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Ireland win classic in Cardiff

02nd February 2013 15:31

Simon Zebo Ireland

Opening score: Simon Zebo

Ireland produced a brilliant first-half display to clinch the opening fixture of the Six Nations with a 30-22 win over Wales in Cardiff.

A dire performance from Wales in the opening 40 minutes left them with a mountain to climb in the second-half, at which they threw everything to bounce back from a 30-3 scoreline to 30-22 in an utterly dominant half.

Ireland appeared to mentally crumble under the depth of their 27-point lead, producing brilliant defence at times but unable to escape their own half as Wales pounded away at the visitors try line, falling short of cutting down the whole deficit in a classic.

Superb hands from Brian O'Driscoll built the opening opportunity for Simon Zebo to touchdown in the left hand corner for the first score of the afternoon, with Jonathan Sexton converting.

Sexton's control with the boot and sharp hands from the Irish backs kept Wales pinned back and after a set of punishing phases, Ireland were held up in the right-hand corner. Wales held out from the resulting phase of play and Sexton settled for a penalty to stretch the lead to 10-0.

Best then charged down Biggar's kick before gathering the loose ball and sending the ball wide first to Heaslip before an audacious bit of skill from Zebo saw him use his feet kept the attack going, Cian Healy pouncing from close range to leave Wales on the ropes.

Another Sexton penalty stretched the lead to 20-0 with half an hour gone, Wales imploding with another loose pass from Davies going straight into touch in the Irish 22. Healy's attempt to drive out of his 22 resulted in a penalty at the breakdown to Wales, with Halfpenny putting his side on the board.

Warburton's cheap block on Zebo handed Ireland another attacking lineout, with O'Brien setting the foundations for a final flourish in the first half. Another penalty against Wales at the breakdown yielded one more opportunity for Sexton, who slotted the kick to leave the half-time score at 23-3.

Ireland carried on where they left off at the start of the second half, a scrum on the Welsh 22 setting up a series of relentless drives before O'Driscoll clawed his way over the line from the bottom of a ruck for Ireland's third try.

A response from Wales was essential and it came through sustained drives forward into the Irish half, hard yards culminating in a Welsh lineout five metres out from the try line. A pre-planned move saw Toby Faletau held up narrowly short, before Alex Cuthbert found space between the rushing Irish defenders to score the first try of the afternoon for Wales.

Cuthbert's score seemed to light a fuse under Welsh backsides as they went for broke, Faletau storming down the left touchline before a crucial hand from O'Driscoll brought the surge to a halt.

A tap penalty sent Wales backwards rather than nearer to the line as the Irish defence turned desperate, Gilroy producing a memorable tackle on Halfpenny before Romain Poite sent Rory Best to the sin-bin for entering from the side.

The extra space was then capitalised on by Halfpenny, the full-back burrowing under the double tackle of Rob Kearney and Jamie Heaslip to score in the right corner, missing the conversion to make the score 30-15.

There was to be no let up in the Welsh response as Cuthbert thundered down the right wing, but breakdown defence from Healy was enough to relieve the pressure with a penalty.

A crucial Welsh scrum yielded a penalty for Biggar to find the corner once more, Ireland mentally struggling with the hosts resurgence. Faletau appeared initially to crash the ball against the base of the post, falling marginally short as Conor Murray was sent to the bin.

Wales were utterly dominant but unable to cross the Irish line, Davies missing a simple overlap as the green wall heroically held firm with time running out.

The hosts inevitably came again though - Craig Mitchell appearing to dive over the line before the TMO confirmed Wales third try of the afternoon, narrowing the score to 30-22.

Ireland finally relieved the pressure by pinning Wales deep in their own half to close out a brilliant opener to this year's tournament - a classic with each side forcing the other into submission for lengthy periods in each half. Ireland march on dreaming of a title. Wales have hope.

Man of the match: Streetwise, skilful, a magnificent return to form from Brian O'Driscoll stole the show in Cardiff.

Moment of the match: An outrageous piece of footwork from Simon Zebo to control possession in the build-up to Ireland's second try.

Villain of the match: Unnecessary petulance from Mike Phillips after being brought back from a tap penalty was needless.

The scorers:

For Wales:
Tries: Cuthbert, Halfpenny, Mitchell
Con: Halfpenny 2
Pens: Halfpenny

For Ireland:
Tries: Zebo, Healy, O'Driscoll
Cons: Sexton 3
Pens: Sexton 3
Yellow Card: Best, Murray

Wales: 15 Leigh Halfpenny, 14 Alex Cuthbert, 13 Jonathan Davies, 12 Jamie Roberts, 11 George North, 10 Dan Biggar, 9 Mike Phillips, 8 Toby Faletau, 7 Sam Warburton, 6 Aaron Shingler, 5 Ian Evans, 4 Andrew Coombs, 3 Adam Jones, 2 Matthew Rees, 1 Gethin Jenkins.
Replacements: 16 Ken Owens, 17 Paul James, 18 Craig Mitchell, 19 Olly Kohn, 20 Justin Tipuric, 21 Lloyd Williams, 22 James Hook, 23 Scott Williams.

Ireland: 15 Rob Kearney, 14 Craig Gilroy, 13 Brian O'Driscoll, 12 Gordon D'Arcy, 11 Simon Zebo, 10 Jonathan Sexton, 9 Conor Murray, 8 Jamie Heaslip, 7 Sean O'Brien, 6 Peter O'Mahony, 5 Mike McCarthy, 4 Donnacha Ryan, 3 Mike Ross, 2 Rory Best, 1 Cian Healy.
Replacements: 16 Sean Cronin, 17 Dave Kilcoyne, 18 Declan Fitzpatrick, 19 Donncha O'Callaghan, 20 Chris Henry, 21 Eoin Reddan, 22 Ronan O'Gara, 23 Keith Earls.

