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The Irish were in top form this weekend.  PHOTO SuperSport
The Irish were in top form this weekend. PHOTO SuperSport

Ireland beat title holders France in Six Nations classic

Top match delivers excitement
Ireland took a giant step towards the Six Nations Grand Slam by beating titleholders France 32-19 in a pulsating encounter between the world's top two sides at Lansdowne Road on Saturday.
SuperSport
The Irish secured a winning bonus point with four tries, with Andrew Porter scoring one on his 50th cap, in what was a record 13th successive home test victory.

France saw their dreams of a successive Grand Slam success dashed while their national record run of 14 consecutive test victories came to an end.

The win also saw head coach Andy Farrell secure his first win over France since he took over after the 2019 World Cup.

"It was two great teams going at it, with the French going for an unbeaten record and us going for the home record," Farrell told ITV.

"At the end of the day, it is a victory in a competition that we want to do well at."

France skipper Antoine Dupont admitted the team was dejected over the loss.

"For the moment, obviously, it's a lot of disappointment; we can see the result; they have the bonus point, and we have no defensive bonus point," he said.

"We will have to recover and continue this tournament because it is not over. We know that a lot can happen."



Match overview

France struck first with Thomas Ramos slotting over a penalty in the fifth minute.

The Irish stormed into the lead with a sublime try when prop Finlay Bealham sold a dummy pass to Conor Murray and fed fullback Hugo Keenan, who burst through the French defence to touch down.

Irish skipper Johnny Sexton converted for 7-3 in the 10th minute.

The trusty boot of Ramos reduced the gap on the quarter-hour mark, converting a penalty for 7-6.

France then produced a dream try that began inside their own 22 before Anthony Jelonch passed to Damian Penaud who brushed off Murray before running in for his 22nd test try. Ramos converted for 13-7.

There was an immediate reply from the Irish as they regained possession when Ramos's clearance kick was deflected.

The ball came out wide to James Lowe, who still had work to do but somehow managed to touch the ball down in the corner with his legs over the touchline, but crucially, with his feet not on the ground.



Emotional Sexton

Sexton failed to convert, leaving the French 13-12 up.

The momentum of an engrossing game swung back to the Irish after French prop Uini Atonio was sin-binned for a high tackle on Rob Herring.

However, the hosts took advantage immediately, with Porter burrowing over. Sexton converted for 19-13.

The French were on the back foot, but fortunately for them, Ramos was once again on hand to keep the scoreboard ticking over. The fullback converted a long range penalty for 19-16.

The Irish rounded off an incredible first half with Sexton slotting over a penalty for a 22-16 lead.

Ramos had the first opportunity of the second period, but he failed for the first time with the boot, his long-range penalty falling just short.

However, with just over half an hour to go, the hosts lost their talisman.

A clearly upset Sexton trudged off, his head in his hands. He had received treatment for his left leg early in the second period.



Pressure on

Ross Byrne assumed the playmaking role, and he landed a penalty just prior to the hour mark to extend the lead to 25-16.

Ramos made one last telling contribution before being replaced by dropping a goal to bring the deficit back to six points at 25-19.

However, it was the Irish who turned on the pressure and got rewarded when man of the match Caelan Doris found Garry Ringrose on the left wing, and he fended off French defenders to touch down.

Byrne converted for 32-19, leaving the French a huge task with just six minutes remaining to keep their hopes of the Grand Slam alive.

It was not to be, as one final French attack petered out and Sexton rose from his seat pitch side to celebrate what will be his last Six Nations victory over the French.

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Namibian Sun 2024-11-24

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