THE YEAR IS 1976 and a group of hardy Irishmen, battered and bruised, are happy to be getting out of New Zealand alive as they board an airplane destined for Fiji.
It’s been a year of firsts for the Ireland rugby team. They’ve just become the first Irish squad to tour New Zealand. They are about to also become the first Irish team to visit Fiji. To this day, they remain the last.
The contrast between the two legs of that tour could hardly be greater.
It didn’t take long for the group to discover that New Zealand is a tough place to go, particularly when the country is experiencing one of its coldest winters on record.
Out-half Mick Quinn was 24 years of age and on his first international tour when sprung off the bench against Canterbury. He jogged past famed New Zealand backrower Alex ‘Grizz’ Wyllie as he found his place on the field. “You’ve come a long way to die, son,” Wyllie snarled. Quinn fired back a less than complimentary remark about Wyllie’s facial features and spent the next 20 minutes trying to avoid the enraged All Black.
“The New Zealand tour, we went quite well,” Quinn remembers. “We lost to Auckland early on, I played on the wing. We had a few injuries. Lost 13-10, very close, should have won.
“We lost in Canterbury (18-3). We had heard about how tough they were, with the Lions in ’71 there was a huge bust-up there. Half the Lions team ended up not playing again on the tour because they got bashed up so badly. Their front rows were really tough, so we were sort of ready for that.”
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Ireland were tough enough themselves, but didn’t quite inspire the same levels of fear in their opponents. Moments before that Ireland team became the first to face an All Black haka in New Zealand, they had stood for a stopgap Irish anthem. This being in the days before Ireland’s Call, the New Zealand Rugby Union had been told to just play an Irish tune in place of Amhrán na bhFiann.
“You know what tune they played?” Quinn says, “The Rose of Tralee. So we’re standing there singing the fucking Rose of Tralee, ‘The pale moon was rising, up above the green mountain…’ I was standing beside Mike Gibson and I said ‘Gibbo, tell me this is going to scare these fecking Maoris?’ I can assure you it didn’t.”
Ireland played well but lost the Test 11-3 – Barry McGann kicking their only points – leaving the tourists with a record of four wins from seven games. The final leg of the tour provided another step into the unknown, as Ireland headed to play Fiji in Suva.
“Getting to Fiji was a bit of a celebration after having got through the tough end of the tour,” remembers John Cantrell, who played at hooker on that Ireland team.
“The few days in Fiji were a bit more relaxing. Sub-tropical, with your palm trees and all that sort of stuff.”
“It was beautiful,” says Quinn. “But you could see the poverty in the place. We were driving around sight-seeing, going on dirt roads, people living in mud huts.
“Then we met up with a lot of the Fijian players, and they were very nice fellas. Very gentle people. We had a lovely time.”
It was an in-and-out job. Ireland arrived in Fiji on Monday, 7 June, and were on a plane back to Dublin four days later. With the game played on the Wednesday, it allowed the group a small window to unwind.
While the squad’s exemplary behaviour had been noted in New Zealand, in Fiji an element of mischief creeped in. One member of the Ireland touring party was so entertained by the fact the buses had no glass in their windows that he decided to present his bare backside while passing through a small Fijian village. Karma ensued with the subsequent loss of his traveller’s cheques to the stiff coastal breeze.
Ireland board the bus in Fiji.
For others the Fiji leg presented a welcome opportunity to test themselves against international opposition. Scrum-half Robbie McGrath was called up to join the tour after Donal Canniffe injured his ankle in training.
“I had just moved to Drogheda, and I had only started a job up here. Next minute I get a call to go to New Zealand, so that was an interesting start,” McGrath laughs.
He played the full game against Fiji but would need to wait another seven months to earn his first international cap. At the time, Fiji were not officially recognised as a Test team.
McGrath was happy to just be part of the action. There are few similarities between June in Suva and Drogheda.
