That try: Mike Phillips
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Wales kept alive their slim hopes of lifting the Six Nations trophy with a 19-13 victory over Ireland in a dour clash at the Millennium Stadium.
Controversy will forever be attached with this March 12 fixture as a Mike Phillips score that should never have been awarded will leave the whole of Ireland fuming on Saturday evening.
It came from an Irish clearance that led to Wales captain Matthew Rees taking a line-out quickly. However, television replays proved the eyebrow raisers correct in that it was a different ball that the hooker picked up and used on the touchline.
But the history books will show a Welsh victory, one that puts them level on points with current leaders England, who play Scotland on Sunday.
Ireland had gone into the dressing room at half-time with a 13-9 lead thanks to a try from Brian O'Driscoll, but were left pointless in the second period as they chose to kick more than they ran. Paddy Wallace will also be kicking himself for looking for an easier conversion for Jonathan Sexton instead of just taking the try at the death.
But in truth, the sporadic drama cannot disguise what was a dismal 80 minutes.
The game took just 20 seconds for the first replacement to be made and it may be a record for the shortest period of time on a field. Scrum-half Eoin Reddan was withdrawn after copping a ball in the face from Lee Byrne's hefty clearance directly from the kick-off.
Peter Stringer came on in his place at the base and was, in fact, the player to fire out a pass to returning Ireland winger Tommy Bowe, who subsequently created a hole for captain and outside centre O'Driscoll to dive over and open the scoring in the early stages.
If that substitution is to be an unwanted tag for scrum-half Reddan, it was one of three records or milestones to be beaten or matched within the first four minutes. O'Driscoll's smartly-taken try now propels him to joint top try-scorer in Five/Six Nations history while Ronan O'Gara reached 1000 Test points with the extras.
Wales quickly needed to find their footing and two James Hook penalties pulled them back to within a point before the hour, with Ireland giving away sloppy offences at the breakdown.
Hook's inclusion over the veteran fly-half Stephen Jones did not really lead to much creation though, as both sides maybe felt the need to claim victory before looking to cut loose.
O'Gara did boot a long-range penalty on 33 minutes and one on the half-time hooter to extend the lead, but it was only a three-point lift due to Leigh Halfpenny's own strike.
The second-half was one to forget for Ireland as replacement Sexton endured a difficult half-hour. First he pushed a cross-field effort into touch before missing a simple penalty.
Then came the moment that will be tagged to this game as Rees threw to Phillips from the touchline and the scrum-half showed his pace and power to go over. Hook's conversion was the further twist of the knife into Ireland's side as the momentum had consequently swung. Jonathan Kaplan had requested confirmation from touch judge Peter Allan, who said it was the same ball, but replays conclusively illustrated that the officials were wrong.
Ireland cannot say that they didn't have a chance to banish their upcoming nightmare tonight though, with Wallace's big blunder on the hooter ending Ireland's hopes of silverware.
Man-of-the-match: For his general game-management, James Hook.
Moment-of-the-match: Is there any other contender? The controversial try for Mike Phillips. Ireland will no doubt be fuming and talking about this one for a good while yet.
Villain-of-the-match: I don't mean to pick on an official but it has to go to Peter Allan for not spotting the different ball being used in the lead-up to Mike Phillips' try.
The scorers:
For Wales:
Try: Phillips
Con: Hook
Pen: Hook 3, Halfpenny
For Ireland:
Tries: O'Driscoll
Con: O'Gara
Pen: O'Gara 2
Wales: 15 Lee Byrne, 14 Leigh Halfpenny, 13 Jamie Roberts, 12 Jonathan Davies, 11 Shane Williams, 10 James Hook, 9 Mike Phillips, 8 Ryan Jones, 7 Sam Warburton, 6 Dan Lydiate, 5 Alun-Wyn Jones, 4 Bradley Davies, 3 Craig Mitchell, 2 Matthew Rees (c), 1 Paul James.
Replacements: 16 Richard Hibbard, 17 John Yapp, 18 Jonathan Thomas, 19 Rob McCusker, 20 Dwayne Peel, 21 Stephen Jones, 22 Morgan Stoddart.
Ireland: 15 Luke Fitzgerald, 14 Tommy Bowe, 13 Brian 0'Driscoll (c), 12 Gordon D'Arcy, 11 Keith Earls, 10 Ronan O'Gara, 9 Eoin Reddan, 8 Jamie Heaslip, 7 David Wallace, 6 Sean O'Brien, 5 Paul O'Connell, 4 Donncha O'Callaghan, 3 Mike Ross, 2 Rory Best, 1 Cian Healy.
Replacements: 16 Sean Cronin, 17 Tom Court, 18 Leo Cullen, 19 Denis Leamy, 20 Peter Stringer, 21 Jonathan Sexton, 22 Paddy Wallace.
Referee: Jonathan Kaplan (South Africa)
Assistant referees: Craig Joubert (South Africa), Peter Allan (Scotland)
Television match official: Geoff Warren (England)
By Adam Kyriacou







Comments
mlbp says...
Was it the effects of my Newcastle Brown Ale or the match was full of mistakes and there was no creativity from either side? Lots of tackling, great defence by Ireland and tons of hard work, but no real cutting edge from any player. It's a pity it was a bad decision by the officials that marred an already marred rugby match.
I don't know if France will be up to the intensity of the Welsh next weekend.
I suppose Ireland will throw everything, even the kitchen sink, at the English in Dublin.
Posted 21:40 12th March 2011
island says...
