
Paul O'Connell's Ireland make history by putting a tonne on Portugal in Lisbon
Paul O'Connell's second-string Ireland produced a record Test victory for the national men's team with a 16-try, 99-point spanking of a hapless Portuguese side at a picturesque Estadio Nacional on Saturday evening.
A huge Irish contingent made up a major part of what was an estimated 8,000 crowd in a 37,000-capacity stadium where Jock Stein's Celtic had won their European Cup back in 1967.
Not so much Lisbon Lions here as lambs to a slaughter.
The scorers? We'll keep that as simple as possible.
1st half: Stuart McCloskey, Hugh Gavin, Tommy O'Brien, Shayne Bolton, Tommy O'Brien, Thomas Clarkson, Bolton, Gavin.
2nd half: Craig Casey, Cian Prendergast, Calvin Nash, Ciaran Frawley, Prendergast, Alex Kendellen, Ben Murphy, penalty try.
This always looked like a mismatch, even with so many of Ireland's players, coaches and staff on duty in Australia with the British and Irish Lions. It wasn't long before we were reaching for the record books.
Ireland's biggest win prior to this was an 83-3 hockeying of the USA in New Hampshire in 2003. Portugal's worst defeat before now had come four years later at the World Cup in Lyon where they lost 108-13 to the All Blacks.
Add in Ireland's stroll against Georgia in Tbilisi last weekend and it all adds up to a two-match mini-tour of highly questionable value for a shadow touring side that handed out nine Test debuts in the absence of so many frontline stars.
The cliché with games like this is to suggest that it was no more than a glorified training session, but then Portugal had given Andy Farrell's Ireland a right old scare during a behind-closed-doors game before the last World Cup.
They've fallen off a cliff since.
It took Ireland less than a minute to get off the mark, McCloskey doing the honours. Tone set. Seven more five-pointers followed in the first-half alone, by the end of which the visitors were 52-0 to the good.
The ease with which most of the scores came, even the early efforts, was embarrassing. Just awful. Any semblance of a defensive line crumbled at the merest of prods or probes, vast acres of turf were there for gambolling all evening long.
Portugal didn't help themselves with some risky stuff out of their own third. and there were rare glimpses of the flowing rugby that so captured the eye and the imagination at the last World Cup in France where they beat Fiji.
Full-back Nuno Sousa Gedes was involved in much of what they did manage. It was the 15 who ran under the posts off the back of a clever crosskick from his ten and dizzying feet from Victor Pinto out wide. The problem was a forward pass and it was ruled out.
Worse was to follow when Portugal's captain Tomas Appleton was stretchered off after lengthy treatment for what appeared to be a bad ankle injury, and his replacement followed shortly after coming on. All this well before the half-time pause in punishment.
It never rains but it pours. The torrent continued on the restart.
The only shaft of light for Portugal was a try for their openside Nicolas Martins after 53 minutes but it was a score off the back of a lineout maul from Alex Kendellen that took Ireland past the record margin set in the States 22 years ago.
Ben Murphy's converted effort took them to the 99-mark with three minutes to go. They brought the ton up at the very last with English referee Adam Leal awarding a penalty try off a lineout maul in the corner.
History made, but what a tough watch.
Portugal: N Sousa Guedes; S Bento; V Pinto, T Appleton, M C Pinto; H Aubry, H Camacho; D Costa, L Begic, D H Ferreira; A R Andrade, P Ferreira; D Wallis, N Martins, D Pinheiro.
Replacements: G Aviragnet for Appleton (21); F Almeida for Aviragnet (33); G Costa for Andrade (50); M Souto for Begic and A Cunha for Costa (both 57); PS Lopes for Begic (57); AR Andrade for Ferreira (60); V Baptista for Pinheiro 62).
Ireland: J O'Brien; T O'Brien, H Gavin, S McCloskey, S Bolton; J Crowley, C Casey; J Boyle, G McCarthy, T Clarkson; T Ahern, D Murray; R Baird, A Kendellen, C Prendergast.
