17 STRAIGHT! Ireland smash Scotland to set up quarter-final vs All Blacks, sweat on Aussie Mack

By Christy Doran / Editor

PARIS – Ireland is through to the quarter-finals. Were they ever in any danger? Mathematically it was possible, but rugby isn’t a game of maths.

Rugby is a game of movement, running lines, accuracy and speed at the breakdown, a rock solid defence with spacing and ruck pressure, set-piece precision and kicking smarts. Unlike Australia’s World Cup campaign, Ireland has it all. Their game finetuned over years, not months.

The scoreboard and all the relevant statistics revealed the story on Saturday evening as Ireland sealed an emphatic 36-14 victory over their Six Nations rivals Scotland to finish on top spot of Pool B and set up a dream quarter-final clash against the All Blacks next Saturday (Sunday, 6am AEDT). Host nation France meanwhile will take on the reigning world champions South Africa a day later (Monday, 6am AEDT).

It means the best four nations in the world, at least from a rankings perspective, have made the quarter-finals. Only two will go through to the last four.

“I think New Zealand are a fantastic side and for little old Ireland to be talked about in the same bracket shows how far we have come as a playing nation,” Ireland coach Andy Farrell said.

“But the respect we have for New Zealand is through the roof. The form they have right now is top drawer and, as Johnny [Sexton] said before, I’m sure they will be relishing this fixture to try and put a few things right. It’s as tough as it gets, two weeks ago it was a tough game [against South Africa] and this one was knock-out rugby.

“It gets a whole lot tougher next week against the All Blacks and hopefully they will have to be at their best to beat us as well.”

Ireland celebrate after Hugo Keenan scored against Scotland at the Stade de France in Paris. (Photo By Ramsey Cardy/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

Yet, Farrell will be sweating over the fitness of former Brumbies and Australian under-20s star Mack Hansen, who was initially forced off for a Head Injury Assessment before his evening ended shortly after he returned because of a possible calf injury.

Despite having Keith Earls and Jimmy O’Brien up their sleeves, it will leave Ireland nervous because Hansen has quickly emerged as one of Farrell’s key men since joining Connacht after the Covid pandemic.

Already Robbie Henshaw – the brilliant centre – is set to miss the rest of the campaign after an injury throughout the week at training. Second-row James Ryan is also in doubt after suffering a knock to his wrist, while James Lowe copped a knock to the eye, coach Andy Farrell confirmed.

Hansen’s work-rate ahead of Lowe’s opening try of the evening in the second minute revealed it all, as he made his way from one wing to the middle of the field to support Garry Ringrose’s ball.

While Scotland enjoyed much of the early running, they could do little with it. Despite Finn Russell’s willingness to play with width, his side failed to get any real ascendency against a hungry Irish side.

In stark contrast, every movement of Ireland’s was delivered with such breathtaking mastery as Johnny Sexton played as if he was a conductor of an orchestra.

So commanding was his performance, and how important he is in Ireland’s quest to not just rid their quarter-final demons but win the World Cup, he was able to come off after 45 minutes. At the time, Ireland led 31-0.

“We just needed to narrow the focus and say we are here to win the game and put in a performance to do that,” Sexton said.

“Very happy with the lads and we’re exactly where we want to be now. We won the pool and we are into the quarter-final. We always knew we would most likely play France or New Zealand. There’s no easy option there and we have New Zealand.

“It’ll be a very tough game and I see they have been talking about revenge already. It’ll be a game they want and we need to be ready for it.”

Much like in 2015 when the Wallabies were popular and they made Twickenham a home away from home on their way to the World Cup final, Ireland is doing the same with the Stade de France.

Peter O’Mahony clashes with George Turner, Matt Fagerson and Duhan van der Merwe of Scotland during Ireland’s big win at the Stade de France on October 07, 2023 in Paris. (Photo by Stu Forster/Getty Images)

A fortnight ago the Olympic Stadium was a stadium of green during their takedown of South Africa. You would have hardly known that they were taking on a different nation on Saturday, as the 78,459 fans that showed up once again resembled a green coliseum.

Ireland will need every bit of that colour in a week’s time when they take on the All Blacks, as they attempt to end their wretched run of early World Cup exits.

They have form on their side.

Not since July 2022 have Ireland lost, with their last defeat coming against the All Blacks at Eden Park on July 2. The defeat was Ireland’s only one in New Zealand, as they came from behind to seal a remarkable 2-1 series victory in the Shaky Isles.

Since then, Ireland has gone onto win 17 straight. Victory over the All Blacks next weekend will see them equal New Zealand and England’s world record of 18 straight Tests. It will be their greatest Test win if they can triumph in Paris.

Scotland coach Gregor Townsend tipped his hat to Ireland, saying they were “very impressive” and could “dominate the world for the next five to 10 years” despite acknowledging the continual threats of France, South Africa and New Zealand.

