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Opinion: Whatever way you look at it, Sexton would be money well spent by the IRFU

Getting Ireland’s most important player back into the fold in time for the World Cup is excellent business.

Reproduced with permission from Whiff of Cordite

IN CASE YOU’VE just woken up, Irish rugby is beside itself today on the back of a pretty definitive report from the Irish Independent that Jonny Sexton will return to Leinster next season.

It’s impossible to see it as anything other than great news.

Jonathan Sexton celebrates scoring the opening try with Devin Toner James Crombie / INPHO James Crombie / INPHO / INPHO

There has been the odd bout of griping that the IRFU could have saved a packet by leaving him in France where he was doing just fine, but such arguments miss one crucial point. The IRFU is committed to having all the players on home soil, and the model for Irish rugby that has proved reasonably successful since the dawn of professionalism has been to have the best players centrally contracted and playing their rugby for the provincial teams.

The system has its flaws and isn’t perfect, but it’s founded on the principal that the players’ performance is maximised by managing their game-time and ensuring that the national team’s interests are fed into by the provinces.

If you don’t agree with that premise, that’s fine. But be sure to apply the same logic when, say, Peter O’Mahony, Iain Henderson or Robbie Henshaw are negotiating their next contract.

+ intangibles

 

Sexton is arguably the single most important player for Ireland’s World Cup and future Six Nations chances, so if an optimally managed Sexton is just 5% better than he would otherwise be, it will be money well spent.  That’s before we even get into the benefits of visibility of our star players, marketing the game to punters and other intangibles.

We’ve said before that negotiating these high-profile contracts is a thankless job; sign the player and you’ve paid him too much money, lose him and you’re too much of a penny-pincher. So it is nice to be able to say the IRFU should be given a pat on the back for a job well done.

The problems arose in the first place because they dragged their heels and looked complacent, giving Racing and other suitors all the time they wanted to sweet-talk the player, but this time they’ve wasted no time, locking things down before the domestic season has even started.

Readers will recall Joe Schmidt’s lamentation during the Six Nations preparations that ‘we have lost control of the player’, and no doubt he has impressed upon those writing the paycheques the importance of keeping the players at home where they can best manage them. Sexton is a card-carrying member of the Schmidt fanclub and it’s easy to imagine Schmidt having a hands-on role in the deal.

Joe Schmidt and Jonathan Sexton James Crombie / INPHO James Crombie / INPHO / INPHO

So, Ireland will stand to benefit. It’s a World Cup year where the players’ game exposure tends to be managed more strictly than ever. Sexton won’t get the benefit of that over the next nine months, because he won’t be here until next season, but presumably his World Cup build-up and pre-season will be managed by the IRFU now.

The biggest winner, by far, is Leinster. After all, Ireland still have access to the player and their frustrations in terms of Six Nations preparation time pale beside Leinster’s problem; they lost their most important player. Now they will have him back (in a year’s time) and the knock-on effect should make Leinster a more attractive proposition for other players. A Leinster with Sexton at 10 should be competing for silverware on all fronts.

Jonathan Sexton and Ian Madigan in Boca stadium Dan Sheridan / INPHO Dan Sheridan / INPHO / INPHO

There will be lots of talk of Ian Madigan being ‘the big loser’ here, and it being ‘time to think about his next move’ and so on. But the be-quiffed one and everyone else would be as well ignoring it.

Madigan has an entire year before Sexton gets here and should be focusing exclusively on playing as well as he can this season; that means making himself first-choice at Leinster (whether at 10 or 12), continuing to get exposure at test level and securing his place in the World Cup squad, for which there will be significant competition.

He’s contracted with Leinster until 2016 in any case, so any long, dark nights of the soul are miles down the road and there is plenty he can do to shape his career in the meantime.

Read more at WhiffOfCordite.com or follow them on Twitter @WhiffofCordite here.

There was a tragic miniature car accident in the Top 14 this weekend

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