How’s it going, everyone?
It’s round three of the Six Nations, it’s Wales at the Aviva Stadium, AND IT’S LIVE!
…Well, the blog is live, anyway. The game will kick off in just over half an hour’s time.
Gavan Casey with you here and I’ll be bringing you live updates throughout the afternoon in the event that you can’t make it to the stadium, to a telly, or to the rajio.
Team news on its way shortly, but no word of any changes to either side that was named during the week so far, thankfully.
‘No tensing.’
Just a reminder of the teams ahead of kick-off.
Ciarán Frawley makes his first test start at 15 in place of Hugo Keenan, while Oli Jager is set to win his first cap off the bench having only returned to Irish rugby from New Zealand with Munster in December.
They, eh, don’t look nervous.
Ireland
- 15. Ciarán Frawley
- 14. Calvin Nash
- 13. Robbie Henshaw
- 12. Bundee Aki
- 11. James Lowe
- 10. Jack Crowley
- 9. Jamison Gibson-Park
- 1. Andrew Porter
- 2. Dan Sheehan
- 3. Tadhg Furlong
- 4. Joe McCarthy
- 5. Tadhg Beirne
- 6. Peter O’Mahony (captain)
- 7. Josh van der Flier
- 8. Caelan Doris
Replacements:
- 16. Ronan Kelleher
- 17. Cian Healy
- 18. Oli Jager
- 19. James Ryan
- 20. Ryan Baird
- 21. Jack Conan
- 22. Conor Murray
- 23. Stuart McCloskey
For Wales, Sam Costelow comes in at out-half having missed the defeat to England, while uncapped Cardiff back-row forward Mackenzie Martin features on the bench.
Wales
- 15. C Winnett
- 14. J Adams
- 13. G North
- 12. N Tompkins
- 11. R Dyer
- 10. S Costelow
- 9. T Williams
- 1. G Thomas
- 2. E Dee
- 3. K Assiratti
- 4. D Jenkins
- 5. A Beard
- 6. A Mann
- 7. T Reffell
- 8. A Wainwright
Replacements:
- 16. R Elias
- 17. C Domachowski
- 18. D Lewis
- 19. W Rowlands
- 20. M Martin
- 21. K Hardy
- 22. I Lloyd
- 23. M Grady
About 15 minutes to go and there’s not much happening around the place, to be honest. The stadium is still about four fifths empty as last-gasp pints are consumed.
If something extraordinary happens during the pre-match entertainment, I’ll give you a shout. If not, catch you for kick-off!
Anthems finished — three rousing renditions, although there probably aren’t as many Welsh in town as there would be typically.
Here we go, so: Ireland against Wales: kick-off is seconds away!
1′ – IRE 0-0 WAL: Jack Crowley gets us underway at the Aviva Stadium.
Your man in the middle is Italy’s Andrea Piardi, who took Cardiff-Connacht last week.
2′ – IRE 0-0 WAL: Some stout midfield defence from the Welsh thwarts and Irish set play but Jamison Gibson-Park goes wide left off next phase. Robbie Henshaw makes serious yardage up the left before chipping ahead off his weaker foot. Ball goes over the goal-line, but not the dead-ball. Goal-line dropout to Wales.
3′ – IRE 0-0 WAL: Wales are making some good defensive reads and reaping rewards as they interrupt Ireland’s flow.
A green knock-on leads to an offside penalty, and Sam Costellow boots Wales between the Irish 10′ and 22′.
4′ – IRE 3-0 WAL: Bundee Aki stops Wales’ first attack with a jackal turnover between the 10′ and 22′. Good steal, penalty Ireland.
And they get another one from the ensuing attack as Nick Tompkins is pinged for grabbing an Irish player around the neck in contact — I think it might have been Van der Flier.
Peter O’Mahony tells Piardi, ‘Points, please.’ Jack Crowley delivers them from outside the Welsh 10′. Excellent kick from 45-odd metres at a slight angle.
Ireland lead in Dublin.
8′ – IRE 3-0 WAL: Andrew Porter ends Wales’ second visit into the Irish half with a brilliant jackal-penalty win.
Crowley takes Ireland up to the Welsh 10′.
9′ – IRE 3-0 WAL: Ireland go quickly at the lineout and Dan Sheehan, on a one-two, bursts down the left into the Welsh 22′.
Wales go offside and Aki’s eventual knock-on is brought back for the pen.
Crowley prods Ireland into the five. Big chance here for the hosts.
10′ IRE 3-0 WAL: Ireland go to the maul and attempt to roll it to the openside but Wales do brilliantly to sack it and win a scrum.
Savage effort from their front row and locks, there, in particular.
12′ – IRE 3-0 WAL: Ireland put pressure on the first scrum but Wales get it away to safety quickly.
