2019 6 Nations Round 2 Review
Scotland 13 – 22 Ireland
Scotland began at a ferocious tempo, unlucky not be rewarded
with a try as Tommy Seymour was tackled just short of the line, but an early
penalty gave the home side an early advantage. Orchestrated brilliantly by the
half-back combo of Grieg Laidlaw and Finn Russell, the Scots continued to pile
on the pressure, only for all their hard work to be undone on 10 minutes when
Tommy Seymour failed to deal with a Jacob Stockdale kick, attempting a quick
offload but instead chucking the ball over the head of Sean Maitland as if he
played for France and leaving Connor Murray in the clear. The scrum-half
registered the first try of the match, although Johnny Sexton, who had already
taken a number of big hits, missed a seemingly straightforward conversion, as
the fly-half seemed to be already nursing several injuries. Sexton put his body
on the line just a few minutes later as he was on the receiving end of another
massive tackle, but not before playing a clever inside pass to the onrushing Stockdale,
whose cleverly timed run and lightning pace carried him all the way to the try
line to grow Ireland’s lead to 9. It did however prove to be the end for
Sexton, and his replacement Joey Carberry had a nightmare start when his pass
was intercepted by Russell, who looked as if he might score before being
dragged to the ground by Keith Earls only a handful of metres short. When the
crisis seemed to have been momentarily averted, Russell showed the Murrayfield
crowd just why he is being touted as one of the best fly-halves in Europe as
the Racing 92 man popped the ball up off the ground, his perfectly-weighted
pass taking the Irish defence by surprise and gifting Sam Johnson his first
international try. It was just reward for a Scotland side who had dominated the
opening exchanges, largely thanks to Russell and his array of passes and kicks
that kept Ireland on the ropes, but no further scores came and Ireland went
into half-time with a slender 12-10 lead.
Into the second half and Scotland’s wonderful attacking
fluidity began to be disrupted by unforced handling errors, back-row Josh
Strauss being the main culprit as the No 8 single-handedly ended two successive
Scotland attacks and put Ireland back in control. We began to see more of
Connor Murray, who despite his try had been subdued, and Joey Carberry amended
his previous error in spectacular style when he surged through two Scotland
tackles before sprinting half the pitch, then perfectly executing a looped pass
over the rapidly chasing Blair Kinghorn that left Keith Earls with a clear run
to the line. Ireland’s dominance on the scoreboard still seemed unfair on the scots,
although as the game wore on the creativity evaporated out of the team, as
Ireland’s fitness and experience of winning assured that there was no way
through for Russell and Co. An exchange of penalties between Laidlaw and
Carberry did nothing to erode into Ireland’s healthy lead, and a late surge for
a losing bonus point came to nothing as yet another knock-on meant Gregor Townsend’s
men ended the game empty-handed. The game certainly seemed to peter out as
Scotland were unable to maintain the electric pace of the first half, and slip
from 1st to 3rd in the overall table, albeit still above
Ireland. Joe Schmidt meanwhile will be pleased that his side have bounced back
after the disappointing loss to England in Dublin, but Ireland were nowhere
near their best and capitalised on Scottish errors without creating many opportunities
for themselves. Trips to Paris for Scotland and Rome for Ireland wait, as
Ireland will be praying that Sexton is able to recover in time for the clash
with Italy.
Italy 15 – 26 Wales
A much-changed Wales team stuttered to a reasonably narrow
win over Italy, as Warren Gatland was forced to wait until the hour mark for
his side to draw comfortably clear. Italy’s early ill-discipline was punished
as Dan Biggar, looking to prove himself after being omitted from the starting
side against France, slotted home 4 straightforward penalties to give Wales a
12-0 lead. Despite the dominance from the kicking tee, there were few chances
for the backs as the majority of the play went through the forwards, with Liam
Williams being restricted to just a couple of darting runs forwards and
sideways. As Wales continued to probe for the first try of the game, Italy
began to grow into the game and ended up striking first, Braam Steyn powering
over from a handful of yards out to pull the deficit back to just 5. A missed
penalty attempt from Tomasso Allan took some of the wind out of Italy’s sails
just on the stroke of half-time as the Italians seemed galvanised by their try.