Ireland, for now, will just want to dominate the next three weeks.

As Peter O’Mahony inspired Ireland’s scintillating first half where they raced out to a 26-0 lead, nothing went right for Scotland.

Within 20 minutes they had lost their fullback Blair Kinghorn, who had boldly declared ahead of the fixture they would snap their run against Ireland, to a HIA. He was joined on the sidelines shortly after by captain Jamie Ritchie, who was wearing a sling when he spoke to the media following the match.

Jamie Ritchie reacts after leaving the field at Stade de France on October 07, 2023 in Paris. (Photo by Stu Forster/Getty Images)

Scotland needed to strike early and strike hard. They did neither, as Ireland pushed Scotland back in defence and cut them to pieces like a knife through butter in attack.

After Lowe’s early try, Scotland couldn’t turn pressure into points. Adding to the frustration, they turned down shots at goal to try and get seven. They left with nothing.

Soon after it was Ireland back on the attack, as O’Mahony nearly sent Hansen over.

His fumble didn’t matter, as another subline line from Bundee Aki had Ringrose running off his shoulder and the centre put his excellent fullback Hugo Keenan over to score.

Lock Iain Henderson had Ireland’s third after 32 minutes, before Keegan’s second just before half time saw Ireland open up a 26-0 half-time lead.

They didn’t slow down after half-time, as Dan Sheenan scored moments after Scotland’s replacement fullback Ollie Smith put his foot in it by attempting a trip on Sexton. The moment made him Paris’ ultimate villain, and earned him 10 minutes in the sin bin.

Ringrose’s try just before the hour-mark continued Ireland’s rout, before Scotland hit back through tries to Ewan Ashman and Ali Price.

But for all Scotland’s desire, they were a clear second best as Zombie rang out loud.

“First things first, we will enjoy tonight because it was a big week for us. It was a big game for us as Scotland are a great team. We paid them the respect they deserve and that is why we came out with a performance like we did in the first half. The wives and girlfriends and families are over and we will make sure we enjoy that,” Farrell said.

“I’m sure once we have recovered properly with a spring in our step, if you can’t get excited about what is coming, this is proper living now. This is exactly where you want to be and these boys have been waiting for opportunities and big games to show what they have learned for a while now. It doesn’t get any bigger than next week and we will relish that.”

The Crowd Says:

2023-10-16T17:36:00+00:00

Bluesfan


:happy:

2023-10-16T08:26:00+00:00

HenryHoneyBalls

Roar Rookie


Fortunately for NZ their project school boy system is still paying dividends. You see some dumb comments on the internet but yours are really up there with the dumbest. :laughing:

2023-10-16T00:47:45+00:00

Bluesfan


Sadly for Ireland does not look like they can buy their way to WC success with "project players"....

2023-10-11T16:02:15+00:00

Derm

Roar Guru


I was responding to your wrong-headed assertion that Nucifora planned this out beautifully via residency and heritage players - despite these recruitment options being available to every rugby union. Nucifora wasn't in place when the Player Succession Strategy revised quotas were launched in 2012 for limiting the number to 4 ineligible players and one special project player being contracted by each of the 3 main provinces - Leinster, Munster and Ulster. Connacht with a smaller budget was not subject to the quota limits in recruitment, which is why they were allowed recruit Aki and a couple of other NIQ players at the time. The policy change within IRFU was decided in 2015/16 following the huge salary escalation within European comps in England and France, with the IRFU deciding to cut funding of foreign player salaries, and investing in their domestic academies instead. World Rugby announced in April 2017 the residency requirement extension from 3 years to 5 years and IRFU announced IQ Rugby focusing on already qualified talent a couple of weeks later, having been in the pipeline for a number of months. Hansen is one example of the IQ policy. Does Ireland have a backline without Lowe, Gibson Park and Aki? Well yes is the short answer - Earls/O'Brien, Henshaw/McCloskey and Murray/Casey. However, the coach sees them as the better starting options currently - possibly with too many game minutes at this stage - driven by injury/recovery time of other players.

2023-10-11T10:35:56+00:00

James in NZ

Roar Rookie


Yeah mate looking forward for sure. I'm feeling a lot more philosophical about this one (must be getting older). Either way it goes, I have a feeling its gonna be a good one. :thumbup:

2023-10-11T09:11:09+00:00

Carlin

Roar Rookie


1999 was a tough one as no one was expecting that. We had a good lead at halftime and then France stepped up big time. 2007, we should have won but given we always changed our team it wasn't a surprise. 2015 was a special team at that 1/4 final performance was phenomenal. I did not expect us to win by that much against Ireland in the 2019 1/4. From hearing Keith Earls during the week, it sounds like the players have well and truly moved on from Joe Schmidt. I guess having him in our camp we get a good insight of how Farrell operates. It is going to be a great game on Sunday morning.

