Ireland 43-13 England:Ireland rose to the occasion for their first ever meeting with England at Croke Park as they thrashed the world champions 43-13 and toppled a 60-year-old record for their biggest win over them in the process.
Ireland dealt admirably with all the emotional baggage
surrounding the match and, after a tight opening quarter, cut loose
to record their fourth successive victory over the English.
The score topped their previous best 28-24 from 2004 and
bettered the margin set in 1947 by a 22-0 victory.
Their four tries to the one of England were fair reward for
their dominance. Flyhalf Ronan O'Gara made yet another sizeable
contribution with a perfect goalkicking display with 21 points from
five penalties and three conversions.
It was the ideal way to bounce back from the painful
last-gasp defeat by France at the same stadium two weeks ago while
for England it was a first, and worrying, defeat of the tournament.
"I think we were quite clinical and ruthless...coming up to
halftime, when they had one man in the sin-bin, we punished them
with two tries," said Ireland coach Eddie O'Sullivan, who added
that the performance must rate "right up there" with Ireland's
best.
For his opposite number Brian Ashton the result produced an
unenviable double. The man who coached England to their worst
defeat against Ireland on Saturday was also in charge of Ireland
when they suffered their worst defeat by England, 10 years ago.
"I don't feel embarrassed, I don't feel humiliated at all,
no, I feel as though there's a hell of a lot of work to do," said
Ashton, who said he had no idea why his side had been so physically
overpowered on the day.
Despite some protests over the last week at the prospect of
'God Save the Queen' being played at a stadium where 14 people died
after a raid by British-led troops in November 1920, the
predominantly Irish crowd greeted it with applause.
Most of the 82,000 crowd then gave full voice to the two
Irish anthems to create a spine-tingling atmosphere.
England did their best to deaden it when Jonny Wilkinson
slotted an early penalty but it was to prove a rare high point for
Brian Ashton's side.
With inspirational captain Brian O'Driscoll and scrumhalf
Peter Stringer back after missing the France game through injury,
Ireland kept calm and slowly took control.
Three penalties for O'Gara put them on top before the game
was effectively settled in the last 10 minutes of the first
half.
With England's bad-boy lock Danny Grewcock in the sin-bin
Ireland bossed the lineout to score two tries, through Girvan
Dempsey, after a piece of magic by O'Driscoll and David Wallace to
earn a 23-3 halftime lead.
England threatened a comeback after the break with a try by
debutant wing David Strettle and a Wilkinson penalty but Ireland
responded by upping the pace further and England had no answers.
O'Gara used a kick across the English line to set up Shane
Horgan up nicely for a third try in the 65th minute.
It was one-way traffic from then on and replacement scrumhalf
Isaac Boss finished things off with an intercept try, converted by
fellow sub Paddy Wallace.
Teams:
Ireland: 15-Girvan Dempsey; 14-Shane Horgan,
13-Brian O'Driscoll (captain) (22-Andrew Trimble 73), 12-Gordon
D'Arcy, 11-Denis Hickie; 10-Ronan O'Gara 21-Paddy Wallace 77), 9
Peter Stringer (20-Isaac Boss 77); 8-Denis Leamy (18-Mick
O'Driscoll 37), 7-David Wallace, 6 Simon Easterby (19-Neil
Best 68), 5-Paul O'Connell, 4-Donncha O'Callaghan, 3-John
Hayes (17-Simon Best 71), 2-Rory Best (16-Jerry Flannery 64),
1-Marcus Horan
England: 15-Olly Morgan 22-Mathew Tait 30);
14-Josh Lewsey, 13-Mike Tindall, 12-Andy Farrell, 11-David
Strettle; 10-Jonny Wilkinson, 9-Harry Ellis 20 (Shaun Perry 30);
8-Martin Corry, 7-Magnus Lund (19-Tom Rees 41), 6-Joe Worsley,
5-Danny Grewcock (18-Tom Palmer 54), 4-Louis Deacon, 3-Phil
Vickery (captain), 2-George Chuter (16-Lee Mears 72), 1-Perry
Freshwater (17-Julian White 54).
Referee: Joel Jutge (France)