Andy Farrell admits Ireland plan to starve Finn Russell and Stuart Hogg of quick ball
Andy Farrell says Ireland must stifle Scotland’s speed of play to prevent Finn Russell and Stuart Hogg starring with their “dinner suits on”.
Farrell’s men travel to Murrayfield on Sunday seeking their first meaningful success of this year’s Guinness Six Nations.
Fly-half Russell and captain Hogg have been instrumental in the Scots’ recent resurgence and were standout performers during last month’s shock Twickenham success over defending champions England.
Ireland head coach Farrell believes denying the hosts quick ball will be key to containing the influential duo.
“Like any game with top-class backs that are quite quick and dynamic in how they want to play the game, control the unpredictability, you’ve got to control the game up front, there’s no doubt about that,” said Farrell.
“Those two players will either play with their dinner suits on or not because of the speed of ball that they will require to be able to play into space.
“And it’s up to us to make sure that we slow that ball down for them so we can put some pressure on them ourselves.”
Ireland continue their salvage operation in Edinburgh after hopes of the title were swiftly extinguished by successive defeats to Wales and France, prior to a routine victory over Italy a fortnight ago.
Having upset England, Gregor Townsend’s Scotland maintain an outside chance of glory but are playing catch-up after a single-point loss to pace-setters Wales was followed by the frustration of the postponement of their clash with France, meaning they have not played for a month.
The Irish have dominated the fixture in recent years, winning nine of the past 10 meetings between the countries, including twice in 2020 and at the 2019 World Cup.
Farrell feels the mindset of his squad will be crucial to maintaining the stranglehold.
“We need to make sure we turn up with the right attitude and if you don’t, you get burnt, it’s as simple as that,” he said.
“When you turn up against a very good side, with how Scotland are playing at this moment in time, with anything but the right attitude then there’s no doubt you are going to come away with a loss.
“From what I have seen so far this week – and hopefully we keep building that – we will be brimming come kick-off time.”
Farrell has made three changes to his starting XV, recalling front-row duo Cian Healy and Rob Herring and wing Keith Earls in place of benched trio Dave Kilcoyne, Ronan Kelleher and Jordan Larmour.
Meanwhile, South Africa-born CJ Stander will bring up 50 Test appearances for his adopted country.
Farrell hailed the Munster back-rower’s selflessness and bravery, while backing him to mark the milestone occasion with a vintage performance.
“It’s a difficult one to put into words because I couldn’t say enough about the bloke. He is the most genuine bloke you would ever meet,” Farrell said of 30-year-old Stander.
“He’s as honest as the day is long and, I suppose, that’s what shows in his performance.
“How he acts on a daily basis and genuinely cares for people is exactly how he plays for the team; he’s a team-first man.
“He takes the hard yards and puts himself into difficult situations where others may shy away from from time to time.
“If anything needs doing as as far as tough yards (are concerned), he’s the one to put his hand up and I am thoroughly delighted for CJ to get his 50th cap this weekend.
“I have no doubt he will have a great game on the back of that.”
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I'm honestly not so sure. I initially thought just reckless mainly because no player should be capable of doing that intentionally.
There's a strong argument that he's working both the eyes. It's his left hand he uses which is furthest from the ball he's contesting. His fingers are also clenched which I don't think is a natural way to try and rip a ball.
Go to comments"I see those teams, SA in particular, as only improving their performances in EPCR."
well, its gone the opposite direction so far!
"I don't like your model that requires them to reach Semi Final level in the Challenge trophy, given the bottleneck that will be URC with 16 teams playing for only 4 places."
my model would have given SA 3 spots in a 16 team CC this year, which is the same number as they have in the 24 team version that is actually taking place. But yes, if they keep getting worse it would get harder for them to get places. It would also get harder for you to argue that they deserve places though!
"I suggest by giving say Englands two semi finalist first seeds of the english teams, then the next best 4 on the league table as much better (it catches improving teams faster)."
interesting argument, but it doesn't always go that way. Gloucester are improving, but they improved in cup competitions before league fixtures started going their way. The same is true of Sharks, and the same was true of la Rochelle. I think maybe this is just an argument for allowing more teams to qualify via the challenge cup!
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