Titanic duel at Twickenham
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England had their Grand Slam dream extinguished on Saturday as a Tommy Bowe double guided Ireland to a 20-16 victory at Twickenham.
Despite dominating for long periods in the first period and significant chunks of the second, England were ultimately handed a painful lesson in how to take your chances by the champions.
Twice the Irish pounced on occasions where they sensed their hosts might be suspect of being caught cold. First it was turnover ball that Jamie Heaslip brought out before Jonathan Sexton slid a nice ball through for the onrushing Bowe, who cruised past Lewis Moody to the rolling ball.
Then with England looking like they were heading to victory thanks to a Jonny Wilkinson drop-goal, the wing then cut a beautiful line at first-receiver to give the travelling support all the motivation they needed to have a good night out in London.
Victory means that Ireland have kept alive their hopes of retaining the Six Nations and they will be hoping for England to do them a favour in Paris.
They do have one slight injury concern ahead of their upcoming meeting with the Welsh, however, as captain and centre Brian O'Driscoll was stretchered from the field following an accidental collision with Paul O'Connell's knee during the second-half.
England had spoken all week of playing with greater attacking ambition and sure enough they ran their first possession from the 22. And although it did not pay dividends following that aforementioned Bowe opener on four minutes, there was much to encourage HQ.
To make matters worse, England lock Simon Shaw left the field gingerly holding his wrist and was replaced by Louis Deacon.
Wilkinson missed with a 40-metre drop-goal as advantage was played and then hit the post with his penalty attempt.
England continued and piled forward and a barnstorming run and offload from Nick Easter sent Dylan Hartley to within a metre of the line. Then Wilkinson lofted a deft chip into the in-goal area intended for Delon Armitage but the full-back could not get there in time.
The fly-half then got England on the board with a simple penalty after fifteen minutes before the heavens opened and, with a period of torrential rain, the game became a physical tussle. Ireland's forwards adapted better. Their driving game was superior and England's lineout began to malfunction, as it did in the second-half against the Italians.
Keith Earls sliced dangerously through the England midfield before Sexton, having seen one 50-metre effort fall just short, exchanged penalties with Wilkinson. Ireland took an 8-6 lead into the interval.
Upon their return from respective dressing rooms, Sexton and Wilkinson both missed shots at goal but Ireland's forwards retained the edge, both in the set-piece and at the breakdown.
The margins were extremely fine and England's discipline, as it did in the corresponding game last season, let them down at a key moment. We are referring to an England scrum which had won a penalty but referee Lawrence reversed it after Care hauled Tomas O'Leary to the ground. Sexton found touch, O'Connell claimed the lineout, Ireland set a platform in midfield and they swung the ball left for Earls to race over in the corner.
England needed an immediate response and produced it, drawing level with a maiden Test try from Cole after a lengthy deliberation from the Italian TMO Carlo Damasco.
Then came the O'Connell/O'Driscoll incident which saw the momentum shift. Wilkinson could not capitalise immediately, missing a third penalty attempt, but with nine minutes remaining he stepped onto his right foot and drilled a drop-goal.
England led for the first time in the match but it lasted just two minutes as Ireland crafted a brilliant response, winning clean lineout ball for Bowe to slice through England's defence.
Man-of-the-match: After picking up his first two tries of the Championship - vitally important ones at that - Tommy Bowe earns the accolade.
Moment-of-the-match: Bowe's second try was much like JP Pietersen's in the recent British & Irish Lions tour of South Africa. A great individual score off the set-piece that killed off England while keeping alive Ireland's slim hopes of retaining their trophy.
Villain-of-the-match: The clumsiness of Paul O'Connell should his accidental collision with Brian O'Driscoll rule out the centre against Wales in Dublin.
The scorers:
For England:
Tries: Cole
Con: Wilkinson
Pen: Wilkinson
Drop: Wilkinson
For Ireland:
Tries: Bowe 2, Earls
Con: O'Gara
Pen: Sexton
England: 15 Delon Armitage, 14 Mark Cueto, 13 Mathew Tait, 12 Riki Flutey, 11 Ugo Monye, 10 Jonny Wilkinson, 9 Danny Care, 8 Nick Easter, 7 Lewis Moody, 6 James Haskell, 5 Steve Borthwick, 4 Simon Shaw, 3 Dan Cole, 2 Dylan Hartley, 1 Tim Payne.
