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BOD delivers Ireland rescue

15th November 2009 14:30

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Drew Mitchell try v Ireland

Drew Mitchell opens the scoring

Australia's Grand Slam aspirations were foiled by a last-minute Brian O'Driscoll try to seal a 20-20 draw in Dublin on Sunday.

The Wallabies stepped up a gear from their defeat of England last week and delivered by some distance their most polished performance of the year, capped by a fine second-half try from Rocky Elsom, returning to Dublin where he was so revered earlier this year.

He could have been the villain of the piece, but as he has done so often, Brian O'Driscoll accelerated through a glaring gap in the final minute and steamed under the posts to cap his 100th Test with another crucial try for Ireland.

The stage had been set for such a finale before the game, but Australia threatened to ruin the party for long periods.

The Wallabies showed many aspects of lessons having been learned from their difficult Tri-Nations series. Disturbingly for Ireland, they looked a yard faster for much of the match, even though Ireland produced the stirring fightback in the final ten minutes.

Most disturbing of all for the Irish was the manner in which Australia's scrum dismantled the Irish eight. John Hayes had a horrible day. Three times in the second half, the Wallaby eight first got the shove on, then splintered the Irish eight. Once on Ireland's own ball. Both Scotland and Wales should have made a note of that in bold.

Both sides kept the game tight, but Australia managed that much better. There were fewer errors with hand and especially boot. Quade Cooper, inconsistent for the Reds but undoubtedly talented, looked like he'd been playing Test rugby for years, so intelligent was his positioning and kicking.

Ireland did not fare so well. Too many kicks were too long, or too central, or too high... there was always a margin of error, rarely a perfect delivery. On the rare occasions they did make a clean break or a player ran a threatening angle, the support was conspicuous by its absence and Ireland gave away too many penalties on attack.

But then Ireland were under pressure right from the 128th second, when Drew Mitchell opened the scoring. Ronan O'Gara took the ball too flat and zipped a pass out to O'Driscoll, whose attempt to drift onto the ball meant he was not forward enough to catch it. Mitchell scooped it up and made the 30m to the line with something to spare. After three minutes, his day could only get better. It did.

Thereafter, things got cagey. Jonathan Kaplan set out his stall to be tight at the breakdowns, challenging the teams to respond imaginatively and let momentum build, but both sides continued to fret over opening the ball and opted to kick rather than let possession fall foul of Kaplan's shrill whistle. A shame - had the teams bought into it, we could have had a cracker.

As it was, it came in fits and starts. Both Matt Giteau and Elsom made individual line-breaks, Giteau's nearly to the line, but neither one was capitalised on properly - in Giteau's case, a glaring lack of support.

O'Gara opted for an unorthodox chip penalty for Tommy Bowe to run onto in the corner, but the Ospreys winger couldn't get onto the end of it under pressure from Digby Ioane. Luke Fitzgerald was released down the left, but the Australian cover smothered any chance of an offload and the move petered out.

By half-time, Australia thus led 10-6, with Giteau landing one penalty to O'Gara's two as the scoring additions to Mitchell's try.

The second half was better as a spectacle, much better for Australia. The forwards cured their line-out woes of the first half - where they had lost four out of eight - and found a real collective head of steam, playing both the referee and the fringes far far better than Ireland. Giteau missed one penalty, but landed his second after 55 minutes, by which point Australia had had nearly 70 per cent of the second-half territory and possession.

Then Ireland pulled a try back. Cian Healy, who had not had the best of debuts in the tight, was at least rampant in the loose. He won the restart and bullocked into the Australian 22. Eight close phases followed, culminating in a simple two pass move for Bowe who scored by the posts.

Tied at thirteen, Australia simply carried on without a blip. Healy once again bustled forward, but the ball was turned over and the Wallabies gloriously moved the ball from side to side before Elsom powered into the corner. Giteau's touchline conversion looked to be a hammer blow.

But Ireland responded. Australia's huge effort left the reserve tanks empty and the siege Ireland laid to Australia's half in the final ten had an air of inevitability about it. Two penalties in the corner forced Kaplan to issue a team warning to the men in gold, and from the next phase, Tommy Bowe was held up in the corner. A five-metre scrum, solid this time, and then Tomas O'Leary crabbed while delaying his pass to find the right one of the three runners. Australia's two centres parted like curtains and through the gap steamed O'Drsicoll, Ireland's hero once again.

