Six Nations Preview: Ireland and Wales

IRELAND: No Backspace

A brief, incomprehensive preview of Ireland’s Six Nations 2020, written fast

Wee Greig helpfully assists Johnny with his referee-handling

Having muffed the entire last calendar year, Irish rugby returns to Europe feeling sorry for itself. The normal provincial success continues, but means nothing come the bitter dawn of the first weekend of February. It’s Six Nations time.

Daddy Faz is our new leader and he’s talked a lot of fan-service shite about how we’ll be a pure-running Irish team, ferocious and feral and flames for eyes. His actual vision for the side will get its first public airing this weekend. Many of the personnel are the same as the World Cup – too many, in a particular rather than strategic sense – but this still represents a period of major change.

Yet change is not to be feared. The history of Ireland at Rugby World Cups shows that a constant state of flux is, paradoxically, needed to maintain standards as well as develop them. 2019 was as clear an example as 2007 of the desiccated horror of trying to take a successful side that has just hit a peak and shield it from the passage of time. The only ways to stop a tiger changing daily are death and taxidermy.

And, so, we come to another paradox. Minimal changes of personnel at this time are not necessarily expressions of fear of that which is new. We could have bucked out everyone over the age of 30 – but we’re not picking the 2023 World Cup team in January 2020. We must be prepared to keep evolving in perpetuity. No need for do-something panic now.

This weekend’s team:

Spuds: Healy, Herring, Furlong, Henderson, Ryan, Stander, van der Flier, Doris

Gravy: Murray, Sexton, Stockdale, Aki, Ringrose, Conway, Larmour

Seconds: Kelleher, Kilcoyne, Porter, Toner, O’Mahony, Cooney, Ross Byrne, Henshaw

Johnny Sexton is the captain, and this is OK. He remains our best ten by a way and is one of a handful of nailed-on starters. If there is an issue with his captaincy, it’s not his age or his ability – it’s his captaincy. The key part of the job is dealing with the ref and, while he seems a charming and self-effacing man when in his civvies, game-day Johnny Sexton is an insufferable wanker. He makes enemies of the whistlers and, while recently he has tried smiling and coercion (and looked unnatural doing so), he’s only one perceived affront away from calling Romain Poîte a brainless snaildick. Contrast with your memories of perfect-son-in-law Sam Warburton and the issue is clear.

Conor Murray’s selection is a poor call. Conor of the past 12 months or so is not the champion player of the years prior. He’s not been bad, per se, and his imperiousness may still return. The issue is alternatives. John Cooney has been the most influential player in Europe this year.

Peter O’Mahony has been unshovellable shite for a year and the fact he made the Six Nations squad at all should have been questioned. Overall, his previous body of work makes that the right call – but picking him in a match-day 23 is frankly the wrong choice. The starting back row looks well-balanced, and chucking 21-year-old Doris straight in barely feels like a risk. However, Max Deegan or Jack O’Donoghue should be on the bench – with the choice of which made on a tactical and stylistic basis rather than trying to decide which of the two great athletes in great form best deserve the number 20 shirt.

Anyway, it’s just one weekend. The variable calls:

  • which of four centres gets to play beside Ringrose?
  • Larmour or Addison, or maybe both?
  • the selected front rows look like our best six, but each of the calls could go either way – do we have a best front row, and do we even need a clear starting trio?

And so we will have room to breathe over the course of the tournament. A tournament we can win (we won’t, England will).

Now is the time for experimentation, to a point. But Andy Farrell does not get a free hit. Anything less than three wins is failure and, ultimately, we’re in it to win it.

Scotland by 50.

ENDS

Preview courtesy of EnzoM

WALES: The Dog That Didn’t Know Whether to be Under or Over

With apologies to Edmund Spenser:

One day they wrote his name upon the sheet,
But at night I came and washed it all away.
Again they wrote it in media and tweet
But in I crept, and made the twittering my prey.
Vain man! cried they, to wipe his name away
A frightening act, a cruel spine-tingler

To ensure Wayne Pivac forgets Aaron Shingler

Link to Squad for the 2020 Guinness Six Nations

Team to play Italy in Cardiff:

Leigh Halfpenny; Johnny McNicholl, George North, Hadleigh Parkes, Josh Adams; Dan Biggar, Tomos Williams; Wyn Jones, Ken Owens, Dillon Lewis, Jake Ball, Alun Wyn Jones (capt), Aaron Wainwright, Justin Tipuric, Taulupe Faletau.

