Irish Daily Star

NORTHERN EXPOSURE!

McCloskey and Marshall impress

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IF it’s September it is, right on cue, the Ulster centres demonstrat­ing they’re vastly under-rated in the Ireland setup.

Stuart McCloskey and Luke Marshall were easily the best combinatio­n on show across the dozen clubs in the six URC games over the weekend.

Misfired

They were also individual­ly better than the other midfielder­s across the provinces where half-a-dozen centres misfired completely.

McCloskey and Marshall were unstoppabl­e at Ravenhill as Ulster blasted past Connacht, for whom (above

Tom Farrell and Tom Daly were left chasing shadows.

Kiwi import Charlie Ngatai and Jamie Osbourne were hardly a matching pair for Leinster who turned porous in the second-half against Zebre.

They were significan­t contributo­rs the Blues missing 20 tackles in a match they won by a four points partially thanks to Zebre missing three from five conversion­s.

Over in Cardiff Chris Farrell and a second Kiwi Malakai Fekitoa were also all at sea, dominated by 23-year-old Max Llewelyn.

Burst

It was ‘déjà vu all over again’ in Belfast, where McCloskey (30) shone, producing a burst and lay-off for an early Marshall try.

The Bangor-born star de2013, buted for Ulster in has been Ulster Player of the Year twice, made the URC’s Dream Team twice and earned just six Ireland caps.

Marshall’s return from injury has been nothing short of heroic, having had one start and three sub appearance­s at the back end of last season 2021/22. That followed just four appearance­s in 2020/21, a season cut short by an injury.

“Stuart McCloksey is ridiculous­ly skilful,” said Ulster boss Dan McFarland.“In another man’s world Stu would have played for Ireland for the last five years but it is a competitiv­e position, with so many Lions in there.

“I would love to see Stu wear the Ireland jersey. If called upon he would add another dimension to their play.

“Stu is not massively vocal but is a really good defensive leader and quietly goes about his business. The other players love playing with him.”

McFarland said of Marshall:“Luke is part of the heartbeat of the team. It’s the first game he’s started for a while but he’s so proud to wear the jersey.

Exhausted

“He looks exhausted after 30 minutes of the game but just keeps going and offers something different to Stu.”

It it is clear that if Robbie Henshaw, Garry Ringrose and Bundee Aki are Ireland first picks. It is also clear the Ulster trio of McCloskey, Marshall and James Hume are next in line.

There were a number of the Emerging Ireland squad in action.

Back-three players Shane Daly, Stewart Moore and Calvin Nash looked the part while Nathan Doak was excellent at Kingspan; up front Josh Wycherley, Tom Stewart, Alex Kendellen, Scott Penny and Max Deegan looked the pick.

Leinster’s Ciaran Frawley, about whom there is considerab­le interest in the context of deputising for Johnny Sexton with Ireland, came from the bench after 53 minutes.

Shane Daly (Munster); Calvin Nash (Munster), Luke Marshall (Ulster), Stewart McCloskey (Ulster), Dave Kearney (Leinster); Billy Burns (Ulster), Nathan Doak (Ulster); Josh Wycherley (Munster), Tom Stewart (Ulster), Marty Moore (Ulster), Jason Jenkins (Leinster), Jean Kleyn (Munster), Rhys Ruddock (Leinster), Alex Kendellan (Munster), Max Deegan (Leinster).

 ?? ?? IMPRESSIVE: Ulster’s Stuart McCloskey is tackled by Tom Daly of Connacht and
Luke Marshall
IMPRESSIVE: Ulster’s Stuart McCloskey is tackled by Tom Daly of Connacht and Luke Marshall
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