Killian Keane

Killian Keane is a retired Irish rugby union player. He was born in Skerries, Co. Dublin, Ireland in August 1971.

Rugby career

As a schoolboy, he was a member of the Skerries Community Games Rugby team which reached the All Ireland Final, losing to Regional (Limerick). He developed to the Skerries first team before being spotted by Frank Hogan who convinced Keane to join Garryowen RFC.

He played at centre for Garryowen and Munster, and also won one cap for Ireland in 1998 as a replacement in a Five Nations match against England at Twickenham.[1]

Media work

Keane also provides co-commentary on Pro14 matches for Setanta Ireland.

gollark: GCSE computer science is useless and bad too.
gollark: That's everything ever. It just happens to be particularly easy because at GCSE content is minimal.
gollark: It probably goes down the chemistry route of making you memorize 2838383939103848384 things.
gollark: I don't know if A-level is much better. I do know it isn't very mathy.
gollark: My friend switched to economics at the end of year 10 and got an A-ish grade on the end of year exams from 2 hours reading the textbook and someone's notes.

References

  1. Killian Keane scrum.com


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