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The 42
is the home of quality journalism for passionate Irish sports fans, bringing you closer to the 2025 Six Nations through insightful analysis and sharp sportswriting.
PETER O’MAHONY CALLS them ‘rows.’ You know what he means.
Scuffles, shemozzles, set-tos, barneys, handbags, tête-à-têtes. Call them what you want, you know the drill.
When most people think of Peter O’Mahony the rugby player, these are the moments that first spring to mind. He has been the ultimate pain in the hole for opposition teams and the ultimate team-mate for the Munster and Ireland players who have loved him having their backs.
His relentlessly aggressive mindset has made him famous around the rugby world. Infamous in a fair few spots. The Cork man has never been one for backward steps. There has always been an edge to his game. He’s now in the final week of his Ireland career, this Saturday’s clash with Italy his last hurrah, but nothing has changed in that regard.
“I was always competitive,” says O’Mahony. “I hated losing. I’ve always hated it, no matter whether we were playing Playstation or anything.
“Look, playing for the club and province you grew up supporting, for your country… there are very few people who grow up and play for clubs they belong to. I think that means it has to mean that bit more to you.
“Don’t get me wrong, we’ve had players come into Munster and Ireland who weren’t from there and been more from Munster or Ireland and played with more passion than some people who were from there.
“But that gave me a bit more of an edge that I was fighting for the lads I knew in Cork Con or people from the province or Ireland. I’ve always wanted to make people proud of a performance, it mightn’t even be a win, but that they could see something in you.”
O’Mahony embraced the role of provocateur and first responder from the beginning of his career. Those who saw him in his earliest days know that he has been an enforcer from day one.
Now in the final few months of his career – he will finish completely at the end of Munster’s season – O’Mahony admits this role has always been clear in his mind. Even when there wasn’t much cause for a row.
“There’s days where I’ve gone out and said to myself, ‘You need to get in a row in the first 10 minutes here.’ You just pick someone and that’s the end of it,” he says.
“There were days where that was needed, particularly in the earlier days. I won’t tell you who, but I could have had a tap on the shoulder saying, ‘We need you here now to f**king be on it’ and that was part of my role.
“Sometimes you get a feel for it, ‘F**k it, things aren’t going the right way, I need to get stuck in here.’ Not even a row, just get stuck in physically. That’s always the way.
O'Mahony is usually in the thick of any rows. James Crombie / INPHO
James Crombie / INPHO / INPHO
“It’s different now, that was back in the day. Rugby is a different animal now in 2025 than it was in 2012, a different sport almost, but it’s a physical game and that’s never going to change. Physicality is so, so important and physical confrontation is so, so important. I’m not overly skillful so I knew that had to be part of my game.”
O’Mahony has earned the scorn of many opposition supporters and players, even the hatred of some.
But he says that very little of what he has got involved in has been personal.
“Rugby isn’t a game for that kind of sh*t,” he says.
“Don’t get me wrong, we’ve had stuff with Glasgow that has got personal, 100% personal. You always have rivalries and even in training, you’d have rows, physical rows. Back in the day, there was fighting in training but it was all because you wanted to get better and it boiled over. You weren’t going out to hit a fella a slap.
“It was competitive, then you just got on with it. You felt bad, you had to apologise and that was the end of it. It’s a physical confrontation and these things are going to happen.”
O’Mahony’s toughness has been a calling card but though he claims not to be overly skillful, there has been immense craft and guile to his game too.
Indeed, he will be remembered as one of the greatest lineout forwards in Irish rugby history and perhaps the global game.
That’s the other image of O’Mahony that will linger – the soaring lineout steals that sickened the opposition in key moments of games.
He hands out credit for his prowess in this part of the game to many others. O’Mahony chose to play with his home club Cork Con after school rather than going to UCC because he wanted to be coached by Brian Hickey.
“Brian was doing more video than some of the professional coaches were with regards to lineout work, and still is,” says O’Mahony.
He gives major credit to strength and conditioning coaches Paudie Roche and Aidan O’Connell who worked with the Munster academy when O’Mahony was part of it. Roche and O’Connell were big into Olympic weightlifting and power work.
They had O’Mahony lifting ”silly weights” on snatches and clean and jerks, which stood to his ability to jump in the lineout. O’Mahony was renowned for his explosive spring off the ground, his timing, and his deft handling in the air.
