Ireland player ratings vs Italy | Six Nations 2022
Ireland player ratings: Eight points behind France with an inferior 36 points difference coming into this Guinness Six Nations round three fixture in Dublin, Ireland knew what they needed to do on Sunday at Aviva Stadium - win and win well. This they did, cantering to a nine-try, 57-6 win that lifted them much closer to the unbeaten French on the table with a round four trip to England next on the cards.
Ireland were 7-3 ahead when the match was sadly rendered a farce. Bad enough for Italy that their sub hooker Hame Faiva was red-carded on 19 minutes for shouldering the head of Dan Sheehan, they were forced to concede another man two minutes later when the game went to uncontested scrums.
The floodgates opened for a time, the drinks queues for the Aviva Stadium bars being more contested than anything that took place out on the pitch. Ireland had their four-try bonus point bagged with over two-and-a-half first-half minutes still to play.
There were some momentum-stalling handling errors, but their 24-6, 18-point interval lead was eventually pushed out to a handsome 51-point win with a late scoring flourish during which Italy again shot themselves in the foot with a yellow card reducing them to twelve players. Here are the RugbyPass Ireland player ratings live from Aviva Stadium:
15. Michael Lowry - 8
Don’t ever be suckered by the debut-making full-back’s frail statistics, Hugo Keenan’s replacement checking in at 20cms and 19kgs less than opposite number Edoardo Padovani. There was an enormous cheer on his first carry and while his positioning wasn’t at all your traditional full-back role as he was often up in the line on attack and defence with others covering behind, Lowry skipped in for a lovely-taken try on 30 minutes with Italy exposed off scrum ball and he scored again off another scrum-ball move 27 minutes later to round off a dream start.
14. Mack Hansen - 6.5
Having impressively played left wing in his first two appearances, this was an opportunity to see what the Test rookie had to offer on the opposite flank. His awareness was evident in how he chased down Monty Ioane, forcing the Italians to concede the scrum-five that was the platform for Lowry’s first score. Had some other encouraging moments but play was more usually down the other wing.
13. Garry Ringrose - 6.5
The midfielder had a habit of scoring against the Italians, running in tries in three different fixtures, but he drew a blank here in his sixth outing versus the Azzurri. Bloodied just three minutes in, he was back on five minutes later and had a busy presence in what unfolded despite getting dumped on his backside on halfway in one particularly bruising man-and-ball tackle. Had some bright moments with his footwork but left the field on 53 minutes with the result long since easily secured. Returned later for a short while when Robbie Henshaw needed his HIA.
12. Robbie Henshaw - 6.5
It can’t have been easy in recent weeks for the 2021 Lions Test player to see his buddies Ringrose and Bundee Aki look so composed together and he will be left fearing that he fell short of what was needed to shift one of his pals from the selection to face England. His cheap 35th-minute knock-on at the 22 butchered what should have been a score. Came through his HIA late in the second half to finish the game.
11. James Lowe - 8
When Ireland named their original squad last month and this guy’s name was missing, the assumption was that he had been axed. Only later did it emerge that he was injured and now back fit, he was composed and accurate to give Andy Farrell a headache with his wing selection for Twickenham if the rested Andrew Conway overcomes his bumps and bruises. Excellent under the high ball in defence, Lowe capped his first half with a sweet canter down the left wing to send in Jamison Gibson-Park on 21 minutes. Was then amply rewarded with a walk-in try on 52 minutes and another four minutes from the end.
10. Joey Carbery - 6.5
Although an emergency inclusion in Paris, Farrell was 100 per cent correct leaving Carbery in the No10 jersey for a second successive game. The pity was it became a non-event once Italy encountered their numerical difficulties. Before that, he began with a sloppy pass that hit the deck but he opened the scoring with 3:40 on the clock with a confident finish where he picked his moment nicely to support the attack and he then gave Lowry the assist for Ireland’s third try. Carbery would have wanted more from this part of his contribution, though, while his kicking had its issues as he was just two from five off the tee when leaving on 53 minutes with the score at 29-6. That substitution suggested it will be Johnny Sexton who will be the Ireland No10 versus England as the veteran got Ireland motoring nicely through to the finish.
9. Jamison Gibson-Park - 7.5
We never thought we’d be paid up members of the Gibson-Park fan club as he had for years only ever looked like a provincial level sub, but the way Ireland are playing off nine is so easy on the eye that the Kiwi is beautiful to watch in an attack that now has so much activity going on. Scored his team’s second try and was a must-watch throughout his 62-minute appearance.
