod as outside back replacement.
Tommy OâBrien can count himself unlucky to drop out of the 23 following a scintillating performance as James Loweâs injury replacement at Twickenham as Farrell restores Jacob Stockdale to the left wing in a more like-for-like switch.
And the Ulster revival is rubber stamped in the forward pack as Tom OâToole starts at loosehead prop for the injured Jeremy Loughman, and Timoney starts ahead of Josh van der Flier in a back row also featuring captain Caelan Doris at No.8 and Jack Conan sat blindside flanker after recovering from the illness which kept him out of the side to face England. Conanâs inclusion comes as Tadhg Beirne switches to the second row alongside James Ryan with Joe McCarthy moving to a strong bench which also feature Michael Milne and Thomas Clarkson as the covering props, van der Flier, Doak, Farrell and Ciaran Frawley as Sam Prendergast sits it out for another week.
Farrell is cutting a very different figure to the one who called his players out for lacking intent following their heavy round one defeat to France in Paris four weeks ago, that big win over England completely flipping the script on an Ireland set-up that now appears rejuvenated and with a Triple Crown in play with home games against the Welsh and Scotland their remaining matches.
âIntentâ is the new buzzword in camp and Farrell is delighted it has been reintroduced to his playersâ performances.
âYou heard a lot of us talk about âcharacterâ in the autumn. You heard me say âpresenceâ today. They're the same thing. There's a different mindset to dealing with big occasions.
âThat's why last week against England was a big test because away from home, big stadium, big occasion, good team. You learn your lesson from that and we weren't ready. We weren't ready in France for whatever reason and that's not good enough.
"Not furious,â he added of his post-match reaction at Stade de France. âI'm more glad that we took the learnings from it more than anything.
âWe'll see whether we can carry that on. That's what we're all chasing down. It's very tough at this level to be improving week on week at international level. Yeah, I'm more proud of how we've responded then going into our shells.âÂ
Jamie Osborne (Nass/Leinster); Robert Baloucoune (Enniskillen/Ulster), Garry Ringrose (UCD/Leinster), Stuart McCloskey (Bangor/Ulster), Jacob Stockdale (Lurgan/Ulster); Jack Crowley (Cork Constitution/Munster), Jamison Gibson-Park (Leinster); Tom OâToole (Ballynahinch/Ulster), RĂłnan Kelleher (Lansdowne/Leinster), Tadhg Furlong (Clontarf/Leinster), James Ryan (UCD/Leinster), Tadhg Beirne (Lansdowne/Munster); Jack Conan (Old Belvedere/Leinster), Nick Timoney (Queenâs University/Ulster), Caelan Doris (St. Maryâs College/Leinster) - captain.
Tom Stewart (Ballynahinch/Ulster), Michael Milne (Nenagh Ormond/Munster), Thomas Clarkson (Blackrock College/Leinster), Joe McCarthy (Dublin University/Leinster), Josh van der Flier (UCD/Leinster), Nathan Doak (Banbridge/Ulster), Tom Farrell (Lansdowne/Munster), Ciaran Frawley (UCD/Leinster).
Louis Rees-Zammit (Bristol Bears); Ellis Mee (Scarlets), Eddie James (Scarlets), Joe Hawkins (Scarlets), Josh Adams (Cardiff) ; Dan Edwards (Ospreys), Tomos Williams (Gloucester); Rhys Carre (Saracens), Dewi Lake (Ospreys) â captain, Tomas Francis (Provence); Dafydd Jenkins (Exeter Chiefs), Ben Carter (Dragons); Alex Mann (Cardiff), James Botham (Cardiff), Aaron Wainwright (Dragons).
Ryan Elias (Scarlets), Nicky Smith (Leicester Tigers), Archie Griffin (Bath), Adam Beard (Montpellier), Olly Cracknell (Leicester Tigers), Kieran Hardy (Ospreys), Jarrod Evans (Harlequins), Louie Hennessey (Bath).