Replacements: M Deegan for Baird, M Milne for McCarthy, T Stewart for Boyle, T O'Toole for Clarkson and C Frawley for McCloskey (all 52); C Nash for T O'Brien (54); C Izuchukwu for Murray (60); B Murphy for Casey (61).
Referee: A Leal (RFU).
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Irish Daily Star
41 minutes ago
- Irish Daily Star
British and Irish Lions betting: Predicting First Test XV could be a big earner for just €1
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A 'safe' team guess could net between 25/1 and 40/1 depending on, say, whether the preference is for Josh van der Flier or Jack Morgan or Tom Curry for no7 and whether it's Hugo Keenan or Blair Kinghorn no15. There is more than one player at a tasty price who has a sneaking chance and one of those, at 12/1 is good value, and could send your bet into very high numbers. Do remember there can often be injuries at training. Keep in mind that the Lions, so far this tour, have preferred to keep schtum about some of them (Ringrose's concussion, Keenan's illness...) On that subject Ringrose, who must go through the concussion protocols, is ruled out of the First Test and therefore not in the betting. "You don't mess around with those things, he is 12 days out but back in the midweek game before the Second Test," said Andy Farrell. Ringrose had started twice (Force, Brumbies) and came on as a sub once to here (Reds) scoring a try on each occasion while his absence will have scuppered a lot of ante-post bets. He would have been circa 1/2 to start and brought Bundee Aki to circa 10/11 with Huw Jones and Sione Tuipolutu more like 6/4 and 7/4 respectively. Owen Farrell, by the way, has to be taken into account here. He was parachuted into the squad for Elliot Daly who is a full-back, a winger and a second-centre but the replacement is not a like-for-like. Given the coach's choice for the first-centre shirt was, when they set off for Oz, between Bundee Aki and Sione Tuipulotu. Lion's Owen Farrell - can he make the XV (Image: ©INPHO/Dan Sheridan) And given Ringrose's injury and that the Scotland captain is not needed as captain here, was poor against Argentina, decent against Force and Waratahs and has yet to score, Andy may be thinking Owen could do a job... Putting the conspiracy theories aside for the minutes and notwithstanding Tuipulotu-Jones is a proven Six Nations combination and would be playing outside their Scotland no10 Finn Russell, Farrell is a meaty 12/1 to start. Watch too the way the second-row and the back-row has been laid out below. That's because Tadhg Beirne and Ollie Chessum could play in either of the rows if needed. There is a not unreasonable theory that Farrell wants Beirne in the side but he may have had that thought downgraded as Joe McCarty and Chessum threw down specific markers. Working from the high numbers down, Blair Kinghorn and Hugo Keenan were most likely level in the pecking order in the run up to the squad assembling. But Kinghorn's late arrival and spraining his knee against Brumbies, coupled with Keenan's strong showing coming back from illness against AUNZ last Saturday has swung this in the Irish player's favour. 