The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

MISERY FOR JONES’ ENGLAND AS IRISH CONSIGN VISITORS TO THEIR JOINT-WORST FINISH

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England collapsed to their jointworst Guinness Six Nations finish after being routed by Ireland as an ill-fated title defence ended tamely at the Aviva Stadium.

A week after appearing to signal the end of a shaky period by dispatchin­g France, they failed to fire a shot against opponents they had beaten four times in a row.

Combined with defeats by Scotland and Wales, it equals their worst Six Nations performanc­e since 2018, when they also lost three games and finished fifth under the guidance of Eddie Jones. In 2005 and 2006 they lost three times and finished fourth.

The highlight of Ireland’s most-impressive outing since Andy Farrell took charge after the 2019 World Cup was Jack Conan’s try that concluded 23 phases of highly polished play.

It was a mesmerisin­g score directed by the brilliant Johnny Sexton, but Keith Earls’ opener was almost as accomplish­ed as England were picked apart by a smart line-out move.

Sexton was at the heart of Ireland’s riotous display and amassed 22 points from the

kicking tee, comprehens­ively overshadow­ing George Ford in one of several Lions duels fought out in Dublin.

Ford will be among a number of England players to see their Lions aspiration­s harmed, albeit he was playing behind an outmuscled pack, while the prospects of their rivals in green shirts have soared.

And Jones’ position now faces renewed scrutiny with the team in full reverse 18 months after reaching the World Cup final.

Farrell and Sexton exchanged penalties before a Ford spiral bomb was misjudged by Conor Murray, but fortunatel­y for the scrum-half Aki was present to intervene.

Searching for their 50th win in the fixture, Ireland engineered the first try when a line-out move saw No. 8 Conan flick the ball to Earls who sprinted clear and rounded a wrong-footed Jonny May to score.

For the seventh consecutiv­e Test England had conceded the first try and their problems escalated as Kyle Sinckler complained at being poked in the eye by Iain Henderson before his front-row colleague Mako Vunipola conceded a second scrum penalty.

It was that infringeme­nt that provided the platform for Ireland to strike again through a cleverly-engineered try that saw Hugo Keenan beat Daly to a high ball before play swung left, where the impressive Conan pounced from short range.

Sexton was heavily involved throughout a sweeping move and in further evidence of the damage being done to England, Mako Vunipola and Luke Cowan-Dickie were replaced by Ellis Genge and Jamie George at half-time.

The penalties were accumulati­ng for Jones’ team and although Earls had a second try ruled out for an earlier knock-on, Sexton landed three points as the lead became 23-6.

Billy Vunipola was stripped of the ball and Farrell disappeare­d for an HIA. The misery compounded when Sexton booted his fourth penalty.

Aki was sent off for a high tackle on Vunipola that ended the number eight’s afternoon and England were smart with the penalty, a line-out drive enabling George to peel off and send Ben Youngs darting over.

But Sexton rifled over two more penalties to snuff out the fightback, with May crossing late on with the result already settled.

 ??  ?? Ireland’s Jack Conan goes over despite the attentions of England’s Luke Cowan-Dickie and Tom Curry
Ireland’s Jack Conan goes over despite the attentions of England’s Luke Cowan-Dickie and Tom Curry

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