He counts himself lucky that Paul O’Connell took him under his wing early on, passing on crucial pointers with regards to jump technique and backing O’Mahony as a key man.
“Paulie was the brains of the operation and he used me to free ball up for himself, or to win ball with. This was with Munster and Ireland at the start of my career and that’s the way it went.”
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O'Mahony has always been a lineout menace. James Crombie / INPHO
James Crombie / INPHO / INPHO
O’Connell hammered home to O’Mahony that he could make this lineout stuff his calling card.
“Paul talks about cornering the market,” says O’Mahony.
“You know, I cornered the market when it comes to a back row’s ability to win lineout ball.”
And yet, O’Mahony doesn’t count himself as a true lineout nerd. In French rugby, the tradition is for back rows to call lineouts but O’Mahony never had any interest in taking things that far.
He has always struggled with the video work, saying he doesn’t have great concentration levels when it comes to that sort of stuff.
That’s in contrast to someone like O’Connell, who continues to have an incredible appetite for it now in his role as Ireland’s forward coach.
“Guys like James Ryan, Paul, Tadhg Beirne, Donnacha Ryan were obsessed with watching video and decoding lineouts, then they’d manoeuvre me into one of the spots they thought the other team won a lot of ball in.
“They did a lot of the graft and just used my jumping ability.”
This weekend means one last trip to Rome for O’Mahony with Ireland.
But it’s also one last trip to Rome supporting O’Mahony for his family.
He’s not the only one who has invested blood, sweat, and tears into a 113-cap international career. It takes a serious support crew to get to these heights and stay there for as long as O’Mahony has.
Last Saturday in Dublin was an emotional one as the 35-year-old bid farewell to the Irish supporters on home soil. It wasn’t the game Ireland were hoping to deliver against France for O’Mahony, Conor Murray, and Cian Healy, but they get a chance to send them off on a final high this weekend in Rome.
O’Mahony has been trying to get his head around what it will be like to finish up with Ireland. So have his loved ones.
“It’s going to be a big adjustment for all of my family, Jess and the kids. Indie is going to be nine and she’s been involved in a lot of my career. Theo loves coming to camp, coming into the hotel and seeing all his buddies he hangs around with which is a regular occurrence in November and the Six Nations. Ralph is a bit small to figure out what’s going on but he’s getting there.
“Then obviously you’ve my mum and dad [Caroline and John]. My dad is retired. He’s been involved in my career since day dot and it’s going to be a big change for him and my mum. His calendar nearly works around my rugby commitments. He spends the month in Dublin pretty much for November.
“They’re lucky, my mum’s brother lives up in Dublin so they stay with him when they’re up. The parents’ Whatsapps, we were only laughing that he’s going to be thrown out of all these things. He’ll be gutted.
O'Mahony with his wife Jessica and son Ralph last year. Dan Sheridan / INPHO
Dan Sheridan / INPHO / INPHO
“But that’s life, we’re all going to have to learn to adjust to it, adjust to being in the stands shouting the lads on instead of in the parents’ box and on the pitch.”
The families have been a bigger part of the Ireland set-up than ever since Andy Farrell took over in 2020. From coming into the team hotel to present jerseys to their loved ones on milestone occasions, being flown by the IRFU to World Cup games, and invited into all sorts of team events, it has been an all-in affair.
“To have us away from home a lot, it’s obviously a full-time commitment. That’s an understatement,” says O’Mahony.
“It’s not normal hours. I spend six-and-a-half or seven weeks of the eight weeks of the Six Nations in Dublin, I don’t go home. That takes its own toll on smallies and Jess at home doing the job of two people for a few months.
“So it’s right that Andy puts an importance on how important they are to us, so we have spent a lot of time together. Some of Jess’ best friends are wives of the other lads. That’s down to Andy and what he has created.”
This is his final week with Ireland but there is still a bit of road to run with Munster as O’Mahony aims to finish his time with the province with another bit of success.
The Grand Slam wasn’t to be and Ireland have lost control of the Six Nations but O’Mahony takes pride from still being here on merit. He was close to retiring at the end of last season but felt he had enough left in the tank for one more big year of rugby.
Now he’s enjoying ticking off all the ‘lasts,’ feeling that he hasn’t just faded out of view.