2023-10-10T07:11:17+00:00

WEST

Roar Guru


Under Razor too? I’m actually looking forward to see what a new coaching team can do. Robertson will bring back the All Black culture that’s been missing for years. Also the player depth is there, it hasn’t been utilised correctly under Foster. Players like Roigard, DMac, Tamati Williams, De Groot, Will Jordan, Vaa’i just to name a few will be the future. Razor will have to rebuild and mould a completely new looking team. It’s way over due.

2023-10-10T07:00:43+00:00

WEST

Roar Guru


Where’s World Rugby headquarters… you’ll find your answer

2023-10-10T03:58:04+00:00

Todd

Roar Rookie


Yeah but Ireland look much better now than they did when they won that series in NZ, and have possibly improved more than NZ has since the coach transition. I'd also add All Black lulls haven't been a long term trend in the past, but that is guarantee for the future. When comparing the structures that the France and Ireland in particular have in place to NZ, the future prospects are looking bleak in my view

2023-10-09T23:54:19+00:00

Brendan NH Fan

Roar Rookie


I think if you asked the English they played the best team in the final unless you are saying the English were the best team as they comfortably beat everyone until the final. Problem is to many people think the same teams are always the best rather than looking at the actual competition. SA won more games in a row than anyone else except England who also made the final. At any point in their group games NZ could have go themselves into 2nd place but choose not too.

2023-10-09T23:45:25+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


Your reference was fine Ken. Sunny's wasnt.

2023-10-09T20:19:22+00:00

Ken Catchpole's Other Leg

Roar Guru


To be clear Jacko, my original reference was to the particular game where the extremely fast and coordinated Sader attack demolished the Blues in a display of pure rugby excellence.

2023-10-09T16:47:10+00:00

CheetahBok

Roar Rookie


Comfortably? Golden 20 minutes. That is the AB’s problem! They are 20 minute team. Based on what metric were AB’s the best team in the world at the time? If I recall the Irish were ranked No. 1. Even if England beat the best in the world in your skewed opinion, they did so easily enough, and then the Boks just obliterated them. Just suck it up buttercup. It get better if you actually just acknowledge that the AB’s weren’t so good in 2019, and they aren’t so good in 2023. You can’t play a final in a semi! That is just a band aid for hurting fans to salve their pride.

2023-10-09T14:12:32+00:00

Jez North

Roar Rookie


SA played a QF against Japan and then a SF against a Welsh side just as limited as the one over in France. England had to face the best team in the world at that time in their Semi Final, a team who comfortably dispatched the Boks in their pool match. The Boks’ route to the final was even easier than the Wallabies surprise final appearance in 2015. The difference was South Africa played a team who’d already played their final against NZ in the Semi.

2023-10-09T13:58:44+00:00

Brendan NH Fan

Roar Rookie


SA were worthy winners as are every team that wins it. SA had a much harder route to the final once the came second in their group and had a much harder Semi final compared to England. Favourites might not win but the one who wins deserves to do it.

2023-10-09T13:56:57+00:00

Brendan NH Fan

Roar Rookie


Same for the France game in the WC was revenge for 2021 yet failed to deliver again.

2023-10-09T13:54:53+00:00

Brendan NH Fan

Roar Rookie


Not sure how this weekend of Ireland v NZ could be the final as NZ failed to beat France in their group. Realistically it was always going to be just two of the 4 teams so final can still happen.

2023-10-09T13:53:21+00:00

Brendan NH Fan

Roar Rookie


former Brumbies Star Mack Hansen make it sound like he was a star at the Brumbies, should read Brumbies reject Mack Hansen. Ireland playing with confidence but next week is a new challenge. Good to see Ireland not shying away from the Challenge and trying to make themselves underdogs like Ireland under JS tried to do.

2023-10-09T10:51:20+00:00

James in NZ

Roar Rookie


I remember the literal pain of France kicking us out in 99' & 07' (even in the 11' final, I remember not enjoying it, but instead having a feeling of relief). The 2015 performance vs France with the bus running rampant was a lot more cozy. Last WC Ireland had the wood on us form wise, but then we threw the kitchen sink at them (our final, cos a week later we looked flat) then cementing their QF curse, unceremoniously sending stalwarts like Rory Best & coach Schmitt away empty handed. I am curious what, if any advantage having Schmitt on our team gives us? Probably not much beyond his everyday analytical temperament (Farrell was his assistant though & he would have nurtured a few of those players....but then thinking it didn't help Robbie Deans much when he coached against Ritchie and Dan). Yeah I think Ireland would've been targeting this game from the last whistle of their last 19'WC appearance(like a well oiled focused machine). Where as the AB revenge list has only added more names under the Foster regime, so its only getting harder to keep up.

2023-10-09T09:50:04+00:00

Carlin

Roar Rookie


Yeah that is a very good point. We played well that night to win by a considerable margin.

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