Replacements: Ryan Elias, Rob Evans, Leon Brown, Cory Hill, Ross Moriarty, Rhys Webb, Jarrod Evans, Nick Tompkins.

Endings & Beginnings

‘Bloody Andy’s Taxis!’ Gats heads off to New Zealand

As Wales sings Po Atarau / Now is the Hour to bid a fond farewell to Warren Gatland and Shaun Edwards, and a jauntier ‘I’ll Bet you a Kangaroo’ to help Howley hop off, the mood in the Heimat is unexpectedly optimistic.

‘Come Back Shaun!’

Wayne Pivac seems to have seamlessly sewn himself into Warren’s catsuit, sorry tracksuit, and the players have gone through the four stages of post-RWC grief faster than a Greased-Zammit down a slippurly slurp℠.

Rather than the sour reek of sweaty anxiety, there’s the fresh morning air of new dawns and bright horizons. Players appear well-rested and happy to be in the new coaching set-up, and the injuries are not casting long shadows over the squad, even though some top players and Handsome Legends are missing.

But…

It’s in times like these that Wales can turn in some honking performances, especially in their opening 6N encounters at home, when all the optimism and expectation dissolves into blunt, turgid attack and weak, chaotic defence. Home cheers fade into murmurings about the bloody roof being open. Or closed.

But fair’s fair, a good old underdogging seems inappropriate, so like a Frankfurter in a bap I will settle for some in-between dogging followed by complete fantasy with my forecasts.

Saturday’s Match vs Italy

Wales have opted for a solid start, fielding an experienced line-up and just one new cap. We’ve flirted with North at 13 before and not much happened, good or bad. These days George is a more seasoned and moderate player, no longer the impetuous young buck throwing homophobes over his shoulder for fun. George has never been great positionally, but I hope his experience and maturity nails the position down for the duration of the Championship.

George takes the garbage out

McNicholl is the only first-capper and Halfpenny’s selection at 15 is a wise move, so we should see some exciting counterattacking running from our Welsh Johnny. Let’s hope it doesn’t lead to a lot of turnovers because his teammates can’t keep up.

Wales are likely to creak in the scrum, but lineouts should be efficient enough with Tipuric and Wainwright doing a lot of the leaping at the tail. As great as it is to see Faletau back, I’m not getting carried away as it is still a long way back to his 2015 Lions Tour form and fitness.

Ball will no doubt go about his ball-carrying like a pig snouts truffle, but he makes some hard yards and plenty of tackles. AWJ will hopefully be his niggly, majestic self and lead from the front.

Prediction: a stuttering 23-11 Wales victory.

Round 2. Away to Ireland

Our first away match is against Ireland, and the Irish look like tournament favourites with both a strong team littered with in-form players, and the desire to lay to rest their World Cup ghosts and memories.

Unfortunately, Scotland seem determined to undermine their own chances in the opener against Ireland, so Wales will be up against a green wave of Grand Slam expectation.

Prediction: a brave effort but a narrow 29-23 Welsh defeat.

Fantasy Rugby 1. Home to France

I think France are really fed-up of snatching defeat from the jaws of victory against Wales, and this will be a big match for them. Time to unburden some true Welsh pessimism and imagine the worst.

After a bruising encounter in Dublin, Faletau leaves for an early Bath with another broken arm-bone. North and Halfpenny haven’t recovered from their HIAs and Greased-Zammit starts on the wing with Welsh Johnny switching to full back. Pivac has his full ‘Welsh Way’ moment and picks Willowy Shingler at 6, drafts Owen Williams into inside centre to replace a stolid Mr. Glue, with Bury my Heart at Watkin’s Knee selected at OC.

Big Dan Biggar spends the entire match kicking grubbers into the French in-goal area for Zammit to chase like a spaniel. France score five breakaway tries and Owen Williams reveals his wonky temperament by being red carded for scramming Fickou in the face during a touchline tussle.

