THE SMALL THINGS that make a big difference in performance. The one percenters. They’re easily done, easily botched, easily forgotten, and ignored by some. Master the basics continuously, and results will come.
Connacht strength and conditioning coach Johnny O’Connor. Source: James Crombie/INPHO
Four days to go. Galway on a late summer morning stolen from June, the sun beaming off the surface of Lough Atalia as the city wakes in tranquility. The west in its purest form, at its lustrous best. Home is where the heart is for Johnny O’Connor, and you can see why.
“I’ve got a great love for this place,” he says. “I love it, absolutely fucking love it.”
More on that later. For now, in his current guise as Connacht’s senior strength and conditioning coach, he doesn’t have a lot of time to reflect or look back, rather work hard in the present and constantly plan for what is to come, ensuring his players are ready for those challenges.
Now in his third different spell at his home province, it feels like O’Connor has always been part of the furniture here. Yet he hasn’t. Time away in England with Wasps and then at the start of his post-playing career with Arsenal has given him great memories and eye-opening experiences, but absence, they say, makes the heart grow fonder.
“Yeah, this is the dream job,” he smiles, looking out over the Sportsground. “I’m always just attracted back to this place, the west of Ireland. I’ve had a love affair with Connacht really. Just love it here.”
Over the pick-pack-pock-puck of early-rising workmen hammering and drilling, and the hustle and bustle of ground-staff busily cutting strips and painting lines on the pitch for the season-opener, O’Connor has arrived for work shortly after 9am having made the short journey from home.
In his second season on the club’s backroom staff, it has been a long summer of early mornings, and late nights, but as the players begin to escape the clutches of pre-season purgatory and are rewarded with the substance of competitive rugby again, much of the legwork has been done.
The majority of the squad are on a day off, resting up after two intense training days at the start of the week, but there is no such luxury for O’Connor as the wheel continues to turn and his time is demanded elsewhere. There is much to do, in this week of all weeks.
On this particular morning, he’s overseeing a session for a group of injured players and will work closely with them as they continue their respective roads to recovery, before the bulk of the group are back in tomorrow to finalise preparations for Glasgow Warriors.
It’s a fast-paced environment, and multi-layered job, but for an individual whose off-field marriage to the gym and training made him the player he became, there is no surprise O’Connor’s passion remains undiluted.
Pre-season is naturally the busiest period of the year for the 38-year-old, as the strength and conditioning team are tasked with not only priming the players for the demands of a long and arduous campaign, but also putting the framework in place to ensure they are in peak physical condition to sustain Connacht’s high-tempo style of play week-on-week.
Working alongside head of athletic performance David Howarth — who was with NBA side Oklahoma City Thunder previously — and Barry O’Brien, O’Connor is part of small but experienced strength and conditioning team whose role is ever-evolving and increasingly important.
“We’re a team who want to play with a high-tempo and with a great level of accuracy,” he tells The42.
O’Connor is in his second season as S&C coach. Source: Inpho/Billy Stickland
The arrival of Andy Friend as head coach has seen Connacht work extensively on their technical skills over the summer months, with the three pre-season wins over Brive, Wasps and Bristol providing evidence of how their free-flowing and expansive attacking game is developing.
Friend’s previous experience with the Australia Sevens team has also seen him introduce a number ideas from that format, and his vision for the way the game should be played — or at least how Connacht should play it — means there is an even greater emphasis on what happens in the gym under O’Connor’s watch.
“Andy has laid out how he wants to play and it’s then up to us to produce leaner, fitter, faster and stronger players,” he continues.
“If you look at basic skill-sets for the game of rugby, such as clearing someone out. If a player needs to improve that area of their game, we’ll look at whether it’s a technical issue or a physical issue.
“If it’s a technical issue, the player can then go and work with the coaches and actually fix those things and if it’s a physical issue, we can work with them in the gym.
“When you put all the key points of the game together like the breakdown and your re-alignment in attack, they’re hugely important but if you’re not fit you’re not going to be in the line early enough and your decision-making process is going to be affected.
The early signs have been particularly encouraging under Friend, and there’s a growing sense around these parts that something special is building, within these five counties, within these four walls.
Even in the walk up College Road towards the Sportsground, or all the way in towards the city off the motorway, there are posters and banners promoting the start of the new season, and the self-coined ‘month of champions.’
Nobody in here is getting too carried away but you can’t hide from the fact there is a feel-good factor around the rugby team again, and Connacht is the talk of the town for all the right reasons.
What’s clear is that there is a renewed spirit around the place after the disappointment and frustration of last season under Kieran Keane, and Friend’s holistic approach has helped cultivate a strong dressing room bond.
O’Connor’s stature as one of the province’s most-revered former players has certainly added to the group, his rugby intellect second-to-none and his passion and love for the club shining through in the drive and enthusiasm he brings to work every day.
“I’m really enjoying it,” he says. “Rugby is a nice environment for a strength and conditioning coach to work in just because players feel the need for it, you’re setting guys up to win collisions and I really enjoy that aspect of it. The buy-in from the players, they’re easy to deal with and the lads here really, really want to do something.
“You can tell how they’ve carried themselves through the pre-season and even last year, how one season goes isn’t a reflection of where the group is at. It seems this year we’re in a good space, we’ve come together well.
