Birth name | Daniel Joseph McFarland | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Date of birth | 10 April 1972 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Place of birth | Oxfordshire, England | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Height | 1.85 m (6 ft 1 in) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Weight | 120 kg (18 st 13 lb) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
School | Ampleforth College | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
University | Newcastle University | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Rugby union career | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Dan McFarland (born 10 April 1972) is an English rugby union coach and former player. He was head coach of Ulster Rugby from 2018 to 2024.
He played loosehead prop for Richmond, Stade Français and Connacht, retiring in 2006. He was forwards coach, then assistant coach for Connacht from 2007 to 2015, head coach of Emerging Ireland in 2014 and Ireland Wolfhounds in 2015, assistant coach of Glasgow Warriors from 2015 to 2017, and assistant coach of Scotland from 2017 to 2018.
McFarland's grandfather, Danny, came from Belfast, and played rugby for Queen's University before becoming an engineer, working on coal-fired and nuclear power stations in England. His father, Paddy, was born in Rugby, Warwickshire, and won a Blue for rugby at Oxford University before playing for Headlingley and London Irish. [1]
McFarland attended Ampleforth College, North Yorkshire, where he started playing rugby, [1] and studied classics at Newcastle University. [2]
McFarland started his senior rugby career at Hull Ionians RUFC, preferring to play in the senior 2nd XV whilst still of age to play for the Colts. At the end of the amateur era, he played loosehead prop for Morley R.F.C. while training to be a teacher. In 1996, he was approached by John Kingston to sign for Richmond, [3] one of the first English clubs to embrace professionalism. He spent a season with Stade Français in 1999-2000, and was part of the team that won the French Championship, before joining Connacht, where he played for six seasons. [1] He became only the second player, after Eric Elwood, to make 100 appearances for the province [4] in 2005, [5] and retired from playing in 2006. [6]
In his final year as a player, he coached the Connacht under-21 team alongside Nigel Carolan. After retiring, he coached County Galway club Monivea to the Connacht Junior League title in 2006-07, and assisted Eric Elwood in coaching Ireland to the Six Nations Under 20s Championship. In 2007 he was appointed Connacht's forwards coach. [7] When Elwood became head coach in 2010, he appointed McFarland as his assistant. [4] He lost out on the head coach's job in 2013 to Pat Lam, [8] but stayed on as Lam's assistant. [9] While coaching at Connacht, he was appointed head coach of the Emerging Ireland team for the 2014 IRB Nations Cup, assisted by Neil Doak, [10] and in 2015 he was head coach of the Ireland Wolfhounds. [11]
In 2015 he took over from Shade Munro as assistant coach at Glasgow Warriors, shortly after the club won the Pro12 for the first time. [12] In May 2017 he was appointed assistant coach of the Scotland national team under Gregor Townsend. [13]
After the resignation of Jono Gibbes as Ulster's head coach at the end of the 2017–18 season, McFarland was announced as his replacement on 30 April 2018. Initially he was to serve his notice with Scotland and join Ulster in January 2019, with Simon Easterby to act as interim head coach until then. [14] But in August, an agreement was reached with Scotland for McFarland to join Ulster before the new season. [15] [16] In his first season, Ulster made the Pro14 semi-final and the European Rugby Champions Cup quarter final. [17] They made the Pro14 final and the Champion's Cup quarter final in 2019–20. [18] In 2020–21 they finished second in Conference B of the Pro14, and made the semi-final of the European Rugby Challenge Cup. [19] In 2021–22 they made the semi-finals of the United Rugby Championship and the round of 16 in the Champions Cup, and McFarland signed a new contract at the end of the season. [20] He stepped down in February 2024 after a run of poor performances. [21]
Ulster Rugby is one of the four professional provincial rugby union teams from the island of Ireland. They compete in the Irish regional pool of the United Rugby Championship and in the European Rugby Champions Cup, each of which they have won once. Ulster were the first Irish team and the first team outside England and France to win the European Cup in 1999.
Connacht Rugby is one of the four professional provincial rugby teams from the island of Ireland. Connacht competes in the United Rugby Championship and the European Rugby Champions Cup. The team represents the IRFU Connacht Branch, which is one of four primary branches of the IRFU, and is responsible for rugby union throughout the geographical Irish province of Connacht.
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The 2016 Pro12 Grand Final was the final match of the 2015–16 Pro12 season. The 2015–16 season was the second with Guinness as the title sponsor and the seventh ever League Grand Final. The final was played between Leinster and Connacht.
The 2017–18 PRO14 was the seventeenth season of the professional rugby union competition originally known as the Celtic League. It is the first season to be referred to as the Guinness PRO14 Championship, with the addition of two South African teams.
The 2017–18 season was Irish provincial rugby union side Connacht Rugby's seventeenth season competing in the Pro14, and the team's twenty-second season as a professional side. It was Kieran Keane's first and only season in charge of the side.
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The 2019–20 PRO14 was the nineteenth season of the professional rugby union competition originally known as the Celtic League. It was the third season to be referred to as the PRO14.
The 2020-21 season was Ulster's 27th season since the advent of professionalism in rugby union, and Dan McFarland's third season as head coach. Iain Henderson was captain. They competed in the Pro14, the Pro14 Rainbow Cup, the European Rugby Champions Cup and the European Rugby Challenge Cup.
The 2018-19 season was Ulster's 25th season since the advent of professionalism in rugby union, and Dan McFarland's first season as head coach. Rory Best was captain. They competed in the Pro14, making the semi-finals, and the European Rugby Champions Cup, making the quarter-finals.