Comments

rk_cambridge says...

Neither team looking good under pressure should give France and England little to worry about. Still the young caps for Ireland can give cause for hope.

3in4 should change his name to Chihuahua.

Posted 16:34 02nd February 2013

munster30 says...

by the way, how much of a spoiled brat is Mike Phillips? Throwing the ball away and having a little temper tantrum when the ref wouldnt let him toake a tap and go? Saw an interview with him there this week. Asked about Johnny Sexton all he went on about was who was better looking and that Sextons bank manager would be happier!

If ever a player was more suited to playing football with the other softies/metrosexuals its this guy!

Posted 16:30 02nd February 2013

munster30 says...

think a lot of the Welsh comeback was down to Irish indiscipline. The panel on Irish TV got it right when they said that the Welsh gameplan was poor and they couldnt get any space or overlaps when Ireland had 15 men on the field. Don't forget Ireland played most of the second half with 14 men. The Welsh game didnt change much, there was just going to be overlaps and space eventually with the numbers there.

Having said that Ireland were fantastic for 35 minutes going forward and 5 at the end of the first half defensively! Felt sorry for Gethin Jenkins, he's a shadow of his former self. Have to eat my words about D'arcy, he was immense in defense. Not sure about a Grand Slam but the championship could certainly be won!

Posted 16:28 02nd February 2013

bluechief says...

tipuric is so much better than warburton its becoming embarrassing...

Posted 16:09 02nd February 2013

bluechief says...

interesting match ups won. BOD beats Davies, Healy smashes gethin, Faletau makes heaslip look ordinary, halfpenny outshineskearney, adam jones and ross tit for tat...

time for wales to grow up and stop relying on a second half comeback when the pressure's off. learn to deal with the pressure and play from the beginning or be resigned to mediocrity.

Posted 16:07 02nd February 2013

dezz says...

Wales my boys. Too slow out of the blocks and failed to pass when overlaps were there. Hats off to Ireland for building an impressive lead. Need to keep the pressure on though. Decent game overall from both sides. Don't think Ireland will get a clean sweep but hope they do.

Posted 15:55 02nd February 2013

papachinzo says...

Romain Poite continues his reign of terror, terrible match to watch from a refereeing point of view. 0 Consistency.

Wales 0 Yellow cards, Ireland 2 in a match where there was a similar penalty count, doesn't make sense. (I'm also pretty sure the Rory Best card wasn't a penalty)

Another thing is, whats the point of referees saying "use it" if they're not going to do anything ?!!!!

Posted 15:49 02nd February 2013

papachinzo says...

Romain Poite continues his reign of terror, terrible match to watch from a refereeing point of view. 0 Consistency.

Wales 0 Yellow cards, Ireland 2 in a match where there was a similar penalty count, doesn't make sense. (I'm also pretty sure the Rory Best card wasn't a penalty)

Another thing is, whats the point of referees saying "use it" if they're not going to do anything ?!!!!

Posted 15:49 02nd February 2013

papachinzo says...

Romain Poite continues his reign of terror, terrible match to watch from a refereeing point of view. 0 Consistency.

Wales 0 Yellow cards, Ireland 2 in a match where there was a similar penalty count, doesn't make sense. (I'm also pretty sure the Rory Best card wasn't a penalty)

Another thing is, whats the point of referees saying "use it" if they're not going to do anything ?!!!!

Posted 15:49 02nd February 2013

melkdave says...

Well the game certainally lived up to expectations,a fantastic,and exciting match imo.Also a match of two halvesgoing on the first half ,you would think Ireland are going to put a cricket score on Wales.BUT NO back come Wales some irish indisapline ,and Wales get momentum,and Ireland are hanging on for dear life.Avery enjoyable match,,but just to much for Wales to do.

That being said ,alot of what i feared came to pass,the frontrow of A.Jones,MRees,and G,Jenkins where outplayed in the scrum,and got no dominance what so ever.S.Warburton was outplayed in the backrow,and it took the introduction of J.Tipric to allow Wales to play at the breakdown,also J.Roberts made very little impression,and it took G.North and A.Cuthbert coming off the wings to alter the midfield malaise.Now i really hope RH and Co take note for the next match.Bevington .Owens and Mitchell,need to startalong with J.Tipric.Also imoJ.Roberts should start off the bench as impact imo,and G,North move to 13 and J.Davies plays 12 while E.Walker if fit start at 11 or J.Hook starts at 12 and J.Davis plays 13

Posted 15:48 02nd February 2013

3in4 says...

Arrogant Welsh 22 - 30 Underdog Irish

Looks like the last 3 taff wins (2 of which were down to appalling officiating) were just a blip. Superiority restored. Shall we draw a line and say the taffy taff-taffs can have another shot at us in 12 months time? See you next season boyos

Posted 15:45 02nd February 2013

FISH says...

it was ireland's to lose(after a superb 1st half ) and they almost did exactly that, poor discipline and lack of structure in the second half nearly cost them, i don't feel wales played better so much as ireland played much worse and took their foot off the pedal.....but i am sure delusional welsh fans will see it differently

Posted 15:39 02nd February 2013

3in4 says...

Its all gone quiet in the principality of Wales

Posted 15:38 02nd February 2013

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