Ireland 27
Australia 24
Murray Kinsella reports from the Aviva Stadium
IRELAND FINISHED THEIR November series in thrilling fashion as they survived damaging injuries to their backline to cling on for a 27-24 win over Australia.
The toll of last weekend’s bruising defeat to the All Blacks was clear as Ireland faded in the second half, having led 17-0 coming towards half time.
But Keith Earls popped up wide on the left wing to finish a brilliant passage of Ireland attack and ensure Joe Schmidt’s side end November with three wins from four games.
Rob Kearney was lost to another head injury just 11 minutes in, while Andrew Trimble was forced off after half an hour, then Jared Payne at half time. Ireland’s backline had Kieran Marmion on the right wing for the entire last 40, while Earls ended up at outside centre and Joey Carbery played 50 minutes at fullback on his third cap.
Those concerns came on top of the loss of Sean O’Brien before the game had even started, with Josh van der Flier coming into the starting team and Peter O’Mahony promoted onto the bench.
Ireland were also missing Johnny Sexton and Robbie Henshaw, their first-choice 10 and 12, but they somehow found answers to eke out victory.
They had a dominant first-half performance and their 17-7 lead at the break didn’t do it justice. The Wallabies’ attack was scintillating in the second half, leading to tries for Tevita Kuridrani and Sefanaia Naivalu – adding to Dane Haylett-Petty’s first-half effort.
But Schmidt’s men showed serious character to survive and then bounce back for Earls’ winning try.
Garry Ringrose was a revelation at inside centre, while Marmion muscled up impressively out of position on the right wing as the Wallabies looked to exploit his presence there.
Man of the match van der Flier was as impactful as he has been throughout this month’s Test action. Tadhg Furlong was superb again at tighthead, but really this was about the collective ballsiness of Ireland in adversity.
Schmidt’s decision to start Kearney and Payne could have cost his team dearly as they both proved unable to complete the game, though their replacements were more than capable – even when out of position.
Captain Rory Best had a proud evening in green as he won his 100th cap, receiving a standing ovation as he made way for Sean Cronin late on. This win means Best has captained Ireland to wins over Australia, New Zealand and South Africa in the same calendar year.
CJ Stander’s carrying contributed to a strong opening few minutes from Ireland, although there were echoes of last weekend’s loss to the All Blacks in the wasted opportunites from close range.
The intent from Ireland was excellent, with lots of width in their attacking phase play, but they were twice turned over within five metres of the Wallabies’ tryline, once by Dean Mumm picking off a lineout and the other through getting held up in the maul.
Ireland lost fullback Kearney early to a head injury – his second in two games. Worryingly, the Leinster man initially appeared to refuse to go off for his HIA, before the match officials insisted on his removal in the next break in play.
Simon Zebo came on at fullback and added energy, helping Ireland to earn a penalty that they finally kicked at goal to lead 3-0 after 18 minutes.
A yellow card arrived for back row Mumm five minutes later and he was lucky not to be sent off permanently as he lifted Furlong’s leg above the horizontal in a ruck and tipped the tighthead down onto his neck.
Lock Rob Simmons was also perhaps lucky not to be punished by Jérôme Garcès for his involvement, but Ireland delivered a seven-point punishment within a minute.
Another big carry from Stander in midfield got Ireland moving forward, before Zebo cleverly rolled a delicate grubber kick in behind the Wallabies out on the left. The ball bounced up perfectly for Keith Earls and he was able to offload back inside to the supporting Iain Henderson for a beautiful try, converted by Jackson.
Payne and Stander combined for a choke tackle turnover, as Ireland began to become dominant. They did, however, lose Trimble to an apparent ankle injury with 30 minutes played, meaning Carbery came on for his third cap at fullback.
A scrum penalty on halfway was followed by a maul penalty, which Ireland sent into the corner, and from a loose pass off the second maul attack, Ringrose struck for a delightful try.
He scooped the ball off the ground on the move, arced around the poor tackle attempt of Rory Arnold and in towards the posts. There were shades of Brian O’Driscoll’s famous try in Paris in 2000, as Ringrose once again showed his class.
Garcès and his TMO were happy that there was no blocking by Devin Toner to allow Ringrose to score, and Jackson converted for 17-0.
Ireland almost got to the break with that lead intact, but a poor kick straight into touch by Jackson after Zebo and Carbery had broken out of the Ireland 22 provided the Wallabies with the kind of set-piece platform they thrive on.
Michael Hooper made the initial thrust through Ireland’s midfield defence, before finding Israel Folau once in behind. The dynamic fullback’s pass on inside to Dane Haylett-Petty appeared to be marginally forward but, again, Garcès and his team of officials were happy.
Bernard Foley converted for a 17-7 half-time scoreline.
With Payne going off injured during the interval, Ireland’s backline was further disrupted by the introduction of scrum-half Marmion on the right wing, with Earls shifting to outside centre.
Immediately, the Wallabies sniffed blood. Two minutes into the half, Ireland just survived as the otherwise excellent David Pocock passed forward to Henry Speight in the left corner, but they flooded back on the attack as their 1-3-3-1 shape caused havoc.
