H Metro

Ireland hold on to Six Nations trophy

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Ireland retained their Six Nations title with a hard-fought 17-13 win over Scotland after Warren Gatland offered to quit as Wales boss following a home defeat by Italy that condemned his side to a tournament whitewash.

France finished in second place after edging England 33-31 in a thrilling final match on “Super Saturday”. Irish hopes of back-to-back Grand Slams had been dashed by last week’s dramatic 23-22 loss to England at Twickenham.

But Ireland knew that if they avoided defeat, or secured two bonus points, against a Scotland side fresh from a 31-29 defeat by Italy in Rome, they would keep hold of the title.

Scotland were bidding for their first Triple Crown — when one of England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales beats each of those other teams in a single championsh­ip season – since 1990.

And the Scots produced a mammoth defensive effort in Dublin that threatened to frustrate Ireland.

- ‘War of attrition’ -

Tries by Dan Sheehan and Andrew Porter eventually proved enough for Ireland, although Scotland centre Huw Jones crossed late on to set up a tense finish.

“It was a war of attrition,” said Ireland coach Andy Farrell.

“I am delighted for the lads as back-to-back titles is very difficult to achieve,” the former England internatio­nal added.

Scotland boss Gregor Townsend praised his side despite a tenth successive defeat by Ireland, saying: “I feel really proud of the players. All 23 — the effort they put in today, in one of the toughest environmen­ts to play in.”

Earlier, Wales finished bottom of the Six Nations for the first time since 2003 — when they also lost all five matches — after a 24-21 defeat by Italy in Cardiff.

It was a sad way for centre George North, who went off injured late on, to bow out from test rugby as he joined a list of senior Wales players who have retired from internatio­nal duty either side of last year’s World Cup in France.

Saturday’s loss led Gatland, in his second spell as Wales boss, to offer his resignatio­n to Welsh Rugby Union chief executive Abi Tierney, even though the 60-year-old New Zealander is contracted until the 2027 World Cup in Australia.

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