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O’Driscoll: Great Tour But Series Defeat Leaves Bitter Taste

O’Driscoll: Great Tour But Series Defeat Leaves Bitter Taste

Brian O’Driscoll has enjoyed an incredible rugby season – winning the Grand Slam and Heineken Cup – although the culmination he had hoped for, a Test series victory with the 2009 British & Irish Lions, failed to materialise in South Africa.

Nevertheless, the Ireland captain, who was voted the Player of the 2009 RBS 6 Nations, has enjoyed his third tour with the Lions more than any other and has even hinted at carrying on for another tour.

BRIAN O’DRISCOLL…

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ON TASTING DEFEAT AFTER SUCH A GREAT SEASON:

“What I hate is that essentially that’s the last chapter, which will prey on my holidays a little bit. That’s the taste that’s left in your mouth – defeat in a series with the Lions, despite having won the Grand Slam and the Heineken Cup.

“It’s disappointing to think that you win those two in the same year that you lose a Lions series.

“In another year you’d be on a complete high throughout the whole summer, whereas now I’m left with the feeling that I’ve been involved in three Lions tours and I’ve lost the three of them.

“That’s not the way I saw this year ending up after the first two Tests. But even having lost the series, I’m really glad that I got to experience everything up to halfway into the last week.

“I’ve had a brilliant tour and I think that says an awful lot about what the management have done and this group of players.

“It has been an incredibly enjoyable tour, way more so than the other two. Even though we’ve lost the series going into the last game, I still look back and go, ‘do you know what, I’ve really, really enjoyed myself.’”

ON MISSING THE THIRD TEST AGAINST SOUTH AFRICA:

“It’s really disappointing. The weird thing is that I look at a third Test that doesn’t mean anything from a series point of view, yet it means everything from the point of view of still playing for the Lions.

“I never saw myself still playing for another four years. I always felt that this would be my last Lions tour but, at the same, when you see Simon Shaw (at 35 now) you think, ‘well, there’s hope.’

“I don’t know, maybe I’ve been a little bit tainted by a little bit of success this year.”

ON HIS FRUSTRATION AT LOSING THE TEST SERIES:

“We just lost by really, really small margins. We just needed a little bit of luck in both games, and we didn’t get it.

“The margins at this level are so minute that sometimes you just need the bounce of the ball or you look at particular points in a game. I look at that penalty they kicked just before half-time and I look at myself.

“I felt I was responsible for that because I called the play that gave them the penalty. It’s just those small things and, maybe, sometimes being a little smart.

“Maybe being a little older, as I am, I should have known better. But sometimes when you get that winning feeling you sometimes just go for the jugular.”

ON THE CONCUSSION HE SUSTAINED IN THE SECOND TEST:

“I was a bit shaky before that clash with Danie Rossouw. When Gethin Jenkins actually cracked a cheekbone, I hit (Bryan) Habana as well.

“I only saw on the video that Gethin pretty much punched me in the face in the act of the tackle which kind of stunned me.

“I was a bit shaky and when the second hit came along I was a little worse for wear.

“I didn’t seem to have any emotions because of the knock to my head for the remaining 10 or 15 minutes when I was off the pitch. It was weird, like not having emotion whether we won or lost.”

ON HEADING HOME EARLY FROM THE TOUR:

“I learned an awful lot about not staying around after your tour has finished from four years ago. I stayed for a fortnight and, when I look back, that was not my smartest move.

“If I’m not going to be on the training pitch, at least trying to help the team win the third Test, there’s no need for me to be hanging around.”

ON MISSING HIS 100TH TEST THIS WEEKEND:

“I am aware it would have been my 100th Test (between playing for Ireland and the Lions) in Johannesburg on Saturday. It’s disappointing but, at the same time, in a way it would have been fantastic knowing you were playing in your 100th game having something to play for.

“It’ll revert back to playing 100 Tests for Ireland hopefully.”