Replacements: 16 Lee Mears, 17 David Wilson, 18 Louis Deacon, 19 Joe Worsley 20 Paul Hodgson, 21 Toby Flood, 22 Ben Foden.
Ireland: 15 Geordan Murphy, 14 Tommy Bowe, 13 Brian O'Driscoll, 12 Gordon D'Arcy, 11 Keith Earls, 10 Jonathan Sexton, 9 Tomas O'Leary, 8 Jamie Heaslip, 7 David Wallace, 6 Stephen Ferris, 5 Paul O'Connell, 4 Donncha O'Callaghan, 3 John Hayes, 2 Rory Best, 1 Cian Healy.
Replacements: 16 Sean Cronin, 17 Tony Buckley, 18 Leo Cullen, 19 Shane Jennings , 20 Eoin Reddan, 21 Ronan O'Gara, 22 Andrew Trimble
Referee: Mark Lawrence (South Africa)
Assistant referees: Christophe Berdos (France), David Changleng (Scotland)
Television match official: Carlo Damasco (Italy)







Comments
JeanLucJoinel says...
dreadful game really, played out by two thoroughly mediocre teams. Ireland apart from Bowe were really poor in this game- which is a reflection of what they are - a team of journeymen with a few sparks of genuine class. but they were up against a team who are badly coached and badly short of a clue.
Posted 22:21 28th February 2010
pogmahon says...
Lets face it England were pathetic. Billy Whiz wanted Englands backs realeased before the game. You wouldn't release them on bail. They had four times the posession and didn't create a single line break. Ireland only missed one tackle all day and still you blame the ref. The truth of the matter is that since winning the world cup (and well done for that) England have convinced themselves that they are somehow superior to everyone else. There is a myth, promoted by Sky Sports, that the standard of rugby in the English Premiership is better than everything else. What rubbish. The truth of the matter is that England has bad players, poor coaches and deluded supporters.
Posted 10:57 28th February 2010
Stag says...
'lofted a deft chip into the in-goal area', wilkinson absolutely butchered that kick after running out of ideas. Armitage wouldn't have got to it if he had started his run the day before. Bit of realism & honesty from your reporter please
Posted 09:05 28th February 2010
choky says...
as a frenchman always find it ironic to see my english friends complain about the referee - i dont even want think what would be yr reactions if u were french and u had games referred by a british for a game france versus british
owise thought england was bit unlucky but irland did what was needed to win
think also that wales deserved to win agnst france - was very very disappointed by the french team who showed nothing in cardiff - 2 lucky tries saved the day but was big step backwards after victory agnst irish
Posted 08:52 28th February 2010
Bigspottedcat says...
I am delighted for Ireland, but left with a nagging frustration at the terrible decisions made by the referees during the match. I counted 3 clear offside infringements by Irish forwards in the ruck which went unpunished. I also thought the scrummage decisions were inconsistent - let alone the O'Leary incident which led directly to Ireland's try. Ireland deserved to win the game, but were helped by a hopeless Mark Lawrence.
Something must be done about this. It is the biggest problem in rugby right now.
Posted 08:18 28th February 2010
sboumika says...
What's there to say other than what everyone else said? When a ref shouts "Hands off" about 3 times every english offensive ruck and yet doesn't think to blow the whistle once on the Irish is beyond my comprehension. Coming from a neutral point of view it just was just very frustrating to watch England go through the motions for 20 consective phases where the ball was in the ruck five times as much as it was in play. Can't fault the Irish for playing to the ref... but you'd think Borthwick would actually make use of his captaincy and speak up
Posted 06:53 28th February 2010
eltonioh says...
Awful ref poor decisions given on both sides, Ireland were far from their best but an awesome display of heart and guts Tommy Bowe turning into a genuinely world class winger best thing he ever did was move to the Ospreys, another huge performance from Heaslip also. England didn't deserve to win not because of any lack of effort but because they're still trying the same old game plan of trundling up through the forwards and johnny kicking the points.
Posted 00:24 28th February 2010
Jimmy_Pitt says...
Terrible game. Good ref.
Posted 20:25 27th February 2010
isabelle713 says...
Good game, well done Ireland.
Posted 19:33 27th February 2010
moojoo says...
Awful ref, at least the assistant got one decision right. We where well worth that victory. Not too sure where England go from here, the players have the heart but just not good enough. Ok from Ireland but we should be beating that English team by a lot more.
Posted 19:12 27th February 2010
Ahab says...
Terrible ref. Good game, well fought.
Posted 18:13 27th February 2010