They’re eventually pinged for going off their feet just inside their own 10′.
Crowley to touch, and he brings Ireland into the 22′. Skewed that one slightly — he’d usually ping them to about six or seven from there.
15′ – IRE 3-0 WAL: Ireland go nowhere and Wales win a jackal pen outside their own 22′.
They make a balls of the ensuing lineout, however, and Ireland take a scrum inside their own half. They duly win a penalty advantage and start making inroads into the Welsh half.
18′ – IRE 3-0 WAL: The Welsh defence has been exceptional so far. Some huge hits. They’re getting after Ireland, as they promised.
19′ – IRE 3-0 WAL: Ireland have finally lost a lineout in this championship! Dan Sheehan overthrows Peter O’Mahony, who knocks it on in the air.
…But Ireland crucify the Welsh scrum and win a penalty.
From a kickable position, Crowley kicks to touch and takes Ireland to within six of the Welsh line.
Another big chance, here.
20′ – IRE 8-0 WAL: TRYYYYY! DAN SHEEHAN!
Ireland run the exact same lineout maul as the one Wales turned over earlier, but this time they get better purchase on their initial shove.
Wales actually do brilliantly to halt its momentum shy of the line, but the Irish backs — including Jack Crowley — pile in and get Sheehan over the paint.
Crowley nails a tricky conversion from the left, too, and Ireland are out to a 10-0 lead despite Wales’ strong defensive efforts.
29′ – IRE 10-0 WAL: Another Irish lineout goes askew — it looked like a mistimed lift, there, on Joe McCarthy — and Jamison Gibson-Park spills the loose ball forward.
Wales scrum on their own 10′… and this time Ireland win a free kick for… a delayed Welsh put-in? Hmmm…
Ireland take the scrum the other way and annihilate Wales — but Piardi doesn’t give a penalty. Gibson-Park snipes and sets Lowe away, but Ireland are eventually pinged for a forward pass near the Welsh line as Lowe was about to be bundled into touch.
Wales lock out the Irish scrum on their own 5′ and eventually clear.
30′ – IRE 10-0 WAL: Ireland win a penalty in front of the posts, between the Welsh 22′ and 10′.
They decline the three again and Crowley pings a beauty into the Welsh 5′.
Chance, again, for Ireland, who are utterly dominant here without being spotless.
32′ – IRE 17-0 WAL: TRRYYYYY! JAMES LOWE!
Ireland batter and batter and batter at the Welsh line, but again the visitors show unbelievable heart in defence.
Ireland swing it all the way to the right edge where Nash is stopped for a loss, but then they swing back left a couple of phases. It’s Nash who pops up on the other side with a lovely little offload over the top of a tackle to Lowe, who dots down in the left-hand corner.
Crowley nails the conversion again from the touchline, and this is looking ominous for Wales now.
35′ – IRE 17-0 WAL: Wales win a penalty outside the Irish 22′ as Gibson-Park infringes at the breakdown.
Costelow pops them to within about 10 yards of the Irish line.
36′ – IRE 17-0 WAL: Ireland stop Wales at the maul but Aki is penalised for putting hands on the ground before he wins a jackal. Huge hit in there by Van der Flier on Josh Adams, too.
Wales go again to the line but their attack breaks down when Dafydd Jenkins is pinged for latching. That’s a heartbreaker for them.
40′ – IRE 17-0 WAL: An Irish attack inside their own half goes from side to side without gaining real momentum and Jack Crowley calls half-time by prodding the ball into touch before they get stung with a penalty or something daft.
It’s been one-way traffic at the Aviva, where Wales have scrapped diligently but Ireland have a three-score lead going into the break.
Andy Farrell’s side still need two more tries for a bonus point, and the Welsh don’t look like they’re ready to give up the ghost quite yet, so let’s see what the second 40 brings.
Catch you in a few!
41′ – IRE 17-0 WAL: Sam Costelow brings us back underway to start the second half.
42′ – IRE 17-0 WAL: A couple of harsh penalty calls against Ireland at the breakdown, to be honest, and Wales take it up towards the five for a lineout.
They go to the tail and set up the maul. Ireland halt them once — but there’s a second surge!
The visitors bundle over but Piardi doesn’t have a grounding…
There was a penalty advantage against Ireland, however, and Piardi is checking upstairs both for a grounding and for a potential penalty against Tadhg Beirne for changing his bind.
43′ – IRE 17-7 WAL: TRYYYY! Piardi gives a penalty try and Tadhg Beirne heads to the bin for his infringement.
Game on?
The Aviva makes some proper noise for the first time this afternoon as Costelow prepares his restart.
49′ IRE 17-7 WAL: A lengthy spell of ball-in-play time. Sides trading possession but nothing of note coming from it.