Prediction: Wales lose 13-49 and Barry John calls for Pivac to be replaced by Rob Howley

Fantasy Rugby 2. The Miracle in Twickenham

After the madness in Cardiff, normal service is resumed and Wales return to full strength, except for Faletau. Halfpenny and North are recalled, and Liam starts on the wing. Wainwright replaces Shingles, and a fired-up Moriarty comes in at 8.

England are marching towards a Slam after victories over France, Scotland, and the BIG ONE against Ireland. Eddie is basking in a contract extension until 2027, making him the best paid coach in RU history.

After 60 minutes England are winning comfortably without stretching away. Pivac plays his joker and turns to his Dragons on the bench. Dee for Owens, Brown for Lewis, Hill for Ball, and squad replacement Tyler Morgan for wee Georgie North.

My-oh-my, what a comeback. A brace from Brown and a classic outside break from Morgan brings the score back to within one point. Greased-Zammit enters the fray while England are camped on the Welsh 5-metre line with 5 minutes to go.

A re-set scrum and Dee strikes against the head! Tomos feeds Biggar who feigns a touch-kick but slips a pass to Morgan. A step sends Billy V into Row C, creating space to free Zammit! Zammit scorches the length of the field to score like a Welsh Andy Hancock – in half the time.

Prediction: England 21-25 Wales

Fantasy Rugby 3. Highland Flings in Cardiff

After their surprise win against France, new Scottish Player-Coach Finn Russell selects the same team while captaining the side for the second time. Wales are also unchanged.

Both sides are committed to playing high-risk running rugby under a closed roof. Madness ensues, and the game ends 49-all, while breaking all records for the highest number of knock-ons ever recorded in an international rugby match. Finn invites both sides for a celebratory night out in Newport, where more pints are spilled than consumed. News comes in from Scotland that Toony and Hoggy have eloped. Jim Telfer’s neck explodes.

Preview courtesy of MisterIks

On the telly this week (SIX NATIONS!!!)

Friday 31st January

Blues v Chiefs06:05Sky Sports Arena
Brumbies v Reds08:15Sky Sports Arena
Sharks v Bulls17:10Sky Sports Arena
Ireland U20 v Scotland U2019:15YouTube / RTÉ TWO
Wales U20 v Italy U2019:35S4C

Saturday 1st February

Sunwolves v Melbourne Rebels03:45Sky Sports Arena
Crusaders v Waratahs06:05Sky Sports Mix
Stormers v Hurricanes13:05Sky Sports Arena
Wales v Italy14:15BBC One / S4C
Cheetahs v Southern Kings15:00Freesports
Ireland v Scotland16:45ITV
France U20 v England U2020:00Sky Sports Arena
Los Jaguares v Lions23:00Sky Sports Mix

Sunday 2nd February

France v England (women)12:30Sky Sports Mix
Exeter v Harlequins13:00BT Sport 2
Wales v Italy (women)13:00BBC Two Wales
Ireland v Scotland (women)13:00BBC Alba / red button
France v England15:00BBC One

1,264 thoughts on “Six Nations Preview: Ireland and Wales

  1. thaumaturge's avatarthaumaturge

    GET IN!

    Like

  2. Chimpie's avatarChimpie

    Bah. Nice move.

    Like

  3. yosoy's avataryosoy

    @Iksy
    Still only a maybe at best. Can’t confirm until after the Twickenham fixture as I’m off down there that weekend.

    Like

  4. Borderboy's avatarBorderboy

    Bugger. That didn’t last long.

    Like

  5. falteringfullback's avatarfalteringfullback

    Good game so far – so much pace on the ball from both teams

    Like

  6. Gutted I can’t get to the meet.
    Nice move from Ireland to open their account.
    Larmour’s looked very hungry so far.

    Like

  7. thaumaturge's avatarthaumaturge

    Bloody Hogg, taking advantage of a poor ref decision.

    Like

  8. Good scrumming from Scotland.

    Like

  9. flair99's avatarflair99

    Raynal was wrong there. Says he from his couch.
    Good that Scotland knocked on in the maul

    Like

  10. Chimpie's avatarChimpie

    Arrgh

    Like

  11. falteringfullback's avatarfalteringfullback

    I think the lack of accuracy in the 22 is going to come back and hurt Scotland

    Liked by 2 people

  12. thaumaturge's avatarthaumaturge

    Now POM is not looking good.

