logo
Ireland find their rhythm to overcome Scots in World Cup tune-up

Ireland find their rhythm to overcome Scots in World Cup tune-up

Irish Examiner16 hours ago
Ireland 27 Scotland 21
Ireland's women tuned up for their looming World Cup tilt with a hard-fought, come-from-behind win against Scotland in Cork on Saturday afternoon.
This was about as good as these warm-ups get.
Scott Bemand's side was rusty as hell at first but they found their feet and did just about enough to hold off a side that already had a good 80 minutes in the bag from a week before.
Captain Sam Monaghan got a good 36 minutes under her belt after 14 months on the sidelines while Eimear Corri-Fallon and Beibhinn Parsons went the full stretch after their own recoveries from injury.
Add in three debuts, one off the bench for 19-year old Ailish Quinn, the five tries and a victory and it gives the squad something concrete to build on - and plenty still to work on - before they face Canada in another prepper in Belfast next week.
A slow start was no shock.
This was their first game in over three months, since they ended their Six Nations with defeat away to the Scots, and only four of the XV that began that match took to the field from the off here in Cork.
The visitors had endured their own sluggish opening away to Italy in the first of their warm-ups last week and it showed in a dominant beginning. They were 14-0 to the good early in the second quarter.
Centre Lisa Thomson claimed the first try a couple of phases on from a lineout, and it was another throw from touch that saw Lucia Scott run from deep and on a beautiful angle to carve clean through the defence. Thomson converted both.
Ireland were hanging on even before those scores on the back of some last-ditch defence – Amee Leigh Costigan claiming a crucial jackal penalty at one point on their own line – and thanks to the cannon that is Dannah O'Brien's boot.
Time and again the out-half lifted the siege but Scott Bemand's side needed more. Their efforts to get some rhythm going were undone by dropped balls and some bad decisions when the odd opening did arise.
First-capper Ivana Kiripati dropped one of those early balls and gave away a penalty for a high hit, understandable nerves combining with the rustiness of so many weeks without a competitive game no doubt, before settling in.
Nancy McGillivray, the other rookie on from the start, saw little of the ball at first as Scotland dominated the first half-hour, but Ireland flipped from rusty to ruthless in what seemed like the blink of an eye.
It came after a lengthy delay for attention to Scottish hooker Lana Skeldon who had to be stretchered off after landing awkwardly in a ruck. Minutes later and the hosts were up and running on the back of some belated pressure in the 22.
Tighthead Sadbh McGrath did the necessary by touching down after a succession of phases and a handful of obvious Scottish penalties. O'Brien's conversion smacked back off a post but it didn't stall the new momentum.
Three minutes later and Meabh Deely scooted over in the right corner after a wonderful team move started by another big run from Grace Moore and, after some more punches through the middle, a succession of slick hands.
It could have been better. Ireland pummelled the Scottish line through to the half-time whistle but couldn't cross for a third time, or on their first effort on the restart when Kiripati was held up over the line.
McGillivray did claim a third try shortly after, the Exeter Chiefs centre played cleverly into a gap by O'Brien after the forwards had softened up the resistance with a series of pick and goes under the posts. A missed kick left Ireland 17-14 to the good. The Scots were in serious trouble now.
Winger Rhona Lloyd got sent to the bin for a deliberate knock-on, and the introduction of Ireland's frontline front rows turned the screw at scrum time, but two chances to stretch the lead went begging with infringements in the 22.
Scotland made them pay. An error here and a missed chance there and all of a sudden they were playing a game of kick-tennis that stretched the field and made the space for Emma Orr to zig and zag through for a converted try.
The Scots were now in front, with Ireland having failed to take advantage of the extra player, but the lead changed hands again 12 minutes from time with big gains from Linda Djougang and Moore opening the door for Niamh O'Dowd to burrow over and leave it 22-21.
Deirbhile Nic A Bhaird came up with what proved to be the clincher off a five-metre lineout, the Scottish defence melting away. Enya Breen's conversion rebounding off the post left the door open for Scotland with two minutes to play but the scoring was done.
World No.2 Canada are up next and Ireland open their World Cup pool campaign a fortnight later against Japan in Northampton.
IRELAND: M Deely; B Parsons, N McGillivray, E Higgins, A-L Costigan; D O'Brien, M Scuffil-McCabe; S McCarthy, C Moloney-MacDonald, S McGrath; E Corri-Fallon, S Monaghan (capt); G Moore, I Kiripati, B Hogan.
Replacements: D Nic a Bhaird for Moore (3-14) and for Hogan (60); F Tuite for Monaghan (36); L Djougang for McGrath and N O'Dowd for McCarthy (both 50); E Lane for Scuffil-McCabe and E Breen for O'Brien (both 60); A Quinn for Kiripati and N Jones for Moloney-MacDonald (both 70).
SCOTLAND: C Rollie; R Lloyd, E Orr, L Thomson, L Scott; H Ramsay, C Mattinson; A Young, L Skeldon, E Clarke; E Wassell, R Malcolm; R McLachlan, A Stewart, E Gallagher.
Replacements: E Martin for Skeldon (32); L Bartlett for Young (HT); L Brebner-Holden for Mattinson (51); M Poolan for Clarke (55); B Blacklock for Ramsey (57); A Ferrie for Wassell and E Donaldson for Malcolm (both 65); C Grant for Brebner-Holden (71).
Referee: C Munarini (FIR).
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Michael Breen pokes fun at Sharlene Mawdsley as he jokes National Championship medal ‘actually belongs to Buggy'
Michael Breen pokes fun at Sharlene Mawdsley as he jokes National Championship medal ‘actually belongs to Buggy'