Their width allowed Tervita Kuridrani to cross in the left corner with 45 minutes played, Foley, Haylett-Petty and Folau shifting on simple passes to free the outside centre, and Foley then converted to bring the Wallabies ominously back to 17-14.
Earls did superbly on the restart to get a hand to the ball and Ireland drew a penalty for the Wallabies not rolling away, allowing Jackson to ease a little of the pressure with three points.
But Chieka’s side were in the mood now against a disorganised Ireland defence. Folau butchered a two-man overlap with half an hour left, but after Zebo kicked the ball into touch on the full, the Wallabies again stretched Ireland.
Finally, they broke wide on Ireland’s left as Foley’s screen pass found Sefanaia Naivalu – only just on the pitch for Speight – in space and he burned clear from 15 metres out.
Foley’s conversion meant Australia led for the first time in the game. A penalty from the out-half with 20 minutes remaining extended that advantage out to 24-20 and it looked like an uphill battle for Ireland.
But battle they did. A huge hit from Zebo as the Wallabies attempted to go wide in their own 22 launched a period of Irish pressure that eventually ended with Earls crossing in the left corner.
Replacements Peter O’Mahony and Ultan Dillane carried powerfully as Ireland finally got their hands back on the ball, with their gainline impact narrowing the Wallabies’ defence until Zebo wonderfully fired a pass wide left for Earls to cross.
Jackson’s brilliant touchline conversion sent Ireland 27-24 to the good as the atmosphere crackled in the Aviva Stadium.
Ireland were forced to dig deep in the closing 15 minutes as the Wallabies threw everything at them and continued to stretch the Irish defence. But Schmidt’s men underlined their character to seal the deal on a brilliant November.
Ireland scorers:
Tries: Iain Henderson, Garry Ringrose, Keith Earls
Conversions: Paddy Jackson [3 from 3]
Penalties: Paddy Jackson [2 from 2]
Australia scorers:
Tries: Dane Haylett-Petty, Tevita Kuridrani, Sefanaia Naivalu
Conversions: Bernard Foley [3 from 3]
Penalties: Bernard Foley [1 from 1]
IRELAND: Rob Kearney (Simon Zebo ’11); Andrew Trimble (Joey Carbery ’30), Jared Payne (Kieran Marmion ’40), Garry Ringrose, Keith Earls; Paddy Jackson, Conor Murray; Jack McGrath (Cian Healy ’60), Rory Best (captain) (Sean Cronin ’76), Tadhg Furlong (Finlay Bealham ’71); Iain Henderson (Ultan Dillane ’56), Devin Toner; CJ Stander, Josh van der Flier, Jamie Heaslip (Peter O’Mahony ’60).
AUSTRALIA: Israel Folau; Dane Haylett-Petty, Tevita Kuridrani, Reece Hodge (Quade Cooper ’80, Henry Speight (HIA – Sefanaia Naivalu ’56); Bernard Foley, Will Genia; Scott Sio (James Slipper ’68), Stephen Moore (captain) (Tolu Latu ’76), Sekope Kepu (Allan Alaalatoa ’68); Rory Arnold (Kane Douglas ’40), Rob Simmons; Dean Mumm (yellow card ’23 to ’33) (Sean McMahon), Michael Hooper, David Pocock.
Referee: Jérôme Garcès [FFR].
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Ireland beat NZ, SA and OZ in the same year! Rory best deserved his ovation
Well said…
Go on the biys!! Southern Hemisphere got nothing on us
Ringrose is becoming exceptionally good exceptionally quick at this level!!
Great opportunist try. BOD-esque in his step and pace.
Murray what do you think of our injury concerns? We seem to get an abnormal amount from game to game; which would make a World Cup run of games very difficult.
Conor you got there before me thinking the same.
Given another week, we’d likely have had Henshaw, Payne at full strength and O’Brien in the team. Last week was exceptionally brutal. Australia rested a huge amount of their team last week. We did very well considering the circumstances.
In a World Cup though, that’s scant conciliation when you play tough games from week to week.
When him and Henshaw get a bit of a run together for Leinster its gonna be real exciting. Drico and Darce reborn only bigger? Well done to all the young lads, playing out of position etc. Incredible shift.
When Peter O’Mahoney came on I though he was really good. Steadied the ship.
I would love to see what a pom cj jvdf back row could do in a full game
Diarmuid, you’ll have to wait until Heaslip retires. Not a single coach on the planet would leave him out of an Irish 15.
I was one of heaslips doubters myself but I must say he has been one of Irelands best players this autumn I just wanted to see how those 3 could work together would have been an exciting prospect to see but the back row competition atm is frightening
Well said diarmuid. I was the same. Had my doubts, but he has been excellent.
@Stephen Foster:@Stephen Foster: He spend his 20 mins on the wing, and didn’t bother to tackle. Clearly unfit..
Take a bow Ringrose. Chuffed for Best shows true grit in Ireland to grind out that win. Great to see O’Mahony back to his best bruising men and getting a vital turnover. Well done Ireland great series!
