CONNACHT SCRUM-HALF Caolin Blade says that having Champions Cup rugby wrapped up for next season is a huge boost, but they are determined to have a right crack at finishing this campaign with silverware.
They head to Thomond Park tomorrow for a free shot at Munster before regrouping to take on Ulster in the PRO14 quarter-final in Belfast the following weekend.
Victory at Kingspan Stadium and a semi-final berth would be just perfect for the Galway native who will turn 25 on Monday and who has featured in all bar one game for Connacht this season.
He’s made 13 starts and 13 off the bench for Andy Friend’s side and, having come through the ranks of mid-Galway junior club Monivea, he knows the return of Heineken Champions Cup rugby next season will be huge.
“Yeah, definitely. The best times you have here in the Sportsground are probably them big games, them close games, them Champions Cup games.
“I have been involved in Challenge Cup games here, and winning them. But when you get to a Champions Cup game and you win it here and the crowd rush onto the pitch is a massive feeling.
“It’s massive. Look, as an individual, you want to play in the Champions Cup and test yourself with the top players in the world.
“As a collective, it’s huge; it’s huge for young people in Connacht, for them to see that Connacht are improving. I don’t think we’re fully there yet. But, as a Connacht lad, you dream to play for Connacht and you dream to have big days,” he said.
Blade with the sidelined Sean O’Brien. Source: James Crombie/INPHO
Blade was called into the extended Six Nations squad and while he didn’t get capped like his half-back partner Jack Carty, he learned a lot from being inside Joe Schmidt’s camp.