The Irish Sun

time26 minutes ago

  • The Irish Sun

Michael Breen pokes fun at Sharlene Mawdsley as he jokes National Championship medal ‘actually belongs to Buggy'

MICHAEL BREEN joked Sharlene Mawdsley's National Track & Field Championships medal "actually belongs to Buggy" after her viral moment following the All-Ireland final. The 26-year-old became social media famous when a video emerged of her 2 Sharlene Mawdsley won the senior women's 200m during day one of the 153rd National Track & Field Senior Championships Credit: Sam Barnes/Sportsfile 2 Sharlene Mawdsley of Newport AC, Tipperary, shows her medal to her partner, Tipperary hurler Michael Breen Credit: Sam Barnes/Sportsfile Breen, who Alongside a photo of the couple after the race with the defender holding her medal, he joked: "Excuse me, this actually belongs to Buggy" She shared a photo from the Templemore Athletics Track with the caption: "Swapping the streets of Thurles for the track today" alongside three laughing faces. Read More on Sharlene Mawdsley Mawdsley outlasted fellow Irish Olympian Sarah Lavin to claim a gritty 200m national medal on Saturday at the Morton Stadium. The sprinter powered to victory at Morton Stadium in windy conditions as she clocked at time of 23.55 seconds' Most read in Sport 'I knew today was going to be a really hard task and to come out on top, I'm absolutely thrilled. 'Sarah was ahead of me, and I was just saying to myself, stay calm, stay strong, and dig deep, and thankfully I ended up winning the title. 'It was a pity about the wind, but it was close to a PB and that'll give me great confidence heading into my last race before worlds on the 16th of this month.' That final warm-up race will be in the 400m in Berne, Switzerland. But Mawdsley will first return to London to train with her coach after withdrawing from the 400m heats in Dublin. She added: 'My summer so far, look, it has been mixed, I missed a good block of training and that's hard to come back from - but the support I've had got me through that race today.' While her place in the 400m relay squad for the World Championships is secure, the 26-year-old isn't sure whether she'll take on the individual event too. She concluded: 'I haven't actually decided; I know I won't say no to the relays. "I'm always the first one in, but we'll see about the individual. It has been a tough year. "We'll see closer to the time.'

