Dark.
Almost 40 years later, that’s the first word that comes to mind when Donal Lenihan thinks back to Munster’s 1982 tour of Romania.
“I remember we played our first match in Iasi, about 12 miles from the Russian border,” Lenihan says.
“Iasi was like travelling through a time tunnel and being thrown back to the 1930s. The only cars they had there were black. It suited the mood of the area. Ireland in the 1980s wasn’t exactly the centre-point of the world, but Jesus, we didn’t feel too bad after Romania.”
“I remember vividly the shock we got when we arrived up there,” says Tony Ward. “You know you hear about how in communist regimes you’re all equal? Well these people were all equally poor. There were queues of people literally starving, queueing for food and hand-outs.”
In September 1982, Munster became the third Irish team in an 18-month period to step behind the Iron Curtain, following a roadmap travelled by Leinster and Ulster before them.
As soon as they landed, a sense of unease had engulfed the squad.
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“Without getting overly philosophical – I’m one of these sensitive beings,” says Ward. “After the Lions tour to South Africa in 1980, I didn’t go back with Ireland in ’81 because my social conscience had been really pricked.
“You always came back from tours with your bags bulging with souvenirs and different things, but I hardly came back with anything in my bag from Romania. I gave away all my gear and that to the players we were playing against because they just didn’t have it over there, it was just so tough on them at the time.”
Under the communist regime of Nicolae Ceausescu, the people starved while the rugby flourished.
The sport’s roots in the country could be traced back to the early 20th century, with Bucharest students returning from Paris and British workers based in the oilfields both taking credit for introducing the game to this new audience. Interest in the sport grew rapidly. A Romanian team collected bronze medals for Rugby Union at the 1924 Paris Olympics, being one of only three nations to compete in the sport, alongside France and gold medal winners, the USA.
Ceausescu, who came to power in the mid-60s, had a fondness for rugby and used it as a propaganda tool, pumping in the necessary funds and pushing a gifted Romanian national team onto the international stage. Backboned by men who served in the defence forces, Romania’s players were essentially semi-professionals during the amatuer era, with CSA Steaua Bucuresti, founded by the army, and Dynamo Bucuresti, representing the police force, emerging as the country’s two prominent teams.
By the time Munster landed in the autumn of ’82, Romanian rugby was in the middle of a golden era.
The country had won their last three games against France – a country which continued to heavily influence the game in Romania – and regularly put 30 or more points on Italy. They drew with Ireland at Lansdowne Road in 1980, and beat Munster, Ulster on Connacht during the same trip. A month later, a 15-0 win over France led to the Home Nations agreeing to award Test caps for games against Romania. Their fine form would carry into the decade, beating Wales (1983) and a Grand Slam-winning Scotland team (1984), while two disallowed tries denied them a famous result against the All Blacks (1981).
“They were exceptional,” Ward says. “That was the height of Romanian rugby, and because Romanian rugby was very much based on the French model, they were very talented players too. They used the ball well, it wasn’t just power and fitness by any means.
“Mircea Paraschiv, the scrum-half and captain, I got to know him quite well on the ’80 tour. And one of the second rows, Gheorghe Dumitru, and Enciu Stroika (flanker), there were a few of them who were big names at the time.”
“In many respects, we were the amateurs (on that tour) ,” adds Lenihan. “All the guys we were playing against were either in the army or in the police, so in effect they were almost semi-professional because they were cherry-picked by the regime.”
There was a growing sense Romania would soon enter the Five Nations. Inviting touring squads to the country was an opportunity to show they could not only host the best teams in Europe, but provide stern competition, too.
And so, following Romania’s 1980 tour to Ireland, the provinces took turns making the journey across Europe. Munster’s trip started with a night in Bucharest.
The Munster squad that toured Romania in 1982.
“You could see that this was different, you had big open squares. There was a suspicion the phones were being tapped, especially in Iasi,” Lenihan says.
“I do remember, everywhere you went there were people around in the background, and we were warned about that beforehand,” Ward adds. “We didn’t really go out and about. We were definitely very aware that there were people in the background and that they were government agents or whatever.”
The team hotel provided the touring group with an early indication of the limitations of life in a country which had been gripped by communism for 35 years. Yet even in the those bleak circumstances, memories were forged which still raise a smile.