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Jack Conan has been used sparingly, a sub against Force on first arrival, starting against Reds and clocking up astonishing attacking and defensive numbers against Brumbies. He is the only natural no8 in the squad and started each of the three Tests four years back. He holds all the aces over Ben Earl. FIRST TEST vs Australia PLAYER BY PLAYER BETTING BACK-THREE - Tommy Freeman 1/8, James Lowe 1/8, Hugo Keenan 8/11, Blair Kinghorn 1/1, Mack Hansen 11/4, Duhan van der Merwe 5/1 CENTRES - Huw Jones 1/8, Sione Tuipulotu 1/8, Bundee Aki 7/4, Owen Farrell 12/1 HALF BACKS - Finn Russell 1/10, Jamison Gibson-Park 1/8, Alex Mitchell 5/1, Fin Smith 11/2, Marcus Smith 6/1, Ben White 12/1 READ MORE: British and Irish Lions vs Brumbies player Ratings: The good, the average, and you won't be making the Test Team mate READ MORE: Calling for a 'leader' mid-Lions Tour highlights pre-Tour selection absurdity - There is Only One F in Foley FRONT-ROW Ellis Genge 1/3, Andrew Porter 9/4, Pierre Schoman 11/1 Dan Sheehan 1/33, Ronan Kelleher 9/1, Jamie George 12/1 Tadhg Furlong 2/5, Will Stuart 5/2, Finlay Bealham 4/1 BACK-FIVE Maro Itoje 1/50, Joe McCarty 1/3, James Ryan 12/1, Scott Cummins 16/1 Tadhg Beirne 8/11, Ollie Chessum 1/4 Jack Conan 1/4, Jac Morgan 5/6, Tom Curry 10/11, Josh van der Flier 11/10, Henry Pollock 5/2, Ben Earl 5/2 So who would pick who, O'Gara, O'Driscoll, McGeechan, Woodward have all nailed their colours to the mast - who have they chosen and how big a bet would that be? First up, Ronan O'Gara says he would keep Porter-Sheehan-Furlong back as 'finishers' to overwhelm Australia at the close. ROG's XV: Keenan; Freeman, Jones, Aki, Lowe; Russell, Gibson-Park; Genge, Kelleher, Stuart, McCarthy, Itoje (capt), Beirne, Van der Flier, Conan . Pays a potential €240 for a €1 bet Brian Driscoll had Garry Ringrose in initially but we have substituted Huw Jones in there for him. This line up came without a nailed on tighthead so we have left the position vacant, it's a XIV! Brian O'Driscoll's XV: Keenan; Freeman, Jones, Tuipulotu, Lowe; Russell, Gibson-Park; Porter, Sheehan, AN Other, Beirne, Itoje (capt), Curry, Van der Flier, Pollock. Pays €328/2 for a €1 bet Lions legend Ian McGeechan has nine Irish players, selects Bundee Aki because of the way he 'carries the ball over the gain-line' but leaves Tadhg Beirne out as he wants 'big' at No6. Ian McGeechan's XV: Keenan; Freeman, Ringrose, Aki, Lowe; Russell, Gibson-Park; Genge, Sheehan, Furlong, McCarthy, Itoje (capt), Chessum, Morgan, Conan . Pays €66 for a €1 bet Former World Cup winning and Lions coach Clive Woodward is most worried about the composition of the back-row. Jack Conan, he says, is the only specialist no8, Jac Morgan get there by a nose following his superb Reds and AUNZ performances Clive Woodward's XV: Keenan; Freeman, Jones, Aki, Lowe; Russell, Gibson-Park; Genge, Sheehan, Stuart, McCarthy, Itoje (capt), Chessum, Morgan, Conan. Pays €64 for a €1 bet AI has looked at the tighthead slot and feels Finlay Bealham deserves a start which is an outlier of note. It also favours Tadhg Beirne at no6. AI, via and ChatGPT, has a go XV: Kinghorn; Freeman, Jones, Tuipulotu, Lowe; Russell, Gibson-Park; Genge, Sheehan, Bealham, McCarthy, Itoje (capt), Beirne, Morgan, Conan. €Pays 145/1 for a €1 bet Some believe this side was selected a good way in advance, that's the Andy Farrell way. Thus Keenan over Kinghorn, JVDF over Morgan, Conan over only player to have played himself in is Ollie Chessum. There is Only One F in Foley XV: Keenan; Freeman, Jones, Tuipulotu, Lowe; Russell, Gibson-Park; Genge, Sheehan, Furlong, McCarthy, Itoje (capt), Chessum, Van der Flier, Conan. Pays €29 for a €1 bet Sneaky One F bet (same team as directly above but with Owen Farrell as no12 instead of Bundee Aki... Pays €339 for a €1 bet Get the latest sports headlines straight to your inbox by signing up for free email .


The Irish Sun
an hour ago
- The Irish Sun
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RTÉ News
2 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Lions call up Scottish trio to cover First Nations & Pasifika tie
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