“I’m glad I played on,’ he says. “It was the right call because I’ve loved these last few weeks. I’m involved in everything, competitive, pushing standards. That’s how I wanted to go out.
“I didn’t want to go out with people saying, ‘F**k it, he’s past it and needs to pull the plug.’ I never wanted that to be the case and I’m lucky because nine times out of 10, rugby makes the call for you. A lot of times you’re either pushed out or you’re broken.
“Very few guys get to go, ‘You know what, I’m playing well and I’m enjoying my rugby.’
“And it’s time to go now.”
__________
Heineken 0.0 has teamed up with sports stars Peter O’Mahony and John O’Shea to prove that sports are better when watched together.
The Heineken® 0.0 Match Day Experiment, carried out with tech partner Neurons, monitored and measured the differences in enjoyment levels when watching a match alone versus with others. It was found that watching a game with others amplifies excitement, boosting motivation by 24% before kickoff and keeping emotional stimulation 20% higher during slower moments throughout the game.
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Builders with a conscience?… the council will make the rules to suit themselves…how many floodplain objections were ignored during the boom when brown envelopes were packeted!
No story on the United States, Britain and Saudi Arabia dropping bombs on a funeral in Yemen yesterday that killed and injured 700 people or are war crimes only reported on when it is committed by our supposed enemies??
I visited a few new build developments in Dublin yesterday. Green spaces are a thing of the past, cobble lock parking, concrete footpaths, Tarmac roadways. Houses are tall terraced three stories, they are built right up to the footpath.
An earlier phase of one of the developments is fully occupied.
Cars fill every nook and cranny. Each corner and kerb has a car perched on top.
Many of the homes appear to be buy to let.
Planning departments are granting permission for 1.5 parking spaces in 4 bedroom houses.
Two houses in one of those appeared on Daft the other day as buy to let.
If I want to enjoy battles over parking, bins, bicycle parking, I can enjoy it in my current apartment.
Buy shares in NCPS as they are getting more contracts from management companies while we build higher density homes.
@Mossy Phelan: It goes to show that not all planning departments sing off the same hymn-sheet where developers are concerned. Leaving a mess in one county before moving off to another is fair game it seems.
The plan looks dense enough to me. My village was ruined by high density badly planned estates which weren’t even finished. The government could have had a sustainable industry, steady stream of housing and construction jobs if planning was managed nationally instead of control resting at the councils. It’s a disgrace how the country’s been blighted by greedy, bad planning and now they speak of a housing shortage…only in Ireland…
So should we all live in urbanised apartment blocks Eamon??? If people are looking to build on their own land in an area they are from I firmly believe they should be allowed do so once they meet planning regulations
Gary, fine if you want to build a house in the middle of a remote field but then don’t come along later and moan about poor transportation, no broadband, and how you want the postman to talk to you when you’re old.
@Barry Davidson:
Nobody in the country moans about poor transportation, they accept there is none and make their own arrangements. They are fully entitled to moan about increases in Motor Tax & Fuel Prices, just as anybody living in an Urban area is entitled to do so about Bus Fares and Train Ticket prices.
The model in holland and germany works but is unpalatable in ireland. You must live in a city town or village umless you are actively farming the land. Their approach has to do with cost efficiency, infrastructure costs, and provision of services-hosptials, doctor clinics, council services, schools/town busses/broadband/electricity/gas/water/sewage/rubbish collection & re-cycling. The local council in your town provides you with ur driving license and paspport as well as providing a host of other services. The modest local council tax ensures provision of cycling lanes, footpaths, roads. Each town has an area sectioned off for a park for walking and extensive sport facilities. If you look at the layout of Alphen aan den Rijn in holland its a text book example of how to layout a town. I know this all sounds unpalatable in ireland but it works. I very much enjoy the countryside and head out every weekend but ive chosen to live in a town for convenience and im too busy during the week to enjoy the great outdoors. I know this model doesn’t suit everyone and we have an agricultural background in this country as opposed to industrial nations like the example discused. Just thought I’d share my own experiences.
@gregory: Gergory, the trend toward living in urban areas is well established in Ireland.
The real problem is that most of the built environment in Ireland is just tat, only recently has their been a focus on quality construction and good quality windows and doors.
How can you blame those who choose to build one off housing, when the alternative was to pay more for rubbish quality.
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