Why Matthew Devine is really leaving Connacht
Connacht Rugby released a statement on Monday evening indicating the departure of Matthew Devine, this relies heavily on ‘choice’, but professional rugby rarely works that way. For a scrum-half without consistent starts – and against the backdrop of Connacht’s recent calls – this result was still coming.
There is nothing factually incorrect in the statement released by Connacht confirming that Matthew Devine will leave the province at the end of the season. But in the club’s communication, it places disproportionate importance on the player’s “choice”, while avoiding the wider context that made this decision almost inevitable.
We can confirm that Matthew Devine has chosen not to extend his contract and will leave Connacht Rugby at the end of the season.
Although we are disappointed by his decision, we thank him for all his efforts during his time at the club. pic.twitter.com/6xjPDYvirf
–Connacht Rugby (@connachtrugby) February 2, 2026
Professional rugby careers are short and unforgiving. Players do not leave their province lightly. Most often, they move when opportunities dwindle – and when the path forward is clearer elsewhere than at home.
Scrum halves not developing in the stand
Devine plays scrum half, a position where continuity, confidence and pace are essential. Unlike many roles, nine is not a role that you alternate casually. If you don’t start consistently or get minutes, your development quickly grinds to a halt. Play time is not a bonus; it’s work.
Signed, Sealed, Guess.
We are delighted to announce that scrum-half Matthew Devine will join Ulster this summer on a one-year contract, keeping him in the province until at least 2027.
https://t.co/qyIf36rDJV pic.twitter.com/0CWrfWBRtJ
– Ulster Rugby (@UlsterRugby) February 2, 2026
So when a scrum-half finds himself outside of first/second choice, decisions about the future tend to follow without much drama. This reality explains this departure much more convincingly than any idea of a voluntary departure.
In simple terms: a nine who doesn’t play will eventually go somewhere he can.
The broader context makes the statement harder to reconcile
The timing and team image only emphasizes the point. It is increasingly expected that Ben Murphy is bound for Munster at the end of the season, which would leave Kaolin Blade as the only established senior scrum-half remaining at Connacht.
Two years ago, Kieran Marmion was not offered a long-term contract, the justification at the time being that his continued presence blocked the way for younger, locally developed scrum-halves – notably Devine and Colm Reilly.
Fast forward to now, and both of these players could be gone by the end of this season.
It’s not a question of loyalty, it’s a question of minutes
This does not indicate impatience or disloyalty on the part of the players. This highlights a gap between the declared intention of the course and the reality of the selection. If running was the priority, it was not reflected consistently in playing time.
This is not a debate about blame. Team management is inherently ruthless. Coaches are paid to pick the teams they think will win. Provinces must juggle budgets, succession planning and short-term results. Players react rationally to the information placed in front of them.
But honesty in communication still matters. Acknowledging that Devine is moving towards regular rugby elsewhere would not weaken Connacht’s position. This would align words with reality and respect supporters enough to tell them what they already understand: minutes boost careers, especially as a scrum-half.
The line that should have been in the declaration
Matthew Devine leaves Connacht because he wants to play.
It’s ordinary. It’s professional sport. And the statement would have been stronger if it had been said that way.
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