The TMO could not have been called for the decision because he can only adjudicate on issues in-goal or in the act of scoring a try.
A further issue is that a quick throw-in MUST be taken from at or behind the place where the ball went into touch. Even if the ball has gone in on the full and the lineout would be back where it was kicked from, a quick throw-in can't be taken there.
Posted 21:40 12th March 2011
setanta78 says...
As an Irish fan, I'm disgusted by the officials imcompetence. However I am more disgusted by the Irish performance. They are absolutely the architects of their own destruction, as usual. One awful decision should not be used as a fig leaf to hide away from the abject performance that this side has, yet again, put in. I thought it was ridiculous for BOD to point to the last 8-10 mins as negative play from Wales. They were simply closing out the game, as any team would.
I just wanted to say though congratulations to Wales. On the day I felt they deserved to win. They kicked their points and closed out the game well. Neither team played well, relative to their potential. But Wales on balance deserved their win. Ireland on the other hand........something serious needs to be done. That is just not good enough. They let us down badly.
Posted 21:31 12th March 2011
lineout says...
Let's face it, it was the only way Wales were ever going to score a try. If the game had gone on for a week, they would never have managed it on their own.
That said, Ireland need a full back urgently, Fitzgerald will never make it and Paddy Wallace should never be allowed near an international rugby field.
Posted 21:03 12th March 2011
crunchfit says...
Some facts:
At half time, Ireland had conceded 5 penalties and Wales had conceded 4 (although, one wrongly given).
Posted 20:47 12th March 2011
crunchfit says...
sirjona: Once again showing your anti-Irish side.
jaxsonlee: How could it have been a quick line out when the line out wasn't formed. Forming a line out: 19.8 (a) Minimum. At least two players from each team must form a lineout. Wales had no players except Phillips who ran onto it andno Irish players. It was a quick and so the same ball had to have been used.
For all those saying Wales should have won / deserved it, they never actually threatened the Irish line until this play. They kicked really well but the Irish line out went really well and they were never put under any pressure. Ireland were poor in attack but they were decent in defense. Wales were likewise, poor in attack. They never really threatened to break the Irish line.
As for Kidney, I think he's doing a ****** job but his performance of late doesn't mean that Wales deserved the win.
Posted 20:41 12th March 2011
timmo says...
rubbish game between two miditablers but neutral reaction on balance wales deserved to win
Posted 20:32 12th March 2011
jaxsonlee says...
Listen very carefully to the exchange between Peter Alan and Kaplan:
PA: It's not a quick throw, he's taken the throw-in quickly
JK: Is it the correct ball?
PA: Yes, it's the correct ball
Peter Alan is saying that it's not a quick throw-in but a lineout that's taken quickly. If that's the case, then there's no need to use the same ball - any match ball counts as the 'correct' ball.
Posted 20:10 12th March 2011
sirjona says...
We deserved the victory yet again Jonathan Paddy Kaplan showed his Irish roots more forward passes than I can remember.The Irish were lucky not to be banned due ti indiscipline again .All we need is a Jock victory tomorrow qnd I am off to the
Posted 19:44 12th March 2011
crunchfit says...
Sorry about all the posts, but I have just watched the incident again. The referee asked the touch judge twice whether the correct ball was used and on both occasions, the touch judge said without any hesitation or doubt that it was. So I understand why Kaplan did not check with the TMO now. So Peter Allan, alone, changed the result of the game.
Posted 19:32 12th March 2011
carpelone says...
A well deserved victory for Wales, against an Irish side playing their usual uninspirational and professional game plan. How many infringements committed in the first half by the Irish? The story about Kidney's statement to keep the penalty count low is the joke of the year.
Overall, a quite boring game, in which possession was happily and cheaply given away. Yawn,
Posted 19:19 12th March 2011
jimhaire says...
Now for another tedious session of Irish press scatter-gun whinging! Loosing by a questionable try to the Welsh is probably something to justifiably complain about. But
how will the misserable Irish Hacks account for the other 89 minutes of utter rubbish
rugby served by the Irish team? Please explain that. Ireland have simply entered a period of serious decline, something we England supporters have had to stomach for the last 7 years. Welcome Irish rugby, to the "House of Pain"!!
Posted 19:18 12th March 2011
munster1981 says...
don't let this decision blind anyone to the disgraceful performance by DECLAN KIDENY!!!!
Every ball was kicked away! You can't score if you don't have the ball. Took O Gara off who was controlling the game well. Sexton had a shocker bar one good kick for the last lineout.
Kidney should do the decent thing and walk away, give us some chance at the World Cup.
Posted 19:03 12th March 2011
crunchfit says...
One more thing, before the game I said that Paddy Wallace should absolutely not be on the team. There is no reason for him to be there. He had the simplest of opportunities to win Ireland the game back, yet he chose not too. His decision was almost as bad as the officiators'. That said, Ireland should not have been in that position to begin with. Hopefully, McFadden will get his place now.
Posted 19:02 12th March 2011
crunchfit says...
Very poor performances from both teams and very poor officiating. Regarding the try, either the touch judge does not know the rules of the game or he did not see what happened (I don't see how he missed it though, it all happened right in front of him). Also, after the try had been scored, the referee should have asked the TMO the question "is there any reason I cannot award the try?" He did not take his chance, and it was as a direct result of the actions of the referee and touch judge (or lack of actions) that Ireland lost the game. Absolute shame.
Posted 18:53 12th March 2011
celticden says...
same useless f...... Ireland TAKE YOUR FU..... CHANCES
Posted 18:53 12th March 2011