THERE’S ALWAYS A moment. In every game, in every team, there’s always some incident that ignites or represents what the side stands for. You could say that came early on Saturday, Keith Earls’ try, a set-piece move, honed on the training field, transferred to the big arena, players executing the coach’s plan.
That score was like a vaccine injection to Ireland, all the fears, doubts and defeats of 2020 wiped away in an instant. Yet we’re not going to talk about the obvious thing, instead opting for something completely different. For some of you, it may already have slipped your mind. For others, it was the symbol of defiance and self-belief, the sight of the smallest member of Ireland’s pack, Josh van der Flier, thieving possession from the biggest guy on the England team, Billy Vunipola.
It came in the final quarter, shortly after Bundee Aki’s dismissal, Ireland fighting desperately to hold onto their substantial lead, Vunipola – all 19 stone of him – losing his grip on the ball, England their grip on this game.
You may have read a biblical story about this kind of contest once but the difference on Saturday was that no one was courteous enough to offer van der Flier the use of a sling.
Instead, he noted his opponent’s hesitancy, and seized his chance, cheekily picking the bigger man’s pocket, the kind of incident Charles Dickens would have worked into Oliver Twist.
“Throughout the week, we talked about how we have had that physicality and desire to put hits in but at times we have been a bit sloppy, where we didn’t use our heads,” said van der Flier of the steal. “We’re pleased that we were switched on mentally for what they were going to bring to us but also that we had a physical edge. You need the balance.”
Balance, it is the one thing Ireland have lacked since 2018. In Joe Schmidt’s final year, they played robotically, slavishly adhering to a demanding coach’s instructions, each ‘Test’ match feeling like an exam, players fearful of the repercussions if they messed things up. It was learning by rote, creativity stifled.
Then came the big change, Schmidt out, Farrell in. A new coach meant new policies and everyone kept talking about ‘heads up rugby’ and ‘smiling faces’ at training. There weren’t as many smiling on the field, though, when England, France, England again, Wales and France, defeated Ireland.
Under Schmidt the complaint was they were being fed too much detail; under Farrell it seemed as if they were not being given enough of it. But Saturday was different, the concentration in defence during England’s initial onslaught as critical to the victory as the potency in attack when Earls and Jack Conan got a sniff of the tryline.
“One thing we have learned a lot from when we played them in the autumn was that they put incredible pressure on our ball carriers which was why one of our focus points for Saturday was to keep the ball moving, because we knew that would make it a bit more difficult for them to put their hits in,” said van der Flier. “That plan worked quite well.”
As did so many other things, the scrum, the attacking line out, the set-piece move for Earls’ try, the fast flowing, phase-building play that led to the Conan score. “They are a few of the things we have been working on all throughout the Six Nations but you probably don’t get to see all of them until it all clicks like it did on Saturday.”
If we’re being honest, we didn’t see it coming. Yet we should have. Even when Ireland were comprehensively beaten by England and France last year, they had dominant patches in those games, as they did in the first half of their matches against Wales and France this year.
What was different about Saturday was that they pieced everything together, holding England to just three points during their best spell in the first quarter – ‘we kind of said to one another, don’t do anything silly, don’t show indiscipline, don’t let it become a two score game’.
Surviving a siege was only one part of the plan, being ruthless and exploiting their opportunities a bigger deal. “You don’t give a team like England time on the ball because if you do, they can be very, very dangerous,” said van der Flier. “That was a crucial part in terms of how well it went for us, I guess.”
Yet he knows not to get carried away. Good and all as Saturday was, it was hard not to think of two other season-saving wins over England on the final day of the championship, the one orchestrated by Schmidt in 2017 and an earlier one won under Declan Kidney in 2011.
The 2017 victory proved to be a turning point, leading to a sequence of results that saw Ireland beat the remaining nine sides in the world’s top ten over a 12 month spell, collecting a Grand Slam, a series win in Australia and an All Black scalp along the way.
But the 2011 victory, when Martin Johnson’s England were as comprehensively beaten as Eddie Jones’ side on Saturday, didn’t lead to anything. Good enough to beat Australia at that year’s World Cup, they then lost to Wales in the quarter-finals. In 2012, they ran New Zealand close in Christchurch but shipped 60 points the following week in Hamilton.
On it went. Wales, Six Nations champions in 2013, lost their opening game of that Six Nations to Ireland. They didn’t lose again in that championship; Ireland didn’t win again.
“That is the big challenge, isn’t it – to be consistent? We can take confidence from that win on Saturday,” says van der Flier. “We know we can put in that kind of performance now, know that when the next match comes around that there is no reason why we shouldn’t perform like we did on Saturday.
“Maybe in the past we would be guilty of putting in a huge performance and then not backing it up consistently. That is not something this side wants. We want consistency. We started that on Saturday. We will try and back it up.”
Interestingly van der Flier talked about the improvements that he personally, and the team generally, need to make, pointing out how there will be days when things don’t flow smoothly and winning ugly becomes something to take pride in.
“You can’t really play just for big moments,” he said. “Obviously the glamorous tries look wonderful, you want to do them every game but, to be honest in my experience there are some games that won’t be won by magnificent moments; it is often just a grind and doing the basics very well. That is something we can strive for.”
They have no other choice, not if they want to leave a legacy for themselves, because great wins stay in the memory for a while but great teams are lodged in there forever.
United are absolutely muck!!!
I agree, Daithi, and I’m a ManU fan. All that’s been holding them together was Ferguson. It’ll take a while to pick themselves up. Hope Van Gaal is given enough time!