“Fiji was lovely. Beautiful country, beautiful place. I remember the hotel had a lovely swimming pool in it. A few of the lads, Willie Duggan, Moss Keane and one or two others, they couldn’t swim, so they would go sit in the kiddies pool on chairs because they were afraid of the water.”
Members of the Ireland squad set up camp by the kiddies pool in Fiji.
“On the day of the match in Fiji, Moss Keane wasn’t playing,” Quinn adds. “So himself, Barry McGann and three or four other lads are in the swimming pool as we’re getting ready to head off to the ground. They were going to follow on later.
It soon became clear that the fixture would not be what the IRFU would have hoped. The attendance was noted as 12,000, but Fijian newspapers put the figure closer to 17,000 as locals packed into the tight surroundings and scrambled for impromptu vantage points.
This was despite the fact the Fiji team were essentially double-booked, with half of their squad in Australia preparing for a Test match against the Wallabies three days later. In order to fulfil the Ireland fixture Fiji plumped up their squad with a couple of the more talented players from the islands, meaning a small group of first-team players took to the field alongside some very raw stand-ins.
The Fiji team that took on Ireland.
“It was totally unique, because they were totally disorganised,” Cantrell says. “They didn’t have any set manner or set play, and I think because they would have been put together (for that game) and some of them came in from the outlying islands, they probably didn’t know each other that well either and wouldn’t have practiced that much together. So they played this natural, flowing game where everything went between long passes, short passes, high tackles, that was the format.”
The setting also left much to be desired, with the idyllic backdrop of blue seas and palm trees in stark contrast to the soggy turf underfoot.
Fiji perform the cibi before kick-off in Suva.
“The pitch was dire,” Quinn says. “It had been raining the previous day and the mud was very deep, so the game never really got going. Obviously we thought that playing Fiji, it would be a really open game, and it was, but the teams could barely function because it was so muddy.”
Ireland, of course, were used to a bit of mud and rain. Other factors proved far more alien.
“We ended up scrummaging beside what turned out to be some sort of nest of frogs,” Cantrell says. “As we were going down to scrummage they started jumping up and they were the size of your fist. The referee just said ‘OK, we’ll move another 10 yards and have the scrum over here.’”
“They were big bastard frogs too, they weren’t like the little frogs you might see here,” Quinn adds.
“You were literally running through and frogs were jumping out of your way. It was incredible. These were big guys, and you’d be afraid of hitting one of them. We didn’t want to do any damage to them!”
Unsurprisingly, it turned into one of the most chaotic fixtures an Irish team has ever played in.
Already struggling to negotiate a smaller pitch than usual, and with a healthy crowd spilling over the sidelines, Ireland’s players were further disoriented as the mud smudged the pitch markings beyond recognition.
“The try-line was very short to the deadball-line, very short, as the pitch was quite small and the crowd were in on top of us,” McGrath says. “At one point Tony Ensor ran over the try-line, but then managed to go over the deadball-line as well!”
Quinn kicks for the posts against Fiji.
Ireland eventually took control just after the half-hour mark when Tom Grace showed a good turn of pace to get over in the corner. Quinn, struggling to place his feet in the saturated grass, saw his conversion attempt drag wide as the South Pacific Ocean glistened in the background.
Quinn had a love for Fijian rugby having beaten them with Leinster three years previously. He remembers their backs playing the game in a manner that inspired the young out-half.
“One thing I learned from the Fijians was the ability to pass out of a tackle,” he explains.
“As an out-half, you can get half-gaps that aren’t complete gaps, and I used to throw myself into the gap and give one-handed passes to my centres behind their centre, and you could put them away in the clear.
“The Fijians were the best in the world at that. They were just fantastic. There was a lot to learn from them, they were class players were so much natural ability. It was incredible, and wonderful to watch.
“We always thought Isimeli Batibasaga was a world-class player, the scrum-half. He was a brilliant player. The other guys, you wouldn’t really know the names of all of them but they were such talented players. They had such an athleticism that we didn’t have.”