Cole Palmer's best mate will not repeat famed celebration with Stockport glory
Cole Palmer's best mate will not repeat famed celebration with Stockport glory

The Irish Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Irish Sun

Cole Palmer's best mate will not repeat famed celebration with Stockport glory

LEWIS Fiorini knows the one thing he would not do if he scores as Stockport make their way through the season – rub his arms in celebration. If he did, the grief he would get from best mate Cole Palmer would be too much. Advertisement 3 Lewis Fiorini says there is no chance he will recreate big pal Cole Palmer's celebration if he scores for Stockport Credit: Reuters The pair may hail from opposite sides of Manchester but they are huge friends after coming through the ranks at City together. Fiorini knows what you see from the Chelsea and England star in front of the cameras really is what you get – even in personal messages the tone does not change. And he knows what would happen if he replicated Palmer's now familiar celebration, one he did not do when they played together. 'I wouldn't do it,' said Fiorini. 'I can imagine the messages I'd get if I did. It's not for me, that one. Advertisement 'But that celebration is actually pretty new. He didn't do that when he was younger, I don't know where he's pulled that one from! 'He's made it his trademark now, though. Everyone's looking to do it. MOST READ IN EFL 'Cole's just a lad from Manchester - fame definitely hasn't changed him. He's the same kid everyone sees in interviews and things people see online. 'That's him, that's Cole being himself and that's good. Some people change when they get to that level but it's credit to him that he's not done that. Advertisement Most read in EFL 'When people interview him, they get what he is whereas other people try and change or become media trained. 'Cole and I played at City together from being five or six-years-old right the way until I left last summer. 3 Palmer has watched County in action before Credit: Rex 'So we were together for 15 or 16 years and played in midfield together. We've been close all that time.' Advertisement While Palmer spent his summer becoming a Club World Champion with Chelsea, Fiorini spent his aiming to make an impact at Stockport. A move from City last summer saw injury frustration and eventually going out on loan to Scottish side Dundee United, which did not work out as he hoped. Now as County get their League One promotion bid with today's derby with Bolton, he is itching to show what he can really do as Dave Challinor's men look to go one better than finishing third and Play-Off heartbreak. 3 County suffered play-off agony at the hands of Leyton Orient last season Credit: Shutterstock Editorial Advertisement The 23-year-old added: 'I tried to approach this pre-season as if I'd moved to a new club, seeing myself as a new signing. 'I got injured early on, which put me a step back from the get-go. Coming to a new club and being off the pitch straight away was harder to settle in. Read more on the Irish Sun 'And League One is as physically tough as you get. Some weeks the ball's up in the air constantly. We want to get it on the floor but there are times where you have to stand up to more physical stuff. 'Today is a big one. The first game's always interesting as you don't know what you're going to get but it's a derby and we want to put a marker down.' Advertisement

Hannah Tyrrell still providing an exhibition in efficiency for Dublin
Hannah Tyrrell still providing an exhibition in efficiency for Dublin

RTÉ News​

timean hour ago

  • RTÉ News​

Hannah Tyrrell still providing an exhibition in efficiency for Dublin

The former Irish rugby international out-half has been more than just scoring for her team, she's also provided her fair share of assists. She has assisted the impressive Niamh Hetherton for 0-03 - and together the duo are providing a serious aerial threat in the full-forward line. Those three assists came in the Leinster final, against Leitrim and then against Galway. Tyrrell also set up Rowe for a goal against Leitrim, and popped a pass for Chloe Darby to raise a white flag in the last eight win over Cork. From frees, play, scoring and creating, even off limited touches, the pace-setter in the race for the Golden Boot award is so hard to handle because of her remarkable efficiency. An FAI Cup, Six Nations rugby and All-Ireland football winner, Tyrrell has already done it all. But based on this season's form she's pushing for more.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store