“Before Iasi, we were all complaining because the only thing you could get to eat was a bit of pork on a plate, nothing with it, and an apple. That was your dinner,” Ward says.
“We had heard all these horror stories about the food and loads of fellas had got sick with food poisoning,” Lenihan continues.
“But there was five or six Shannon fellas on the trip and we couldn’t understand how over the first few days, they were the only fellas not getting sick. They used to disappear around five o’clock every evening and we got suspicious after a while, so sent a delegation up to their room.”
Ward continues, “The reserve hooker on that tour was Noellie Glynn from Shannon. The Glynns were butchers in Limerick on Patrick Street. Colm Tucker had got word that things were rough in Romania, so Colm got Noellie to vacuum pack a load of meat – very advanced technology to us at the time – and bring it out with him. Most evenings the Shannon lads would disappear after the meal, and go off and have their own dinner.”
Lenihan and Colm Tucker pictured the week before Munster travelled to Romania. Source: Billy Stickland/INPHO
“Tucker had given this big speech about how we were all in this thing together,” Lenihan laughs, “I have great time for Colm, but he’d organised the whole feckin’ thing!”
For the opening game on 12 September, Munster boarded a plane bound for the border town of Iasi, deep within the Iron Curtain. They just about managed to bring Moss Keane with them.
“Mossie was a shocking flyer,” Lenihan explains, “and we were getting on one of these old propeller planes where you literally walked out to the runway and put your bag into the boot of the plane yourself.
“So we climbed onto the plane, blessed ourselves, I think we might have even sang. Thankfully, we survived.”
Munster’s opponents, Polytechnica – a largely student-based side – brought in some outside help to form what was billed as a Moldova provincial team.
Posters in Iasi advertised the visit of ‘The only team to beat the All Blacks’, but shaken by their early impressions of the country and two long days of travel, Munster laboured to an 18-12 win in intense sunshine. Keane told reporters he hadn’t experienced such heat “since the last time I was in Kerry.”
Next up was a trip south to the resort town of Constanta on the Black Sea, where in a far more relaxed setting, Munster’s players walked the beaches, visited a bowling alley, and began to enjoy the rare opportunity to spent time together as a squad.
“We played Farul Constanta, and I’d say it was one of the dirtiest games I ever played in my life,” Lenihan remembers.
Munster’s cause wasn’t helped by a ferocious home crowd, who found an early pantomime villain in the shape of Keane, who had been permitted a couple of days off between the first and third games.
“I can still see him,” Ward laughs. “He wore his white shorts, his Lansdowne socks, a grubby auld training jersey he had with him, and was the official touch judge representing Munster.
“I remember at one stage Wardy kicking a ball out on the full, and Mossie striding up the sideline and putting up the flag when clearly the ball had gone straight into touch,” Lenihan continues.
“The crowd were going bananas and throwing things at him. The Incredible Hulk was the big thing on television, and so Mossie turned around and did this impression your man turning into the Hulk.”
Ward: “I can still see the crowd roaring abuse at him.”
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Moss Keane playing for Munster in 1982. Source: Billy Stickland/INPHO
Lenihan: “Because Mossie was rested, Brian Spillane played second row. Spillane was a top-of-the-ground, free running feckin’ artisan. The grind and the dirty games wouldn’t have been his palate.
“There was an article in the programme about Moss and myself being the Irish second rows and winning the Five Nations and Triple Crown that year – I only knew it was about us by the pictures, none of it was in English.
“Farul had this one second row who was about 6’7″ and another fella who was about 6’2″, who kept following me around everywhere I jumped in the lineout, so I was cleaning up.
“Spillane was cracking up because the 6’7″ fella kept following him. He eventually turned around to him and goes ‘I’m not Lenihan, he’s Lenihan!’ – and I’m shouting ‘Spillane, shut your fucking mouth and get on with it!”
Lenihian won six of the first seven lineouts before Farul put the pieces together and took control. Ward shipped a couple of early knocks and kicked Munster’s only points against a Farul side which contained a handful of international players, star centre Adrian Lungu causing the most damage in a 19-6 win which if anything, was kind to the tourists.
That night, the post-match function found itself merge into a Romanian wedding reception, where the need to dilute the local wine got lost in translation. More than a little worse for wear, the Munster squad dragged themselves onto the team bus to head back to Bucharest the next morning.