Soft try: Andrew Trimble scores Ireland's third
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Ireland scored four tries at the Aviva Stadium on Saturday in a convincing 32-14 Six Nations victory over Scotland.
Having lost narrowly (and somewhat controversially) to Wales before being held to a draw in Paris, Ireland will head to Twickenham in confident mood next weekend.
Scotland meanwhile are faced with a Wooden Spoon showdown in Rome.
An entertaining first-half saw four tries being scored as Rory Best, Eoin Reddan and Andrew Trimble touched down for the hosts while Richie Gray showed great power, pace and skill to cross for Scotland to leave the hosts leading 22-14 at the break.
Unfortunately the same cannot be said for a gritty, error-strewn second half as the hosts struggled to come up with the knockout blow.
In fact, the only knockout of the second period involved Scotland wing Lee Jones's lights going out after a vicious (though entirely unintentional) clash of heads with Trimble.
Replacement centre Fergus McFadden did eventually secure a deserved win for Ireland with a try under the sticks in the dying minutes.
A hamstring injury in the warm-up meant that Nick De Luca was replaced by Max Evans in the Scottish midfield, with uncapped Edinburgh back Matt Scott named on the bench.
Fly-half Greig Laidlaw kicked the visitors into an early 6-0 lead as Scotland held onto all the possession in the opening 10 minutes with the expansive style which has been the hallmark of their approach throughout the championship.
Ireland's positive mindset was evident when they opted to kick for the corner rather than take three points on the quarter-hour mark.
After a simple line-out, the ball was sent down the blindside and Best went straight over Mike Blair to score the first try in the corner.
Jonathan Sexton and Laidlaw exchanged penalties before Ireland struck again as Reddan escaped the clutches of opposite number Blair, Sean Lamont and David Denton to wriggle his way clear and score following a ruck five metres out. Sexton converted to put the hosts 15-9 ahead.
Scotland's reply wasn't long in coming though as giant second row Gray broke through attempted tackles from Reddan and Tommy Bowe before selling Rob Kearney a dummy and sprinting 25m for his first Test try. Laidlaw missed the conversion.
Ireland would take the momentum into the dressing rooms however, scoring their third try when Trimble made a mockery of the Scottish defence out wide - and Lee Jones in particular - to dashed over in the corner.
Sexton's conversion was wide but the hosts would have felt confident of victory with an eight-point lead at the break.
Bowe came desperately close to claiming Ireland's fourth try early in the second period but was wrestled onto his back by Graeme Morrison and the TMO ruled that he had made an illegal second movement in grounding the ball.
But overall the second forty minutes failed to live up to the standard set in the opening period. Scotland fought bravely but never realistically looked like having enough to claim victory.
Max Evans was sent to the sin bin for impeding Keith Earls without the ball on 72 minutes and Ireland made the most of their numerical advantage as McFadden burrowed over the line with three minutes left on the clock.
Man of the match: A few candidates here and a mention must go to Rory Best for leading Ireland to victory. Stephen Ferris and Donnacha Ryan were also outstanding for the men in green but we'll break with convention and go with someone from the losing side because Richie Gray was phenomenal. For a lock, his try was simply brilliant. It's a sign of his class that he often seemed like the Scots' most dangerous runner.
Moment of the match: Scotland were right in the game in the first half but Andrew Trimble's try just before half time took the wind out of their sails. While a lot of credit must go to the Ulster wing, Trimble should never have been allowed to score. It was the kind of defensive glitch that has ruined Scotland's campaign and it put Ireland in a position from which they could control the game.
Villain of the match: We'll change this one to "Ballerina of the Match." The dive from Keith Earls after being 'interfered with' on his way to the line by Max Evans would have made Christiano Ronaldo proud.
The scorers:
For Ireland:
Tries: Best, Reddan, Trimble, McFadden
Cons: Sexton 3
Pens: Sexton 2
For Scotland:
Try: Gray
Pens: Laidlaw 3
Yellow card: Evans (Scotland - 73rd min - playing man without the ball)
Ireland: 15 Rob Kearney, 14 Tommy Bowe, 13 Keith Earls, 12 Gordon D'Arcy, 11 Andrew Trimble, 10 Jonathan Sexton, 9 Eoin Reddan, 8 Jamie Heaslip, 7 Peter O'Mahony, 6 Stephen Ferris, 5 Donnacha Ryan, 4 Donncha O'Callaghan, 3 Mike Ross, 2 Rory Best (c), 1 Cian Healy.
Replacements: 16 Sean Cronin, 17 Tom Court, 18 Mike McCarthy, 19 Shane Jennings, 20 Tomas O'Leary, 21 Ronan O'Gara, 22 Fergus McFadden.
Scotland: 15 Stuart Hogg, 14 Lee Jones, 13 Max Evans, 12 Graeme Morrison, 11 Sean Lamont, 10 Greig Laidlaw, 9 Mike Blair, 8 David Denton, 7 Ross Rennie, 6 John Barclay, 5 Jim Hamilton, 4 Richie Gray, 3 Geoff Cross , 2 Ross Ford (c) 1 Allan Jacobsen.
Replacements: 16 Scott Lawson, 17 Euan Murray, 18 Alastair Kellock, 19 Richie Vernon, 20 Chris Cusiter, 21 Ruaridh Jackson, 22 Matthew Scott
Venue: Aviva Stadium, Dublin
Referee: Chris Pollock (New Zealand)
Assistant referees: Romain Poite, Greg Garner (England)
Television match official: Giulio De Santis (Italy)






Comments
curates_egg says...
@shoedogg my understanding of the rules is that Bowe indeed scored a try.