Man of the match: Big kudos must go to the Wallaby front row of Alexander, Moore and Robinson for their scrumming, while Rocky Elsom delivered a fine captain's display. Quade Cooper started very well, but faded a little. BOD was as good as ever and Tommy Bowe and Luke Fitzgerald - before the latter went off injured - were both constant threats. But running those few yards further than anyone was David Pocock, who may well have usurped George Smith for keeps with his display.

Moment of the match: In his hundredth Test, a last gasp-try to save his team's bacon from BOD. A Hollywood finale.

Villain of the match: Wycliff Palu was yellow-carded for an alleged dangerous tackle, but replays bore out Palu's version of events. No award.

The scorers:

For Ireland:Tries: Bowe, O'Driscoll
Cons: O'Gara 2
Pens: O'Gara 2

For Australia:
Tries: Mitchell, Elsom
Cons: Giteau 2
Pens: Giteau 2

Yellow card: Palu, 30, dangerous tackle

Ireland: 15 Rob Kearney, 14 Tommy Bowe, 13 Brian O'Driscoll (c), 12 Paddy Wallace, 11 Luke Fitzgerald, 10 Ronan O'Gara, 9 Tomas O'Leary, 8 Jamie Heaslip, 7 David Wallace, 6 Stephen Ferris, 5 Paul O'Connell, 4 Donncha O'Callaghan, 3 John Hayes, 2 Jerry Flannery, 1 Cian Healy.
Replacements: 16 Sean Cronin, 17 Tom Court, 18 Leo Cullen, 19 Denis Leamy, 20 Eoin Reddan, 21 Jonathan Sexton, 22 Keith Earls.

Australia: 15 Adam Ashley-Cooper, 14 Peter Hynes, 13 Digby Ioane, 12 Quade Cooper, 11 Drew Mitchell, 10 Matt Giteau, 9 Will Genia, 8 Wycliff Palu, 7 David Pocock, 6 Rocky Elsom (c), 5 Mark Chisholm, 4 James Horwill, 3 Ben Alexander, 2 Stephen Moore, 1 Benn Robinson.
Replacements: 16 Tatafu Polota Nau, 17 Matt Dunning, 18 Dean Mumm, 19 George Smith, 20 Luke Burgess, 21 Ryan Cross, 22 James O'Connor.

Referee: Jonathan Kaplan (South Africa)
Assistant referees: Christophe Berdos (France), Andrew Small (England)
TMO: Geoff Warren (England)

By Richard Anderson

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Comments

Wallaroo says...

Well done Ireland you certainly came good in the end and proved why you are the 6N champs.

Posted 14:00 17th November 2009

IslandPower says...

yeah put on your B team for fiji, hope ireland gets beaten if they do, scotland was flattered by the score at least one of those trys should of been disallowed, ireland is awesome but it doesnt pay to underestimate the opposition, if fiji clicks they can be really hard to contain, esp if it turns into an open game. Fiji would have a game under their belt and more than a few days to prepare and could be a different kettle of fish.

Posted 02:31 17th November 2009

bluelion says...

Rusty Ireland did well against a team that has been together for 5 months. Fiji game shouldn't do much to oil the cogs as it is hoped a different Ireland will take the pitch. New players need to be blooded, starting at 10 where back-up is needed. 4 & 5 need combination options, que Leo Cullen. We are short on experience in the front row after Horan and Hayes. Who's back-up at 13? Bowe or Fitzgerald need a chance to try on the jersey.

Bring on Fiji, and lets see who gets the starting nod for the SA game.

Posted 13:40 16th November 2009

fitzy72 says...

