RWC Game 3

Ireland defeated South Africa 13-8 in the third game of Pool B of the World Cup after overcoming issues at both line out time and the scrum. This game and the intensity of it defiantly signalled an upping in intensity by both sides who didn’t take a backward step. South Africa will know they left points behind them from the tee.

Ireland too will know that had there line out functioned in the opening 20 minutes they could have scored more than one try. Both teams know they have issues to solve for later in the Pool. Ireland play Scotland in Paris on Saturday week and South Africa will face Tonga where Handre Pollard will return to the fray in the 10 jersey.

It will also be interesting to see how South Africa select their bench from now on after they used a 7/1 split in two games. Will they go down the traditional route of 5/3 or stick to 6/2 or 7/1. Deon Fourie struggled at key moments in the final quarter last Saturday and the decision to not pick another hooker and bring in Pollard will certainly be looked at as he struggled to get to grips with the game from a line out throwing perspective, which is kind of key when you come on as a hooker…

Ireland will know that win is only another stepping stone as they have been here before by beating Australia in 2011, France in 2015 to step up quarter finals both of which ended in defeat. As supporters we can lose the run of ourselves as long as Farrell and his squad keep the feet planted and we have truly learned from past errors at this point.

Scotland will come into full focus when the squad reconvenes tomorrow after a couple of days away from camp. They did the needful against Samoa and will need to do likewise against Romania next weekend. Then they can focus on Ireland.

I have seen the talk about the use of Cranberries song “Zombie” has come into focus in the days since the game on Saturday. We really need to press pause on these immediate pile ons that occur in the aftermath of these things.

You can’t in the words of my late grandfather rip the pages out of the history book and expect a different result. History is just that, history. We can’t revise every single piece of history to suit a narrative from 2023.

Let’s hope people will get behind the team on Saturday week. They have to try and break an unwanted record at World Cup time of not making it beyond a quarter final and yes it is a terrible record that they need to stop and once again they have done what’s been asked of them by beating the teams before them.

Under Andy Farrell this team went to New Zealand and based that tour on the final couple of weeks of a perspective World Cup run and that saw them win 4 out of 5 games on that tour. So they showed they can back up games week on week. Let’s trust in Andy Farrell and see can his men deliver another big performance on Saturday week against Scotland….

RWC Game 2

RWC 2023

Ireland’s 2023 World Cup campaign got off to the perfect start with an 82-8 win over Romania who look a long way off the pace and according to an ex-coach Michael Bradley who also coached here in Ireland Romania have regressed so far that they are about 10 years behind Georgia in terms of preparation and all that goes with that particular aspect of things !!

Ireland did the needful and scored 12 tries which were evenly spread between forwards and backs. They need to work on the line out and the restart which were not where they need to be if this side can truly challenge at the top end of this competition.

Paul O Connell will need to help them fix the issues that continue to hold them back, losing Dan Sheehan and Ronan Kelleher hasn’t helped with consistency but both men are on the way back with Kelleher making a return from the bench last weekend.

I would be hopeful that the return to fitness of both men along with Jonathan Sexton’s return will have the desired impact. Sexton looked like hadn’t been absent for 6 months through injury and then suspension.

Bundee Aki got the opening chance to play alongside Garry Ringrose and took full advantage, he and Ringrose may make way for both Stuart Mc Closkey and Robbie Henshaw to face Tonga next Saturday at 8pm Irish time.  Henshaw was named on the bench for Saturday’s clash but was withdrawn after the captains run on Friday.

If he is deemed fit enough one thinks that both men will get the chance to stake a claim for a starting role. Not taking Tonga lightly will be key for Ireland next weekend. We have seen how ruthless and clinical they can be which is great to see. Watch the final few minutes and you’ll see a prime example of the clinical and ruthless edge I speak of. An end to end try started by Mack Hansen and finished by Tadgh Beirne.

The campaign started well and now it’s onto game two where Ireland will expect plenty of themselves as well as the travelling masses who will want more of the same against Tonga that was seen and in evidence last week.

Here is the 23 I would select for game 2 against Tonga –

15 Jimmy O Brien

14 Mack Hansen

13 Robbie Henshaw

12 Stuart Mc Closkey

11 Keith Earls

10 Jack Crowley

9 Conor Murray

8 Jack Conan

7 Josh Van Der Flier

6 Ryan Baird

5 Iain Henderson

4 Joe Mc Carthy

3 Finlay Bealham

2 Ronan Kelleher

1 Dave Kilcoyne

16 Rob Herring

17 Jeremy Loughman

18 Tom O Toole

19 James Ryan

20 Peter O Mahony

21 Craig Casey

22 Ross Byrne

23 Bundee Aki

This is the 23 I would select to play Tonga on Saturday night, time is now for this squad to hit their second marker….

RWC 2023

My RWC team to face Romania in the opening game of the 2023 Rugby World Cup would be

15 Mack Hansen

14 Keith Earls

13 Robbie Henshaw

12 Stuart Mc Closkey

11 Jimmy O Brien

10 Jonathan Sexton

9 Jamison Gibson Park

8 Jack Conan

7 Peter O Mahony

6 Ryan Baird

5 Iain Henderson

4 James Ryan

3 Finlay Bealham

2 Ronan Kelleher

1 Dave Kilcoyne

16 Rob Herring

17 Jeremy Loughman

18 Tom O Toole

19 Tadgh Beirne

20 Caelan Doris

21 Conor Murray

22 Jack Crowley

23 Bundee Aki

Here is the 23 I would select to play Romania in next Saturday’s World Cup opener. It gives players the chance to get minutes in the legs namely Jonathan Sexton, Ronan Kelleher to name two who need game time. Not ideal to be building up match fitness in a World Cup opener but such is life.  This World Cup does promise so much and let’s hope the harsh “lessons” of 1987, 1991, 1995, 1999, 2003, 2007, 2011, 2015 and finally 2019 can finally be learned from and although the draw doesn’t favour an Irish semi-final appearance this squad under Andy Farrell have done much to change perception of failure in certain ways and now it is time to lay to rest the shambolic World Cup record of no semi-final appearance.

Yes of course the 2023 version isn’t easy and history says Ireland will be home as normal after the quarter finals but this year might be different as Ireland  won a Grand Slam this year and not forgetting the series win in New Zealand from 2022.

Those wins won’t count for anything if they don’t help lay the actual groundwork for Ireland to break the glass ceiling that should have been broken long before now but now is the turn of this squad with many men who have had heart break along with real disappointment at previous World Cups but we also have a core of players with no World Cup baggage !!

I know rugby isn’t everyone’s cup of tea but it’s our national side in a World Cup and they have genuine claim to win it, they need to break a dreadful record to do it but that’s what breaking records are about, time now to stand up a really be counted……