Law 15 (g) "If a player is tackled near the goal line he may immediately reach out and ground the ball on or over the goal line to score a try or make a touch down"
There is, in fact, no such thing as "double movement" in rugby union, as is frequently pointed out (it is a rugby league rule). However, the tackled player cannot move forward beyond what his momentum takes him and he must release the ball once tackled and held, with the obvious exception of the rule cited above.
As for the Earls incident, Earls did go down quite easily but it was also a definite penalty and, if it was a penalty, as he was the last man, a yellow card.
Them's the rules as I understand them.
Also baffled why Scotland kicked their third in a row penalty, when Ireland was on a yellow-alert.
Posted 08:24 11th March 2012
J_HDK says...
A tug on the arm of earls to slow him by Evans was deliberate and as last man and thus a penalty and yellow card.
In the pricess of this earls tripped over evans feet while trying to spprint for the loose ball. Probably not as deliberate by evans but absently not a dive by earls.
Disgusting to describe this as a dive.
Posted 07:40 11th March 2012
ciaran1792 says...
A dive his foot cliped his ankle when he chiped ahead he lost his footing like a tap tackle from what i saw contact was minimal but effective
Posted 00:33 11th March 2012
shoedogg says...
Is it just me but in terms of penalty tries, the Bowe effort in the corner where Morisson, LYING ON THE FLOOR, has his arms all over Bowe as he tried to immediately place the ball, is the most obvious example of where one should be given. EVER. And then to give a penalty against Ireland for a double movement? There wasn't even a double bloody movement!! Please tell me it's not just me with this opinion?
Posted 23:08 10th March 2012
carpelone says...
Kidney's substitutions in the last minutes of the game with Wales could be proved very costly indeed. Six Nations' glory would have been at hand now.
Posted 22:23 10th March 2012
curates_egg says...
This article could only have been written by a Scot - shocking journalism.
Both Scotland and Ireland played some great rugby in the first half. Ireland played some of their best rugby under Kidney IMO.
Extremely frustrating to see Kidney bring on that donkey O'Leary so early - it demonstrated a clear lack of ambition. Ireland lost all shape and drive after the 55 minute replacements.
Great performances from Ross, Best, Ryan, Ferris, Reddan, Sexton and Kearney. These guys are delivering consistently high standard performances and should be the backbone of the team - unfortunately, two of them are Kidney's subs.
Posted 22:21 10th March 2012
tombomb says...
J_HDK"Btw was it only me that saw Hogg take out Bowe when he was about to tackle Gray on his charge to the try line?" i saw it too but the funny thing was that later on in the match tommy did the exact same thing but got booked for it. also keith earl's was pushed of the ball so the wright thing to do was to make a meal of it. how many time's did Scotland obstruct in this game and get away whit it?=disgraceful. and finally what a bias article.
Posted 21:53 10th March 2012
munster30 says...
@ Planet Rugby
grow up with your villain of the match. Earls was running full tilt and Evans foot clearly caught his ankle and knocked him over. It wasn't as if Earls fell over and rolled around and went remonstrating to the ref. He tumbled and was up in the same movement.
If you want a villain you have to look no further than the referee Chris Pollock.
His incessant whistle blowing and picky refereeing was terrible and ruined the game as a contest in the second half.
It doenst matter if Evans didnt full blown hack Earls down, he stopped him from scoring a try.
Its nice to see that fine balanced reporting here. Especially Earls the villain and no mention of Pollack.
Posted 21:12 10th March 2012
mcdb06 says...
@sextons_on_fire
You don't know anything about rugby. Stop posting stupid comments. Sexton was good today, D'arcy was crap. Subs are used to make impact or to change a stagnating game. Bringing on ROG made sense. Game wasn't really in doubt in 2nd half and was good to use the bench
As for the reporter on this article, Earls didnt dive; tripped over himself after Evans nudged him. Not a yellow but penalty was right, Villain of the match?- Poor reporting. Reeks of bias i hate to say
Posted 21:08 10th March 2012
J_HDK says...
Please stop with the calls for Downey he is not up for it. McFadden is the clear direct replacement at 12.
Earls had another great game.Donncha Ryan was a monster. O'Mahony did well. Ogara on early was more a response to best being caled ashore due to aggravating his ribs.
Btw was it only me that saw Hogg take out Bowe when he was about to tackle Gray on his charge to the try line?
Posted 20:38 10th March 2012
Welshy says...
Just wanted to try and beat Melkdave to the draw.
Posted 19:37 10th March 2012
liam2me says...
Earls was fouled, it's not like the Wendyballers who dive without being fouled to con the ref. He did make a meal of it though.
Posted 19:31 10th March 2012
sextons_on_fire says...
Kidney what is with you and these substitutions? You bring on O'gara after 50 mins when Sexton was playing great, you shift him to inside centre where he isn't half as effective and as far as I could tell O'Gara contributed the square root of FA in those 30 mins. Of course it goes without saying Sexton had a sublime game and has done more than enough to silence the Munster trolls on this forum hahaha
Another thing Kidney, If D'arcy's poor form/shaky defence worries you then why not opt for James Downey - a solid specialist midfield man who defends well and runs directly...Of course we know that's never gonna happen because it would require Kidney to be little bit, oh what's that word, ah yes ADVENTUROUS hahahahaha
Posted 19:21 10th March 2012
melkdave says...
Well what cab you say Ireland so clinical and Scotland giving away soft tries in the 1st half.Then the Scotland set piece just falling apart in the 2nd half.A very enjoyable game to watch though .But i bet AR is toally furious with that 2nd half performance and wondering just what he has to do to get that win
Posted 19:10 10th March 2012