Paul O’Connell : In His Own Words

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Andrew Fosker/REX Shutterstock (5036699bq) Captain Paul O'Connell of Ireland England v Ireland - QBE International - 05/09/2015 - Twickenham Stadium - London Mandatory Credit: Andrew Fosker / Seconds Left Images England v Ireland, QBE International, Rugby Union, Twickenham, London, Britain - 05 Sep 2015 Byline: Andrew Fosker/Seconds Left/Rex Shutterstock

Paul O’Connell has played his final game for Ireland & Munster. It remains to be seen whether or not his devastating injury will affect his Toulon contract and if Sunday’s game was his last. Let’s take a look back at some memorable quotes from the towering lock.

I want them standing back thinking ‘what the f**k is going on here?’ not for the first five minutes – every f**king minute of the game. F**king manic aggression – did you scare anyone? Did you put the fear of God into anyone?

To his Irish teammates before playing France in 2007

There’s a lot of logic and a lot of thought and a lot of preparation goes into rugby and all of the brutal moments that you see are . . . it isn’t mindless brutality.

O’Connell explaining how rugby is just as much brains as it is brawn.

This is where it gets most challenging. This is when it’s hardest. Going on will be tough. The experience will be great for us, but we’ve got to make sure we kick on. There are tough times ahead.

After winning the 2009 Grand Slam

If you can lift the World Cup you will go down in history. Look at the English team that won it in 2003 – the only northern hemisphere nation to have ever done that. Those guys are legends.

It would be great to fulfil our potential and play to the best of our ability in this year’s World Cup.

To Donald McRae of the Guardian in January this year

I think, after rugby, if I wasn’t doing something I loved, that gnaws away at me. I’m going to need to love what I’m doing to be able to get up early to do it.

To Paul Kimmage on life after rugby.

I don’t know if it is nerves or stress, but when you are coming towards the end you appreciate that there won’t be many more of them. You want them all to be good days.

O’Connell contemplates a life after rugby as he closed in on his centenary of Irish caps last March.

Source: Irish Independent

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