Sun 24 Jun 2018 | 09:54
Ireland build towards RWC 2019 with brilliant season and 2-1 series victory

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Ireland are looking forward to a bit of a break after capping off a sensational season with their first win in Australia since 1979, as they beat the Wallabies 20-16 in Sydney to go 2-1 in the three-Test series. This follows their Six Nations Grand Slam earlier in the year.

Deserving of their current world ranking of 2nd, Ireland had Johnny Sexton to thank for 15 points with the boot, after both sides scored just a try apiece, both after halftime.

Jacob Stockdale was yellow carded for an elbow to Nick Phipps' throat before Israel Folau was also sin-binned after he appeared to get himself in a position to catch the ball, but then pulled down the Irish jumper.

The game ended with more drama as the Wallabies claimed there was a deliberate knock-on with time in the red, but after multiple replays, the TMO and referee couldn't conclude that there was a clear and obvious deviation, so the game ended with the Wallabies disappointed.

"Some things didn’t go for us. You need a few things to go for you in a game," Australia coach Michael Cheika said. "It could have gone either way. It was pretty tight. It was an electric atmosphere."

MATCH HIGHLIGHTS:

Ireland coach Joe Schmidt added to his grey hairs in those final few minutes.

"Tough, tough to watch that," said Schmidt. "They just kept coming wave after wave, I thought they were super in that second half and I thought it was a super effort from our guys to hang on in and keep them out.

"They came in waves, the speed they came on to the ball, it was really hard to keep them off our advantage line, so once they started getting that momentum they were even harder to contain.

"It’s a credit to our guys for hanging in there and it is probably a credit to the Wallabies, because I thought they did a fantastic job of carrying incredibly well.

"I’m pretty pleased there is not a game next week – that might have been a bridge too far.

"I think they [Australia] are a super team. To be in their back yard and manage to sneak off with the Lansdowne Trophy is a little bit special for us, especially on the back of a pretty long season."

In a tight series, both teams scored 55 points each, but it was Ireland who leave victorious for the first time in 39 years, earning themselves a nice break before they head to Chicago to take on Italy.

The real question, of course, is if Ireland can build on this success and take it into the Rugby World Cup in Japan next year. A lot will happen before then, but this outstanding season sets them up nicely, and their solid position of second in the world rankings won't hurt their confidence either.

TEST SERIES RESULTS:

Wallabies won 18-9 | Ireland won 26-21 | Ireland won 20-16

IRELAND PRESS CONFERENCE:

AUSTRALIA PRESS CONFERENCE:

credit: irishrugbytv/sanzaar/rugbycomau

1 Comments

  • flanker2712
    6:18 PM 25/06/2018

    Great series and hard luck to Australia.

    As an Irishman, great to see squad depth developing. A few years ago, Sean O'Brien missing from the team was a real cause for concern. Likewise Mike Ross. BOD. The only concern is that this doesn't apply to 9 and 10!

    A lot of talk (mostly from Aussies) that this game was decided by the referee. Michael Cheika the leading example, but there are others. I agree the referee was bad, but his bad decisions didn't favour one side over the other.

    - The Folau yellow card - debatable, of course, but Folau's left arm (which was no longer going for the ball) clearly unbalanced O'Mahoney in the air.
    - The penalty against Australia in the last minute. Bad call. But as George Gregan said after, Pocock won an important ruck penalty in the first half when clearly off his feet. If you are going to take them when they go your way, you have to accept them when they don't.
    - Conor Murray was prevented from scoring a try against the post by an offside player. If that's not a penalty try, I don't know what is.

    Cheika, Kearns and co need to suck it up and move on!