    Like

  13. Chimpie's avatarChimpie

    Too many turnovers

    Like

  14. Chimpie's avatarChimpie

    Ffs stupid penalty

    Like

  15. Enjoying how tetchy this is. Ref’s got his hands full.

    Like

  16. yosoy's avataryosoy

    Getting a bit testy. Good

    Like

  17. thaumaturge's avatarthaumaturge

    Scotland a bit dirty here.

    Like

  18. Chimpie's avatarChimpie

    Feisty

    Like

  19. Treacle toes is a class act.

    Like

  20. The Scottish giving the Irish a bit of edge back, great to see

    Like

  21. Borderboy's avatarBorderboy

    Really? Scotland being dirty? After POM takes a player out without the ball?

    Liked by 1 person

  22. thaumaturge's avatarthaumaturge

    Hamish McFuckface strikes again.

    Like

  23. Chimpie's avatarChimpie

    Cough the ball up in the 22 again. Grrr

    Like

  24. thaumaturge's avatarthaumaturge

    (Briefly opens other eye)

    BB – seen at least 2 instances of Scottish players taking man off ball.

    Like

  25. falteringfullback's avatarfalteringfullback

    Come on Scotland, need to get something to show for this pressure.

    Loving the niggle and edge from the Scots, where was this in the world cup?!

    Like

  26. Scotland winning the rileing battle.

    Like

  27. flair99's avatarflair99

    Sexton doing a Neymar, Raynal making friends in Dublin. This is fun.

    Like

  28. Chimpie's avatarChimpie

    Another dumb penalty. At least we’re showing some fight

    Need to cut out the errors now

    Like

  29. Borderboy's avatarBorderboy

    We’re simply playing Ireland at their own game. Funnily enough they don’t seem to like it.

    Like

  30. “Gutted I can’t get to the meet.”

    You just broke my heart.

    *cancel’s extra booking of low tables to dance on*

    Liked by 1 person

  31. Chimpie's avatarChimpie

    ‘BB – seen at least 2 instances of Scottish players taking man off ball.’

    Just joining in with local ways

    Like

  32. Chimpie's avatarChimpie

    Another soft penalty. Ffs

    Like

  33. yosoy's avataryosoy

    McFlair.

    Sourcing too many opportunities, mind.

    Like

  34. thaumaturge's avatarthaumaturge

    Jaysus! This is going to do me in.

    Like

  35. Chimpie's avatarChimpie

    PROTECT THE EFFING BALL

    Like

  36. Doh. Maybe making all those tackles have deadened J Gray’s brain.

    Like

  37. Scottish back row not covering themselves in glory here, never there to support the breaks and clear out

    Liked by 1 person

  38. tichtheid's avatartichtheid

    That ball was back on our side

    Like

  39. falteringfullback's avatarfalteringfullback

    Scotland – clear the bloody ruck

    Like

  40. EnzoM's avatarEnzoM

    We are doing some of the flash stuff well but lots of small errors in possession. Bit weird.

    Like

  41. tompirracas's avatartompirracas

    Enjoyable half. Neither team is that good, both have enough.

    Like

  42. tichtheid's avatartichtheid

    Our tight five has more than fronted up, but as has been said, we need to protect the possession after the tackle, it is the reason we are trailing just now. There have been, what, five turnovers in the red zone in that half – inexcusable

    Liked by 3 people

  43. Borderboy's avatarBorderboy

    A far better performance than I was expecting, but need to keep this up. We still have the dreaded third quarter to go which is quite often where we lose games.

    Like

  44. flair99's avatarflair99

    Really enjoying this. Great pace and turnovers. The Irish should build a statué to CJ. And probably bring in Cooney. Murray’s too slow.

    Like

  45. tichtheid's avatartichtheid

    Flair, Cooney v Horne will be fun, similar all-action scrum halves

    Like

  46. flair99's avatarflair99

    Vincent Clerc thinks Ireland probably has the edge as they dominate the rucks. Sharp analyst…

    Like

  47. Chimpie's avatarChimpie

    Flipsake

    Like

  48. Shitty advantage reffing there. Scotland punished for doing nothing wrong.

    Like

  49. falteringfullback's avatarfalteringfullback

    Butchering that 3 on 2 was criminal.

    Draw the 14, draw 15, winger in the corner.

    No need for the fancy offload

    Like

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