Last time out will never be forgotten and though it wasnât good enough that day it assuredly would be on any other, including tomorrow. Given the three month hiatus since the heartbreaking defeat to New Zealand, there shouldnât really be a hangover, but whether Ireland can replicate the accuracy and precision along with the emotional intensity for this Sunday afternoon kick-off is another matter.
The players and Joe Schmidt will have learned plenty about each other last November. Applying the lessons from the Australian defeat, the first period especially was a wonderful amalgam of Schmidt-style rugby and Irish emotion â hard carrying into the gain line, accurate clearing out from the first one or two players in, and Conor Murray swiftly moving the ball out to receivers running from depth or sniping himself.
Coupled with variations in running lines and use of passes back inside, along with a potent maul and territory, it was a heady, high tempo brew, which stretched even the worldâs best team close to breaking point in yielding a three-try, 19-0 lead.
Soft shoulders
The key was the ability of the carriers to seek out soft shoulders and break the gain line by taking the collisions on their terms, and in this regard of course, Ireland have lost their primary weapon in Sean OâBrien.
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âHis numbers were unbelievable against New Zealand, on both sides of the ball â defensively and in attack,â said Schmidt yesterday. âAnd I guess itâs a real roll-your-sleeves-up day for the back-row, and even the second-row will have to chip in.â And Cian Healy.
Accordingly perhaps, to further share the load, Luke Marshall has been recalled despite Gordon DâArcyâs superb performance against the All Blacks, while also as forecast the other two enforced changes see Chris Henry and Andrew Trimble recalled.
Marshall tore the Scottish midfield to shreds in Murrayfield if â as can be his wont â not turning those breaks into tries, but he is a potent carrier with a kicking game to boot. Trimbleâs selection adds to the physicality and aerial strength of the Irish back three â areas where the Sean Maitland, Stuart Hogg and Sean Lamont trio â look designed to test them given the selection of Duncan Weir.
Common denominators in all Schmidtâs picks, including Dan Tuohy ahead of Ian Henderson, are both familiarity with the coachâs ways along with match hardness and form. There remains scope for freshening things up six days hence against Wales, with Luke Fitzgerald perhaps also entering the equation, although Schmidt maintains this was not a factor.
âWe canât afford to lose our first game, to be honest. Itâs pivotal for us to get a good start. You only get one shot at your first game and youâve got to give it your best shot I think. As I say Iâm still learning in this job. Itâs a competition of five games but itâs five finals and that probably makes it slightly different to the autumn. . . â
Won eight
And, although Ireland have won eight of their last ten openers whereas Scotland have won of their last ten, therein lies another rub. Ireland are in something of a no-win position, and for the campaign to be in any way successful, simply have to win, whereas the Scots are in vintage party pooper mode.
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Time for Ireland to deliver the goods again
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