Rory Best is a gent. And a great captain. Tough second half…. Well done the boys in green.
Well done to a valiant Irish team. Bring on the 6 Nations…
And we sure saw a lot of LIONS there tonight ????
Pat – possibly, but there is a 6Nations to come yet and make no mistake it will be physically brutal.
What a game by the whole 23 great series with plenty of new players blooded on to the six nations…
Do you think there are any other players that haven’t played in this series that could come into the mix? Maybe Ronan O Mahony? Stuart olding?
Jesus me nerves!!!
@Range Rover P38: Bloody oath mate. Do wish we wouldn’t kick possession away – just adds to the stress.
What a country we have! Proud to be Irish. Great win.
Couldn’t agree more. Proud of Rory and all of ‘em!
What a great win and heroic performance; a scrum half on the wing, a rookie out half full back, a midfield who hasn’t played together and all the injuries to senior players prior to the game. Great heart and performance.
Brilliant win. Getting wins over the big three in one year is nothing to be sniffed at. The depth at backrow is unreal, even when we had to reshuffle we had a backrow that dominated Hooper, Pocock at the breakdown, and we finished with a backrow of POM, VDF and Stander. Ringrose a special player. Best a great leader. Furlong a monster. Mighty potential shown over the series. One thing though, should we have started Scannell and O’Halloran? Players pushing hard to recover from injuries weren’t able to last the full match, that stretched us a bit.
@Thomas Moroney: And what happened to the SH dominance all of a sudden? Australia, SA, Argentina and even NZ losing in the November series. Glad to see that things are maybe being shaken up at international level.
Your right there Thomas, I have never seen Pocock so dominated at the breakdown.
Just Brilliant .
The Mighty Green MEN made a dark November very BRIGHT .
Thanks .
3rd in the rankings. “How sweet this moment is”
Even if Australia get hammered next we we still won’t be third in the rankings, the gap is too big between us and the Aussies.
Correct
Ya I realise that now. Those at RTÉ 2fm told me differently
That was an Incredible victory, arguably a better victory than the win against the All Blacks considering the 2nd half circumstances and the missing players from the start.
An epic match! Battered by injuries and still found the wherewithal to come from behind to win. Aussie grand slam in tatters. My heart bleeds…. not.
They’ll take it out on the Poms. Didn’t deserve to win tonight after our first half.
Hopefully
Wohooo!! Guess we bet them with their own style
Fantastic mix of young and less young. Can’t wait 6N. England and France at home. Big thanks to Joe, Andy and coaching staff.
Love this team!!!! What a win. Injuries are a serious concern though
Brilliant match the boys in Green are on fire. Congratulations to all who played hope the injuries received are not too serious especially Rob Kearney.
What a Man Rory Best.
That was one of the best Irish performances I’ve seen….they knew there would be a backlash after the break, they soaked up the pressure of 2 scores, and when it was necessary, went out and finished the game with am Earl try in the corner. ….very proud. ….a world beating performance.
Amazing as well considering Aussies rested so many lads last week to be fresh for this. None of our injuries bar Jordi murphy seem to serious at this stage as well.
If we didn’t have all those injuries we could have won by a cricket score.
Exactly!!!
Well, if ever our depth was going to be questioned, it was going to be in a game against a better ranked team, an improvised back line, with two backs having seven caps between them. That was an incredible win. Our pack is just fantastic. So happy right now.
What a win. Such heart and passion shown there with all the injuries and reshuffling around the backline. All 23 were superb there today, an excellent November series and lots of players blooded for the 6 Nations in February. Well done Rory and the boys.
What was done here with so many inexperienced kids is just brilliant – The squad standard is scary and will have no need to fear anyone. it’s potentially only a beginning – but what a start. I’m sure there is a crazy talented winger or two out there just waiting to be sprung on us and maybe a fullback or two ( thanks Rob for being a hero of mine for so long)
The aussies really did butcher it. Twice they had easy run ins but messed it up thankfully. Joe should really have had a Centre on bench considering Payne wasn’t 100% and Kearney also.
We’re the first team to beat the All Blacks, Oz and SA in a year since England in 2003. Joe Schmidt & the boys deserve great credit for that. I was fearful of England in the 6N but not anymore after this series. COYBIG, you’ve done us proud.
Brilliant game and great atmosphere at the Aviva , the pack were on fire today , Furlong , Stander , Van Der Flier and Jackson had world class performances today . Beating Springboks , The All Blacks and The Wallabies all in the space of a few months is incredible. Hopefully we get no injures and a few players recover and we’ll be in flying for the six nations
I think its fair to say Ringrose makes the grade in an Ireland shirt and once again Furlong went on the rampage!
Huge character shown by all 23 players. And a great victory in the face of such adversity. But if we know Joe he will have picked out a number of areas we can improve upon and win the 6N.
Rory Best for the Lions captaincy??
Great win, great year. Congratulations, am gonna go put some money on Ireland for the 6N before the odds drop thru the floor!
Bring on the six nations. England and France at home. . GREAT CHANCE !