Yeah, I think it’s a while off till they get themselves together!! Rooney was savagely bad!! Mata was poor. Evans, young, all were garbage!!
That’ll be two points dropped for Burnley come the end of season relegation battle. Bad result. Should be beating the likes of muck like United!
Poor result for Burnley. Need to be beating their relegation rivals at home to have a chance of staying up!
Burnley started very well against Chelsea a couple of weeks ago but were well beaten eventually – could well be something similar today. Anything less will be disastrous for Utd.
Noticed that Burnley’s starting 11 is entirely British – something very rare nowadays
I wouldn’t have Evans in my local pub team.
What’s worse is we let Pique go because we thought he was the next big thing!
Although you never know a prolonged run in the first team may see him come good.
Ah now, with all the money he has he’d surely pay for a few rounds
Pique was always going to end up back at barca
Pique was always going to end up back at barca
There’s an echo in here.
And United fans with the usual ‘welcome to the biggest club in the world’ deluded
Good chance for united to pick up 3 points against the team backed for relegation…but I still worry about the back 3 (jones, Evans and blackett) I think this game is a perfect chance for jutciewicz (sorry, I can’t spell it) and ings to prove themselves against a fairly lacklustre defense
Relegation 6 pointer !!!
Utd done very well to get the draw that’s 2 points in the bag WOW!!!!
Could be the point that saves United from relegation come next May.
A dreadful performance by Utd – as bad as anything that they produced last season. 2 pts from 3 games against the giants of Swansea, Sunderland and Burnley. Hard to see them finish in the Top 6, could be much lower than last season if they don’t cop on soon.
It’s early days yet but they’d want to get their shit in gear sharpish!
It would be plain stupid to play Evans again – after his dire performance against MK Dons.
Time for him to move on….
Great squad player!
Poor mans john o Shea he is. O Shea could play in goal
Yoda are you?
I have a wee theory about to United’s poor start to the season so far, which I have yet to see written anywhere (I’m open to correction).
Players who have been at United for years appear to be lacking in confidence, particularly central midfielders and defenders.
I reckon that boasting about having so much to spend on new players was bad enough, but the worst idea was identifying areas we need to strengthen and then not having them strengthened by the start of the season!
Everybody knows we need a proper central defensive midfielder like Keane was. Hence all the hype about Vidal. Everybody also knows the likes of Evans and Jones are prone to being rubbish so we need to strengthen there too, hence the hype about Blind, Rojo, and Shaw. Our wingers have been singled out as blunt instruments, hence the long running saga over DiMaria.
Such speculation must have an impact on the egos of the existing players. Imagine playing in any of these positions over these past few weeks, knowing that the club are actively trying to find a better player in your position! Your confidence would be shot, especially when you’re (by association) being partly blamed for the worst season United have had in ages!! Most of us agree that there is a lot of dead wood still at United, but I’m sure they know who they are too.
I reckon these kinds of big transfers should ideally be completed before the season starts and leave the time between gameweek 1 and Deadline Day to strengthen the squad!
True Man Utd players would relish the competition.
Does Ronaldo ever accept that anybody is better than him?
In any professional job the bottom 10percent of performers should always be moved on!
True class always finds another level, and manages to raise their game.
Time to get rid of the passengers at United and keep the winners!
I agree. But shouldn’t they be moved on before the season starts? I suppose the World Cup has had a big impact on Uniteds ability to do that this year…
Most definitely, a period if transition should be just that!
Vidic should have never been allowed to go before a high class centre back was found.
Your talking about a club that still hasn’t replaced Keane or Scholes!
Spot on. And they hail Carrick as the Messiah when all he can do is pass backwards!!
He’s not the Messiah, he’s a very naughty boy!
“They all”? Who? His kids,never heard anyone say that about carrick.
Mainly the English media in fairness. Christ lads, this is feckin desperate stuff.
Good result for united.
Sean Dyche has to go. Poor result for Burnley :):):)
Di Maria looking great so far. Utterly ridiculous decision by Real to offload him.
For 60 odd million, great business by Madrid. Good player in fairness but Madrid tend to make few mistakes when selling players. Remember the furore when they sold Ozil for 50 million. Probably worth 20 now
Pure muck how is Anderson still getting a game
Bring back Moyes.
Just not creating enough chances. A team like burnley shouldn’t be coping as easy as they are at the moment.
Come on. No offemcr but its burnley and we kept a clean sheet but when we cant find a goal with 4 world class attackers it has to be the tactics #352is532
Should’ve won that,more injuries too. So much for 6 easy games to start.
Did not see game, too early here in Canada for me…. No such thing as easy games I would guess these days. Watching Man City game though, when is a blatant penalty not a penalty for smaller clubs though? Right in front of Ref and assistant too…. Stoke robbed……
We had a peno claim too with a few to go,handball in the box,I’m not even sure what’s a ball to hand/hand ball is anymore.
3-1 Utd for me.
Burnley 3-1 Utd?
2 – 0 to Burnley.
ManU’s glory days will not recommence for some years.
It takes a while to completely rebuild a team.
The foundations of the last ones were home grown.
Buying random players on the market is a lot more difficult as – who knows if they’ll gel.
You forgot your “mid table team” gem.
So easy to cancel United out.
No leader(s) or class….
The most scary statistic from this morning is that diMaria cost more than every player that has ever played for Burnley in its 100+ year history added together. And by some margin.
Can’t believe West Ham signed Song from Barca…..he’d be perfect for Utd
If MU now have a lengthy injury list I feel a bit sorry for van Gaal, it’s been hard enough anyway. Now for red thumbs, come on the blues.
Looks like a Oreo for each player in the Sky Sports pic!