Ireland survive Scottish fightback

Ireland survive Scottish fightback

Ireland scored a narrow 21-18 win over Scotland at Murrayfield on Sunday.

No 8 Jamie Heaslip was huge for the visitors, scoring their first try and setting up a second through a powerful drive from the back of the scrum. The Irish forwards bossed the Scots at the set-piece, and while they weren’t always accurate at the breakdown, they did enough to dominate the first half.

Credit must go to Ireland flyhalf Ronan O’Gara for kicking his team into attacking positions. O’Gara probed for territory and exposed the poor positional play of the Scottish back three on several occasions, and this in turn allowed the imposing Ireland lineout to pressure their counterparts. It was a simple but effective formula that ensured Ireland went to the break with a 14-9 lead.

The hosts stayed in the game thanks to the boot of Chris Paterson. While they battled to sustain an attack deep within Ireland’s 22, they did benefit from some over-zealous Irish defending.

Their set-piece woes continued into the second stanza, and referee Nigel Owens eventually decided to yellow-card prop Allan Jacobsen for repeated infringements. Scotland lifted their defensive standards during the period of sanction, but could not resist a relentless Irish onslaught for long. O’Gara eventually rounded off a move sparked by flanker Sean O’Brien, and at 21-9, the result seemed assured.

But Ireland continued to offer Scotland opportunities. Dan Parks came off the bench to kick two important penalties and set up a dramatic finish. Suddenly Ireland looked a team under pressure. The Scotland set-piece had discovered a new edge, and their attack a fresh purpose.

A controlled period on attack culminated in a 70th minute drop-goal by Parks to bring Scotland within three points. Unfortunately, the same handling and breakdown errors continued to cost them, and they couldn’t finish subsequent attacking surges.

Scotland – Penalties: Chris Paterson (3), Dan Parks (2), Drop-goal: Parks.
Ireland – Tries: Jamie Heaslip, Eoin Reddan, Ronan O’Gara. Conversions: O’Gara (3).


5 Comments

  • 1.JockBok: Reply to this comment

    Nessie’s

  • 2.JockBok: Reply to this comment

    It would have been a miscarriage of justice if Ireland never won. 3 tries to 0 says a lot more about the game than the scoreline.

    Scotland couldn’t buy a try just now if they were on sale at Tesco’s.

  • 3.dquinn25: Reply to this comment

    @JockBok(JockBok)-2:

    I agree they dont look like scroing whatsoever, mind you if scotland couldnt buy a try Ireland should be grateful for the freebies they were given against us, the first two tries were complete give aways.

    Poor standard of teams this year England and France the best of a very average bunch.

    Parks should have been on from the start, Jackson needs more time to mature at this level.

  • 4.JockBok: Reply to this comment

    It’s sad when we have to consider Parks for the starting role. Pity about Godman being out but it’s the story of our life, no depth anywhere.

  • 5.dquinn25: Reply to this comment

    @JockBok(JockBok)-4: I agree, some of our first choices are also not good enough. I knew the French game was just an illusion. And i fear for the Italy game which will be the wooden spoon decider, Italy can score tries which we cannot

Keo.co.za has always promoted uncensored views, but has never tolerated racist or crass outbursts. Come on guys and girls. If you can't moderate yourselves or each other then I am going to be forced to regulate the posts and enforce a registration process for comments. The choice is yours.

Have your say

You must be logged in to post a comment.