They had to wait till after the break to get more points on the board, as Allan
was successful in his 2nd attempt at goal. Wales, who had been
expecting to romp this game much like in previous years, suddenly found
themselves sleepwalking into a potential shock defeat at the hands of the
Azzurri. Gatland realised he had to do something and introduced talismanic
captain Alun Wyn Jones, although the second-row had very little to do with
Wales’ first try of the match, as Liam Williams finally broke through the
resolute Italian defence before offloading to winger Josh Adams, who raced in
to score his first try of the tournament. Williams had looked like he could go
alone, but the Saracens full-back likely had last week’s game in his mind when
he had the chance to assist a certain Jonathan Davies try but instead failed in
his own attempt to score. Gareth Anscombe’s introduction in place of Dan Biggar
also seemed to revitalise a stagnant Welsh attack, as the fly-half exploited the
huge dead-ball areas at the Stadio Olimpico as a delicate chip kick over
Italian back line was dotted down by Owen Watkin for the centre’s first try in
a Welsh shirt. It had taken until the 70th minute for there to be
clear daylight between the two sides, although Italy took some of the shine off
of the scoreboard when Allan’s line break and miss pass to Padovani at least
gave Italy a small consolation. Wales’ failure to secure the 4-try bonus point
will be noted by other teams, as will Italy’s much improved defence, with Eddie
Jones and Joe Schmidt unlikely to make the same decision as Gatland to rest the
majority of the squad following the difficulty his makeshift side faced in
Rome.
England 44 – 8 France
Jonny May has scored some very quick tries in an England
shirt, scoring after 2 minutes against Wales and Australia in 2018 and taking
just 91 seconds to score against Ireland last week, but the Leicester wing
reached new heights against France. Fullback Elliot Daly’s weaving run and kick
caught France off-guard, and May’s searing pace made a mockery of Morgan Parra
and Damien Penaud as he overtook three French players in his pursuit of the
ball, finally reaching it just as it crossed the try line 65 seconds into the
game. England seemed to have continued where they left off against Ireland, and
constant line breaks from the forward pack, Tom Curry the main protagonist, put
England just a metre away from the try line. After a switch in direction from
Ben Youngs, a wondrous pass from Owen Farrell took most of the French defence
out of the game, and left May in a one-on-one situation with opposite number
Penaud. From a standing start, May’s sublime footwork bamboozled Penaud and
created the space for England and May’s 2nd try of the match. France
were incapable of coping with England’s main tactic of kicking and chasing the
ball, and when a Henry Slade kick wasn’t dealt with by Morgan Parra, Chris
Ashton adopted the role of fly-half and exploited both the advantage played by
referee Nigel Owens and the acres of space in behind the French defence with a
grubber kick for May to chase down and score a phenomenal hat-trick inside half
an hour. With the score at 23-3, the England victory already seemed inevitable,
but France showed a glimmer of their attacking promise when makeshift full-back
Yoann Huget broke through 3 English tackles then sent Penaud on his way to the
try line with a well-timed pass. Ashton came mighty close to pushing the French
wing into touch, but a quick consultation with the TMO confirmed the try.
However, France quickly sank back into defensive mode, but were once again
undone by a kick through which was gathered by Ashton, and one phase later
Henry Slade secured the bonus point before half time.
After failing to capitalise on the momentary swing in
momentum in the first half, Jacques Brunel looked to take back control
tactically with a half-time substitution, bringing on Thomas Ramos in an
attempt to rejuvenate the French attack. The opposite occurred, and the France
pack continued to succumb to the bulldozing English forwards, and a slow French
attack was punished when Henry Slade correctly predicted Camille Lopez’s pass
and gathered it gratefully, racing away then kicking the ball downfield. A
moment of controversy followed, as Chris Ashton looked destined to score his
first 6 Nations try in 6 years, only for Gael Fickou to haul down the Sales
wing before he had gathered the ball. Nigel Owens awarded a penalty try, Fickou
was sent to the si bin and England stretched their advantage to 29, with France’s
sole aim for the remainder of the game to limit the damage. However, a rampant
England team could not be suppressed for long, and a quick tap-and-go penalty
from Ben Youngs some 70 metres from the try line kick-started a scintillating
move, as first Youngs then Farrell drove deep into French territory. Jonny May
was centimetres away from getting on the end of Farrell’s kick through, but
confusion in the French ranks as to whether there was a knock-on left Farrell
in the open to touch down his own kick. The fly-half’s try capped off a
mercurial display that had seen the captain dominate the game with his kicking,
and orchestrate the attacks with his pin-point passing. Mass substitutions and
the win being guaranteed meant the game stalled in the closing stages, but
France were unable to make any further progress on the scoreboard as the match
finished 44-8 to the hosts. England will now head to Wales with a Grand Slam
now definitely on the cards after 10 tries in just 2 games, while France have
some serious soul-searching to do before their home match against Italy
following 2 successive defeats.


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