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Ireland survive Wales scare to secure Triple Crown in Cardiff

By PA
Sam Prendergast - PA

Title favourites Ireland survived a major Six Nations scare as they clinched the Triple Crown by beating a transformed Wales team 27-18 in Cardiff.

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While Wales ultimately fell to a 15th-successive Test match defeat, Ireland marched on in pursuit of the Grand Slam and an historic Six Nations title hat-trick.

But Wales were a revelation in their first game since Warren Gatland departed as head coach, with interim boss Matt Sherratt masterminding comfortably their best performance since the 2023 World Cup.

Ireland lost centre Garry Ringrose to a 20-minute red card midway through the second quarter and they trailed 13-10 at half-time, but they dug deep and prevailed through three Sam Prendergast penalties during the closing stages.

He booted five penalties and a conversion in total, with number eight Jack Conan and full-back Jamie Osborne scoring tries, while Wales replied with touchdowns from captain Jac Morgan and wing Tom Rogers, plus two Gareth Anscombe penalties and a conversion.

Points Flow Chart

Ireland win +9
Time in lead
15
Mins in lead
50
18%
% Of Game In Lead
61%
65%
Possession Last 10 min
35%
0
Points Last 10 min
3

Sherratt’s Wales at times looked on course to deliver arguably the biggest upset in Six Nations history and there was late drama when debutant wing Ellis Mee went agonisingly close to a try that might have snatched it.

After barely a week into his role following Gatland’s exit – and just four training sessions – Sherratt moulded a display that few expected, especially those bookmakers who installed Wales as a 25-1 chance to win.

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The Principality Stadium rocked to its foundations as Wales chased a first Six Nations triumph on home soil for more than 1,100 days.

Despite being 10 places above their opponents in the world rankings, Ireland’s expected dominance did not materialise, yet they had enough character and composure when it mattered to find a way over the finishing line.

The hosts edged early possession and territory, but they fell behind after just seven minutes following sustained Irish pressure that left to Conan crashing over from close range and Prendergast converting.

Wales, with an entirely changed front row from the one on duty against Italy last time out, gained three scrum penalties inside the opening 16 minutes, but they also found themselves defending for long spells.

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Ireland Wales
Bundee Aki of Ireland, right, celebrates his side winning a penalty during the Guinness Six Nations Rugby Championship match between Wales and Ireland at the Principality Stadium in Cardiff, Wales. (Photo By Seb Daly/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

Prop Nicky Smith went off for a head injury assessment midway through the first half, with Gareth Thomas replacing him, before a Prendergast penalty took Ireland into double figures.

Wales opened their account through an Anscombe penalty and there was a tenacity about them that they sorely lacked in Rome.

Smith rejoined the action after Tomos Williams went close to a try, then Ireland wasted a golden opportunity after Osborne’s wayward pass denied Ringrose an unopposed run to the line.

Ringrose was heavily involved again just minutes later, but this time it was a walk to the sin-bin after head-on-head contact with Wales centre Ben Thomas, with the incident put on review before it was confirmed as a 20-minute red.

A second Anscombe penalty further narrowed the gap, then Prendergast hit the post from distance and there were signs of Ireland losing their composure as Wales staged a strong finish to the opening 40 minutes.

They laid siege to the visitors’ line and pressure finally paid off when Morgan touched down and Anscombe converted as Wales deservedly claimed a 13-10 interval advantage against all odds.

Match Summary

2
Penalty Goals
5
2
Tries
2
1
Conversions
1
0
Drop Goals
0
145
Carries
106
6
Line Breaks
2
12
Turnovers Lost
10
2
Turnovers Won
4

It got even better for the home side just three minutes into the second period when full-back Blair Murray made the most of a temporary one-player advantage to cut a superb angle and send a diving Rogers over in the corner.

It was the stuff of dreams for Sherratt and his players, although Prendergast got Ireland moving again through a 49th-minute penalty and the visitors trailed by five as Bundee Aki arrived off the bench and restored them to a full complement.

Ireland drew level after 56 minutes when Prendergast’s steepling kick was flicked on by James Lowe and Osborne applied the finish to set up a thrilling final quarter.

Wing Mack Hansen was held up over the Wales line by Murray, but Prendergast kicked a 67th-minute penalty that edged Ireland back in front before adding a long-ranger and a further three-pointer that saw them home, despite Ellis Mee’s late effort that was ruled out following several replays.

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Comments

1 Comment
M
MD 106 days ago

Wales put up a good fight I think because the belief that something could come of the back of Sherrat as their new manager injected belief, hope and confidence into their rugby. The dead cat bounce.

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C
CO 3 hours ago
Whose ship has sailed before the first All Blacks squad?

Based on last weekend there should be no Hurricanes loose forwards in the mix, they all seemed poor with the Brumbies once again fantastic at playing and executing as a team. The Hurricanes were also poor in the halves with the ten invisible and Cam Roigard trying to play up tempo, Helter skelter rugby which is what the Brumbies wanted.


Roigards passing was telegraphic with his running game and sniping non existent, Ratima also appears to be getting metronomic, devoid of flair and his ten went invisible as well.


If you can't step up at finals then you need to be punished, yes the blues were poor at times this season but they were right on either the last two games when it really matters.


CWL is a bit larger but both him and Lakai are down on size for an eight and aren't freaks like Savea. Sotutu has to be in the mix and Dalton, but only if they front this Friday night.


However six is an ongoing issue, Josh Beehre could be an answer to the lack of height in the loose forwards at Allblacks level, his driving try to ice the contest through a decent Chiefs pack was raw determination even with support.


As for the previous try being ruled out on the flimsiest of technicalities that highlighted everything wrong with the TMO, it wasn't ‘rabbiting’, his knees dropped one after the other and he then brought his shoulders forward to extend and score, big guys can do that, that's why Sotutu has to be in the mix.


Sititi looked short of a gallop and the Chiefs might be acting a bit too cute with their bench, the coach is saying all the right things but he's in the departure lounge and the signs are there that the Chiefs expected to be the best team in finals simply because they had the best bench.


They're now under the pump and the winner of this year's super final will almost certainly be whoever wins this Friday in Christchurch.

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