1. Andrew Porter - 6.5
The loosehead was his team’s busiest first-half tackler and he added a couple of determined carries to that action list, but his issue was the game going to uncontested scrums which denied him the opportunity to shine in an area of his game that is so important. Left on 44 minutes to give Dave Kilcoyne his turn.
2. Dan Sheehan - 8
With Ronan Kelleher laid up for the remainder of the championship, this was the cub hooker’s first Test start and he wasn’t out of place at all. Gave Carbery the assist for the opening try and his robustness was seen in how he leg-drove his way forward despite taking Faiva’s red-carded shoulder to the head. Very competent throughout his 69 minutes.
3. Tadhg Furlong - 7
As with Porter, this became an afternoon where his ruggedness in the contact and his creativity on the ball wasn’t needed away from not having scrums to contest. Curiously stayed on for 62 minutes when he should have left earlier as happened to Porter with a view to England.
4. Tadhg Beirne - 8
Before he shone with a turnover penalty to nullify Italy’s first visit to the 22, his athleticism was encapsulated by how he knocked a deflected aerial ball down on the Irish side and then carried from the ensuing ruck on halfway. He was at fault for the penalty that gave the visitors their first three points but his game intelligence otherwise shone through across his 62 minutes.
5. Ryan Baird - 8
Set the tone with the game’s first decent carry in the opening salvo and his enthusiasm from there was infectious as he looked to make a lasting impression. He has always loved a decent gallop and he was no different here. Scored a fantastic try on 70 minutes, charging down a kick and picking up the bobbling ball without breaking stride.
6. Peter O’Mahony - 7.5
In his ninth outing as the Ireland captain, the flanker had much to do to remind Farrell that he should be a more regular starter in a back row selection currently dominated by Leinster representation. It was his pop that ignited the move for the first try and his handling skills were again evident when finishing the attack in the corner for the bonus point try on 38 minutes.
7. Josh van der Flier - 7
Having admirably found a way to survive and thrive against the bullying French, he encountered a couple of holding on penalties against him in the opening half here. A try chance was also lost with a 61st-minute knock-on but he was a bundle of energy throughout and was named the sponsor's man of the match.
8. Caelan Doris - 8
With Jack Conan off the boil in France, this was an ideal opportunity to restore Doris to No8 instead of blindside and he quickly opened his arsenal with central involvement in the creation of the first try. His one-handed catch of a pass on 20 minutes was exceptional, so too his nuisance value in constantly annoying the Italians. Exited on 55 minutes with his job very well done.
Replacements:
16. Rob Herring - 7
Arrived on with eleven minutes remaining to help fire Ireland to their late three-try flurry.
17. Dave Kilcoyne - 6
He would have been heartbroken by Porter’s decision to quit tighthead and switch to loosehead last summer, nudging him down the Test pecking order. Arrived in for Porter on 44 minutes but this wasn’t really a game for props to stand out.
18. Finlay Bealham - 6
Sent on with 18 minutes remaining for Furlong but has a similar experience to Kilcoyne.
19. Kieran Treadwell - 6.5
It’s been a slow-build Test career for the lock - this was just his fourth cap despite a June 2017 debut - but he will have enjoyed his 18 minutes here, a cameo capped with him scoring Ireland’s ninth try.
20. Jack Conan - 7
Much better here than in Paris when he was hooked early but that wasn't hard against the outclassed Italians.
21. Craig Casey - 7.5
If Gibson-Park is the energetic style of play Ireland want, there needs to be more investment in Duracell-bunny Casey than having Conor Murray in reserve. A 62nd-minute sub, he helped up the tempo late on to expose the tired Italians.
22. Johnny Sexton - 7.5
Showed his class after he came on with 53 minutes played. Gave Lowry the assist just minutes later and was also integral in Treadwell's score with a carry to a ruck. Immaculate as well off the tee. Will be a starter against England.
23. James Hume - 6
A midfielder with a different style to Ireland’s other centre options, he was on as early as the third minute a blood sub and stayed for five minutes before returning on 53 minutes.
Latest Comments
He nailed a forward on this tour (and some more back in the NPC before he left lol)!
I know what you mean and see it too, he will be a late bloomer if he makes it for sure.
Go to commentsSo John, the guys you admire are from my era of the 80's and 90's. This was a time when we had players from the baby boomer era that wanted to be better and a decent coach could make them better ie the ones you mentioned. You have ignored the key ingrediant, the players. For my sins I spent a few years coaching in Subbies around 2007 to 2012 and the players didn't want to train but thought they should be picked. We would start the season with ~30 players and end up mid season with around 10, 8 of which would train.
Young men don't want to play contact sport they just want to watch it. Sadly true but with a few exceptions.
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