Wales are giving it a right go and Ireland have become a bit rudderless in attack in the last few minutes.
52′ – IRE 17-7 WAL: Ireland concede a couple of stupid penalties near midfield and Costelow boots Wales up to the Irish 22′.
Elliott Dee takes a short one-two off the lineout and makes ground. Ireland pinged for offside and Ciarán Frawley eventually plucks a Welsh chip out of the air.
Wales pen deep in the Irish 22′ — and Costelow goes to touch again.
54′ – IRE 17-7 WAL:Wales maul it towards the Irish line! But Tadhg Beirne — just out of the bin — says ‘nope!’ He comes through the middle of the maul and rips it back to the Irish side.
Unbelievable steal by the Munster lock.
55′ – IRE 17-7 WAL: Wales knock on the door again outside the Irish 5′.
Andy Farrell, meanwhile, has brought on Rónan Kelleher, Oli Jager, James Ryan and Ryan Baird for Sheehan, Furlong, McCarthy and O’
Mahony.
Kelleher makes an immediate impact with a jackal-penalty win deep in his own territory!
60′ – IRE 17-7 WAL:
Ireland think they have a settler as Bundee Aki crashes over under the sticks after some electrifying attack — but the TMO spots a knock-on by Robbie Henshaw in the build-up.
Wow! It’s the correct call, and Wales are still in it.
They have a scrum on their own 5′, where Henshaw flicked it forward.
61′ – IRE 17-7 WAL: Wales lock out the scrum and clear.
And here come Ireland again — until Beirne spills forward.
Wales boom one downfield again and put Lowe under untold pressure, but he weathers contact well and buys time for his forwards to clear out the breakdown.
Gibson-Park clears up to the Irish 10′.
67′ – IRE 17-7 WAL: A brilliant Irish attack down the blind is thwarted by a Welsh penalty, and it really should have been a yellow card. Crowd going nuts, and rightly.
Ireland go to the five through Crowley.
68′ – IRE 24-7 WAL: TRRRYYYYY! AND IT’S CIARÁN FRAWLEY ON HIS FIRST START!
Ireland roll it up to within inches, recycle, and attack the openside.
Eventually, Gibson-Park gives Frawley no option but to cross the whitewash.
Crowley pops over the conversion from close range — and that should be that!
71′ – IRE 24-7 WAL: Kelleher — who has been sensational since coming on — offloads to Ryan Baird who makes his customary 30-yard burst upfield.
He takes it again a couple of phases later but eventually spills forward while attempting his own offload.
Wales, then, win a penalty at the scrum against Oli Jager.
76′ – IRE 24-7 WAL: Wales hammer at the Irish line for what feels like an infinite number of phases.
Ireland infringe three times and James Ryan will sit out the rest of the game — he’s yellow carded.
Some incredible defence in there, and some heavily illegal defence too!
Wales tap and go from the 5′.
77′ – IRE 24-7 WAL: And Ireland hold them up! Cian Healy, Caelan Doris and Jack Crowley deny the Welsh a try and earn a goal-line dropout.
79′ – IRE 24-7 WAL: Huge work in the tackle and at the breakdown by Stuart McCloskey and he effectively wins a penalty.
Ireland get one last shot at the BP from the Welsh 22′…
82′ – IRE 31-7 WAL: TRRRYYYYY! AND THERE’S THE BONUS POINT! TADHG BEIRNE!
Ah, it’s a bit harsh on Wales’ second-half effort, to be honest. But it’s a well crafted score by Ireland, who retained the ball for umpteen phases in the Welsh 22′ before the visitors eventually cracked.
Some nice work in there by Crowley among others — and it’s Ireland’s 10 who has the final word as he splits the post for the fifth time from five this evening.
Jaysus, it became hard enough work in the end, but ultimately Ireland run out as 24-point, bonus-point winners over a Welsh side who promised chaos and produced a fair bit in that second half.
I’ve to run here and record a podcast so that’s it for me. Keep an eye on The 42 for reaction and analysis.
‘Til next time, take it easy!
Don’t think I’ve ever seen an Irish team physically bully a welsh team like this , winning every collision
@Owen ODonoghue: Ooops
@Ray Ridge: Did you unload in your adult diaper Ray?
@Owen ODonoghue: you think he’s graduated to adult diapers?
First time I’ve seen a player penalised for counter rucking against a player clearly within the ruck. Weird call
The band sounded like they wanted to get through Amhrán na bhFiann as quickly as possible
@Gregory C Donoghue: sour orange b@$t@rd
@Gregory C Donoghue: Miserable person.
Ref trying to make a game of it
Best National Anthem in the World Greg…always proud to hear it !!
@Jb Walshe: lol. What’s this based on?
