I think part of Ireland's success has been in developing and then retaining internationals in their regional teams - through various means including a very attractive tax breaks etc but also in terms of a more joined up approach to player development between club and country (I'm really contrasting with England here, where it's probably better now than it was at early stages of professionalism but is still not ideal, especially given Eddie picking players in random positions and breaking what feels like at least half of them in every camp).weegie01 wrote: ↑Mon Dec 13, 2021 3:29 pmI don't understand why this would be so. Partly because I don't think it is unreasonable that the much larger pool of players in England should generate enough players of the requisite quality. The relationship may not be linear, but a larger pool of players should result in more players of a defined standard, other things being equal. Partly because I remember a time it was virtually axiomatic that the average level in the Prem was higher than in Scotland, Wales and Ireland individually or combined.
When the Celtic League was launched, it had 4 teams from each of Scotland, Wales and Ireland. It was generally accepted that the teams at the top were comparable to the top of the Prem, in the middle the English teams were stronger, and at the bottom the English teams were much stronger with the Prem teams stronger on average. There was a persuasive argument that there were teams in the Championship that were better than some of those in the Celtic League.
The Scottish teams consolidated to two, the Welsh to three and Irish stayed at 4. Ireland did consider dropping to three as the IRFU felt they lacked the resources for 4, but Connacht survived as an underfunded development side.
If the concentration of resources were the reason for Ireland's success, then Ireland would have had more success earlier, and Scotland, and especially Wales given their relative success at international level, would have seen better results.
I don't think much has changed in England, Scotland or Wales. What has changed is that Ireland has found a way to improve the quality of all its teams relative not just to the Prem, but relative to everyone else with Connacht improving just as much as Leinster, just from a lower base. I don't know how they did it, but I am envious they did.
I appreciate it's just my gut intuition but I think retention is overlooked a fair bit in these arguments, which benefits both club and national team - especially if you can get national team players playing in their club positions alongside their club teammates, e.g. Leinster backs and Munster forwards. Wales for example have had to introduce rules to stop the exodus of their better players (eta: I know all countries have had to this, but it seemed to introduce more soulsearching and contention in Wales than elsewhere, presumably as it hit so many in the squad). England - even noting that the national team players aren't evenly distributed amongst the clubs - have a quite diffuse team representation, e.g. post-Vunipola there are only really 2/3 Sarries in the pack and although Bath provide a good handful in the squad these are at best a couple of front row, a lock, a back row and a wing or two. There's very few club pairings/groupings being blooded and developed in international competition, which is surely the most intense development environment in professional rugby, and a development which would be hugely beneficial to the club sides themselves.
I've always been intrigued by the argument that larger player numbers necessarily drives up quality, mostly as I view being included in international competition as a development pathway in itself and is limited to a selected few for all teams - everyone has a squad of 23 on matchday, and the same number of caps to build up experience and to develop the players. On this topic, I'm also not convinced England have done the clubs - or a number of players - many favours in recent years.
Just my two pence worth, but as a completely unscientific observation Ireland do seem to retain their better players in Ireland more effectively than their peers.