Ruddock Relishing Out-Half Battle Between Deasy And Quinlan
Previously a member of Cork Constitution during his time as a provincial player, Scott Deasy has proven to be a revelation for Lansdowne since his arrival in Dublin back in 2013. While he has played a key role in their march to the final, the same could be said of his opposite number in the Con side.
Tomas Quinlan’s 17-point haul against Terenure College helped the Leesiders advance to their third consecutive league showdown, and Ruddock believes the half-back battle will have a huge bearing on the outcome of the title decider.
“They’re similar in the sense they’re both match-winning out-halves. I call them quarterbacks a bit these days, because they’re the guys that run the ship. Any good team, like Johnny Sexton with Ireland, as much as the coach is going to influence the team, you need guys who are going to organise it and are pivotal to the success of those strategies on the field.
“Someone like Quinlan is fantastic down at Con, and just look at their record. Their pack is very strong and key guys there with a lot of big-game intellectual property. Then you have half-backs who dictate matters and boys outside who can score and finish.”
Though Cork Con defeated Lansdowne in last year’s league semi-final, Ruddock’s men claimed the spoils in the recent Bateman Cup final between the two teams. A 32-12 win at Temple Hill last month ensures they on course for a coveted All-Ireland double, but Ruddock insists an element of luck will be needed on Sunday afternoon.
“We played really well and executed our game-plan very well (last time out against Con), and on the day it fell for us. A couple of bounces went our way. You talk about losing, there was a bounce there last year in the semi-final and they scored a try.
“In the Bateman Cup final, the bounce went our way and the year before the bounce went their way. It could come down to that on Sunday, it could come down to it a little bit.”
“We spend 50% of our season on the astro-turf (on the back pitch). People always say to me that’s a massive home advantage on the astro-turf but hang on now, that means we have a massive disadvantage playing on grass. What we try to do is make those things totally irrelevant. It’s how we play the game.
“You learn over the years, if we have those little gremlins in your mind about home advantage or grass compared to astro. That’s what Leinster and Munster have done over the years. It doesn’t matter, just get the game-plan right and off you go,” he added.