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Rob Baloucoune: From Injury Nightmare to Ireland's Secret Weapon Against Scotland

Sports ✍️ Sean O'Brien 🕒 2026-03-14 12:53 🔥 Views: 1
Rob Baloucoune in action for Ireland during the Six Nations

There's a buzz around Dublin this St. Patrick's weekend that goes beyond the Guinness. The Aviva Stadium is sold out, the Triple Crown is on the line, and for the fourth game in a row, Rob Baloucoune has been named on the wing. If you'd told any Ulster fan, or even the man himself, a year ago that he'd be here—starting a Six Nations finale against Scotland as a guaranteed pick on Andy Farrell's teamsheet—they'd have thought you were crazy. Yet, here we are. And honestly? It's the best kind of crazy.

Let's rewind to this time last year. Baloucoune wasn't just out of the Ireland squad; he was invisible, an afterthought for most. He managed a mere two games for Ulster in the entire 2024-25 season. The kid from Enniskillen, via Tottenham, was stuck in a nightmare cycle of hamstring tears and ankle setbacks. "Last year was probably my toughest year," he admitted recently, recalling the "number of big setbacks" where he'd almost be back playing only to suffer another relapse. He was a forgotten man, and he knew it.

So how did 'The Cat' land on his feet? It wasn't luck. It was a mix of sheer determination and a touch of coaching genius. While most guys on the injured list might tune out, Baloucoune was studying the game from a different angle. He started helping out with the backs at his hometown club, Enniskillen RFC, borrowing drills he'd learned from Ulster's Mark Sexton. "You just see the game in a different style," he said. It opened his mind to what the forwards are doing, how the patterns all fit together. It turned a pure finisher into a complete rugby player.

The X-Factor Ireland Was Missing

When he finally got his shot against Italy in this year's Six Nations, it was like unleashing a greyhound. He scored, he worked, he looked like he'd never been away. Then came Twickenham. That all-action performance wasn't just a flash in the pan; it was a statement. Simon Zebo put it best when he called Baloucoune Ireland's 'find' of the tournament. "For too long we’ve been probably lacking that X-factor and speed that other teams are using," Zebo said. "My goodness, he’s provided it."

It's not just the tries, though he's got those too—six for Ulster before the Six Nations even started, and crucial scores against Italy and England. It's the threat he poses. Defenses now have to genuinely worry about the edges. They have to slide, they have to commit an extra man, because if you give Baloucoune even a sniff of space, he'll burn you. As Zebo noted, a winger's number one job is finishing, and when you have a guy who can finish from anywhere, it changes how the entire opposition defense sets up.

The Cat vs. The Scottish Threats

Saturday is a different beast. Gregor Townsend's Scotland have been the entertainers of the championship, and their wingers, Darcy Graham and Kyle Steyn, are on fire. Between them, they've racked up the tries and they'll be licking their lips at the prospect of playing at the Aviva. But so is Baloucoune.

  • Darcy Graham: "He's quick, he works well around the scrum-half," says Baloucoune, acknowledging it's an area of his own game he's keen to develop.
  • Kyle Steyn: "A physical player, he knows how to score," adds the Ulsterman.

But here's the thing: Baloucoune isn't just going out there to defend. He sees it as an opportunity. "I back myself," he says simply. And why wouldn't he? He's got the pace to trouble anyone, and now he's got the rugby smarts to know when to use it. Willie Anderson, the old Ulster legend, nicknamed him 'The Cat' not because he sleeps—which Andy Farrell jokingly thought—but because of the defensive stance he takes, ready to pounce. On Saturday, against a Scottish side that loves to throw the ball around, he's going to need to pounce in attack and defense.

More Than Just a Game

This isn't just another cap for the 28-year-old. It's a reward for sticking with it when the easy option would have been to throw in the towel. It's a testament to his mother, Shirley, who raised him on her own in Fermanagh after his father passed when Rob was just six, and who's now giving him "tips and tricks" on catching, much to his amusement. And it's a massive moment for Enniskillen RFC, the club that had to coax a shy 19-year-old into training and watched him develop into a powerhouse who'd smash opposition number eights into touch.

With the Triple Crown on the line and a Championship still a mathematical possibility, the stage is set. Rob Baloucoune has gone from thinking his international career was dead and buried to being the man Ireland are looking to, to provide that spark. Against a confident Scottish outfit, he's not just part of the supporting cast. He's a headline act. And I, for one, can't wait to see him pounce.