I have to agree that Jonathon Kaplan is a muppet.He completely killed the contest as a spectacle.I for one would think twice about ever paying ¿70 for a ticket again - I don't think you get enough entertainment for your money.So much aimless kicking....painful.Wycliffe Palu puts one of the best shots on Kearney that I've seen in a long time and he gets sent to the bin for it?.... an absolute joke.Having said all that I think the draw was a fair result.Australia had two thirds of the possesion and territory but couldn't build enough pressure thru repeat phases to put the irish away.The thing that makes me happy as a wallabies supporter is they are a young team and have a hell of a lot of improvement in them.Pocock was outstanding - far and away the best player on the pitch repaying Dean's obvious faith in his ability

Posted 13:03 16th November 2009

Trinats says...

Lucky for us it was Irelands first outing in months, they got up a steam towards the end. However we had a good run for about 20 mins just after half time. Not a great game, as a spectical, Australia mirrored the Irish kicking game. And "that" ref spoilt it again, blowing his whistle every chance he could (why doesn't he let the play flow ???) I'm not whinging about his reffing in favour of one team, just his style of reffing. (he had shocking calls for both sides) At least he was consistent with his inconsistencies !!!

Posted 07:56 16th November 2009

burdon says...

Ohh nearly fell asleep half way through this article. Even the title suggests the O'Driscoll was the savior, he hadn't been seen on the park all day and that try was anyones for the taking considering there was 3 or 4 irish players waiting on O''Leary's delivery and the size of the hole in defence was massive.

Considering "Ireland didn't turn up in the first 60 Minutes" and they haven't had a test match since April/May it's a pretty good result!!

I think that fact that they stayed composed after that bad start is a testament to Irish rugby.

No mention of Pocock who had a stormer. Interfered with so much Irish ball, made some brilliant tackles.Giteau is useless two missed kicks is unacceptable!!

But it was good to see two teams running the ball and not opting for the sticks as much

Posted 05:54 16th November 2009

robhall_ie says...

From the stands it appeared more like Ireland were pretty rusty and on a better day easily had the beating of this Wallaby side. Irish kicking was poor and gifted much attacking play to Australia. Physicality was also poor and Australia were allowed to dominate the scrum and breakdown. With that kind of advantage they really should have put Ireland away quite easily. But they had no real creative spark and didn't know how to turn their advantage into points. I think a draw reflects well on the Aussies and it will be Ireland feeling like their rustiness cost them an available scalp. Bring on the Fiji game and hopefully we can get our performance right for the Boks.

Posted 22:58 15th November 2009

Apodeictic says...

Australia are certainly an improving side. The way the British press had been going on about them after coming last in the Tri-Nations you would think they were a poor side. But on today's performance I think they are still rightly third in the world ahead of any of the Home Nations (the jury's still out on France; can they follow up their win over South Africa in their encounter with NZ?). Sure, Australia came last in the Tri-Nations but don't forget that that is a three horse race involving the three best sides in the world. It's not quite the same as coming last in the Six Nations. Australia is far from its best at the moment but definitely a team on the up and will be really hitting their straps come 2011. On today's performance I would have to say Australia were unlucky not to come away with the win aided by the rougher end of the refereeing stick (especially with Palu's sin binning for a perfectly legal tackle and not a word by the referee about the no-armed shove on Elsom as he planted the ball for a try) but these things happen. I suspect Australia will probably go on to win the remaining two tests which will leave them with the bitter sweet taste of going undefeated on a grand slam tour but not *quite* clinching the grand slam. But this will arguably make them even stronger for 2011.

Posted 22:33 15th November 2009

nikid40 says...

Everyone take note, the Aus scrum is the real deal! There is only one problem (lineout not included); our back up tighthead is Matt Dunning... Lineout again looked bad but cleaned itself up in the second half. However, once we lure Vickerman back this won't be a problem. The young forward pack looked incredible but it is noticeable that Australia played one of their best games of the year and Ireland played one of their worst and still got the draw...

Ireland should stroll past Fiji, get their continity back and then play the Boks for IRB team of the year. Congrats to BOD, deserved to score the decisive try in his 100th test. If Ireland beat South Africa, BOD will win IRB player of the year.

Posted 18:16 15th November 2009

catchyname says...

good OZ performance, not the best Irish performance. Ireland didnt turn up to the game until an hour passed. hopefully the fiji game will get them good match practice before the boks game. And well done to cian healy!

Posted 17:05 15th November 2009

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