It’s not up to the officials to try and level things up. Touch judge saw something that no one else on the ground saw. Ref kept his cards in his pocket for 8 straight Welsh penalties. Having said that Ireland have been frustrating against a truly awful Welsh side
@Darragh Freir: Before Ireland’s disallowed try there was an advantage for a no arms tackle. Should that not have been looked at?
@tony baloney and Ray ridge talking pure s#!te about Frawley.
Well done Ireland
Why am I so nervous? Probably cause a loss to Wales hurts the most.
@David Flynn: ….oh no!!…to England is unconscionable….and particularly playing Stone Age rugby with slabs of beef…….at least Wales are trying to rebuild and in very difficult circumstances at that!!
@Michael Murray: yeah that’s fair
Fair play to wales,a team that is rebuilding,a good nation of people and a proud rugby nation. They came here to play as they always do,defended like dogs and kept us out a few times for sure but realistically and respectfully they were never going to win today in Dublin.
Wales defended very well in the first half,disrupted us and stopped 2 certain tries from us…
This is dreadful. Mccarthy penalty machine for the opposition. Not good not good at all.
@Ray Ridge: oh look me everybody. I’m so controversial because I’ve such a sad life.
Ridgey wants us to have flawless displays week in week out scoring 60 points in each game with zero errors.
@Ray Ridge: sausage.
@Kevin Dillon: he definitely does not want Ireland to have flawless displays… he doesn’t support Ireland
Wales defending well to be fair but starting to creak at the seams now so the floodgates will burst open soon enough
Shocking opening 15 minutes from Ireland. All the ball and going nowhere. Can’t even get a maul over from 5 metres out.
@Gregory C Donoghue: ray ridge and that Dave moran lad are complete *ankers
@Ray Ridge: sausage !
@Ray Ridge: do you wake the morning of a match and wet yourself with excitement that your going to put your so called team down. Counting the days we’re you? You’re nothing but a fool.
Pack going forward at the scrum but we can only get lineout ball at the front and can’t maul properly. Ryan may be on early in the second half if Beirne can’t sort that out soon
@James K: yea right. Ryan will make a difference compared to the far far superior player
Ciaran Frawley is average at absolute best
@mWhSNsK2: Don’t think he’s too bad.
@mWhSNsK2: Forget about Frawley. One of the most overrated players in the history of Irish rugby. The best full back on the pitch is winnet
@mWhSNsK2: if you hurry Andy farrell is still in the avivia, you should let him know. Surely there’s someone from your province that’s better
@chris mcdonnell: is Frawley related to you because you’re straight in to defend whether the critiscm is justified or not. Personally I thought he had a fine match. It was a strange match with very few line breaks with the cuteness of Ringrose badly missed in the middle of the park.
@Ray Ridge: sausage
@mark sheehan: no he’s not, but this criticism was purely provincial BS.
@chris mcdonnell: you’re making the assumption that the poster isn’t a Leinster supporter.
@mark sheehan: I am making the assumption that the poster isn’t an irish supporter
@mark sheehan: agree what all you’ve said. I forgot that Leinster players are beyond criticism on this. Frawley was in the way more than anything. While I’m at it, looks like James Ryan hasn’t responded well to being dropped
@mWhSNsK2: Ah… you have revealed your colours… and they are far from green. Have a talk with yourself.
Ireland by 40
@Gary Galligan: Ooops
@Ray Ridge: Sausage!!
That was an embarrassing half from Wales. Impotent.
A few good players on the Welsh team that will cause a few problems and a bit of resistance but Ireland all the way for this game ! Hon Ireland
Lineouts are a complete and utter shambles now.
@Ray Ridge: a bit like your posts.
@Ray Ridge: sausage
Andrew Martin shitpants Farrell … it’s the greatest national anthem in the world and I hope it deafens you every time you hear it…. I love it more every time I hear it….up our national anthem ! Hon Ireland
If we got two injuries or HIA to our backs today very thin looking on the bench, 6/2 split for Wales not really necessary I think anyway..
Beirne again, a liability at the set piece all season. He kept Wales in the game in the first half with his very poor lineout work and now gifts them a penalty try.
@James K: because Henderson is injured.. and Farrell probably knows more about rugby than you and me
@James K: He did okay overall.
@James K: are you actually saying a guy highly revered by more respected commentators than you or me is a liabilty to Ireland – really ??
@James K: Wales had a massive advantage in that maul because they managed to illegaly squeeze 2 players in front of the ball carrier before he got to ground. Impossible to defend against and bound to result in pen try + yellow for someone.
Woeful game. Worst iv seen ina long time
Farrell’s refusal to include a lock that can run a lineout or maul is killing us now. Ryan can’t get on to stop the dog quickly enough
@James K: Any opinion on Ryans impact when he was introduced? Cant point to anything other than the yellow card.