“We’ve probably had some better squads before but at the moment, our key messages and where we’re going, it’s changed. There’s certainly a far more superior and intelligent player than when I was here as a player and that’s the just facts of it.
“Things change very quickly and even when I came back in it was just a noticeable change. We’ve found a style instead of trying to copy everyone else’s style and I think we’re going to keep going with that.”
It’s now five years since the Galway native made his 146th and final appearance in the green of Connacht, as the curtain came down on an illustrious 14-year career, which earned him legendary status around these parts.
O’Connor works alongside David Howarth. Source: James Crombie/INPHO
The former flanker, who signed his first professional contract in 2000, enjoyed two stints in Galway with his native province either side of a four-year spell with Wasps.
During his time in England, O’Connor was involved in two Heineken Cup wins, two Premiership titles and a Powergen Cup victory, before coming back to Connacht in 2007 to finish his playing days where it all started.
Although there had been lingering doubts over his size for Test rugby, he more than proved his worth in winning 12 caps for Ireland, as his hunger, drive and commitment to the jersey earned him the nickname Johnny ‘Concrete’ O’Connor.
So impressive was his rookie season at international level, O’Connor was named IRUPA players’ player of the year in 2005, a further indication of just how valued he was in a dressing room, with his durability, dynamism and work-ethic coming to the fore.
He carried those core values with him throughout his playing career, having been set on the right path in his late-teens by a Kiwi team-mate in Galway Corinthians after a difficult couple of years in school.
“I didn’t get it easy, I didn’t have an easy life for it,” he reflects. “Rugby taught me values in my late-teens and I started making better decisions in my life as I had been a bit wild as a teenager. I had had a few schools and it wasn’t ideal.
“The values of rugby and the people around it, guys you looked up to, made a big difference to me.
“It has been a big part of my life for personal reasons. I wasn’t ever the greatest student and I suppose rugby would have kept me out of trouble and given me opportunities. There’s a level of loyalty to it, because if I wasn’t good at rugby I don’t know where I would be.”
The youngest child of the family, O’Connor played ‘all sports’ as a child but the proximity of Galway Corinthian Rugby Club to his home meant it was the game he always most invested in, first picking up an oval ball at the age of nine.
Having started secondary school in St Enda’s in Salthill, O’Connor was moved to boarding school after first year and arrived at Garbally College in Ballinsasloe as a 15-year-old with a reputation for trouble.
But rugby was becoming an increasingly big part of his life, and having already developed into an outstanding young talent at open-side, helped Garbally win the Connacht Junior Cup before becoming the youngest player to represent the Connacht Schools team at just 16.
“I didn’t know Connacht Rugby existed at the time or anything like that,” he continues.
“There was certain behavioural traits that I needed to shift, and rugby kind of kicked it out of for me. At about 16/17 I was drawn to that; I could see what I could have and wanted it.
“I suppose there weren’t many back rowers around and I was lucky that a guy called Shane McDonald took me under his wing. He was a Kiwi hooker and was out in Corinthians and started training me and getting me involved in strength and conditioning. He took me aside and looked after me and that had a massive effect on my career because I just got so far ahead of the game.
“At 20 years of age I started making my breakthrough at the first team here [in Connacht] and that was thanks to Shane literally giving me an hour or two of his time a week and training me. He set me on those behavioural changes.
With Eric Elwood and his son Jack after his final Connacht game in 2013. Source: Billy Stickland/INPHO
“I was so far ahead of the game physically compared to most others, I’d probably say in Ireland to be honest. Everyone obviously caught up and there was parity, but in terms of physical attributes and general strength markings and stuff, there weren’t many guys who would touch me at the time and that was just from Shane taking me aside and putting me on the right path.”
O’Connor suffered his fair share of injury setbacks along the way, but it was his unrelenting work-rate and drive to succeed which meant there was never any question of putting the head down and doing everything he could to get better.
Possibly borne out of self-effacement and self-questioning, O’Connor was shy by nature and his unassuming disposition and personality devoid of any assumptions or ego, ensured he constantly strived to a be a better version of himself for the team.
There are stories of him in the Wasps gym on crutches during different lay-offs, and it speaks volumes of his integrity and obvious ability that he was brought over from Connacht by Warren Gatland on the recommendation of Lawrence Dallaglio.
O’Connor has tried to park that chapter in his life and doesn’t give it much thought, but for a player whose hunger, toughness and serial winner mentality ultimately defined him as the rampaging flanker he became, there are always lingering regrets.
“People say you don’t any [regrets], but I think you always sit down and you do. There are certain things that you would regret. There are certain times I wish my head space was different and certain situations I wish I dealt with better. When I was younger I could have been a better leader, and been a bit clearer on what I wanted.
“I was a bit shy when I was a bit younger. I was a bit shy and I use shyness as a kind of a way to get out of things. Like I could have stood up and been a bit more manly about the things and just fucking spoke my mind when there were certain things I didn’t believe in.
“There are always regrets, there are always missed opportunities. When I was England, I only played in one final and lasted about 57 seconds. I got cleaned out and spent about seven months out of the game. There is nothing I can do about them now but just the kind of regrets… The things that drive me on now in this role. Looking at a trophy and the escalation of actually lifting it. The reward for hard work.
“Physically I obviously can’t do that anymore, but I can put my players in the right space to have that kind of drive and that’s what we’re trying to do.”