U20 Six Nations: Scotland V Ireland – The Irish Examiner (Print) – February 10 2025

Ireland U20s used England loss hurt as catalyst for Scotland win

Ireland lost their first round clash to England and used that hurt in a clinical attack against Scotland.
DAIRE WALSH

U20 Six Nations: Scotland 15 Ireland 33

Following the disappointment of losing out to England in the opening round, Ireland captain Eanna McCarthy believes a more clinical attacking edge was the catalyst behind his side’s victory over Scotland in the U20 Six Nations at the Hive Stadium on Saturday.

After the hurt that was left from their 19-3 reversal at the hands of the English nine days earlier, Ireland were determined to get their first win of the Championship in the Edinburgh venue. Thanks to a hat-trick of opening half tries from Charlie Molony – in addition to fine finishes over the whitewash by Billy Corrigan and Oisin Minogue in either half – Neil Doak’s visitors emerged from this round two clash in the Scottish capital with a maximum tally of five points.

“There was a big week’s training went in and a few fix-ups from last week. We had nine entries [against England] and we only converted one, whereas this week we had 15 and converted a lot more. I’m very proud of the lads, but it was a fierce physical battle with Scotland. They’re always a good team, so you never want to take them for granted,” the Cork native remarked after Saturday’s game.

“We know we’re a good side. We created so many opportunities against England and we just missed out last ball here, dropped ball there. There wasn’t much getting into it. There was a bit of hurt left from it, but there wasn’t much to say to the lads. They were fairly well motivated themselves.”

After spectacularly touching down with just over 90 seconds gone on the clock, Molony got on the end of a delicate crossfield kick by Sam Wisniewski for his second try on 13 minutes.

The hard-working Corrigan added his name to the scoresheet by rounding off an enterprising attack just shy of the first-quarter mark, before Molony wrapped up his hat-trick and an Ireland bonus point in ruthless fashion on 22 minutes.

Scotland finally opened their account with a five-pointer from Fergus Watson just four minutes later and even though Ireland established a comfortable 26-5 interval lead, there were some nervous moments after Joe Roberts added a second Scottish try on the restart.

Yet the introduction of Munster hopeful Minogue (nephew of the late Anthony Foley and son of former Ireland women’s international Rosie Foley) proved to be a masterstroke by Irish head coach Doak as he dived over off an intricate line-out move mere seconds after his introduction as a 59th minute replacement.

A resolute Scotland dotted down once again via scrum-half Hector Patterson inside the final-quarter but while Ireland came up short in their quest for a sixth try in the closing moments, they had already done more than enough to earn an emphatic victory.

Scorers for Scotland: Tries: F Watson, J Roberts, H Patterson

Scorers for Ireland: Tries: C Molony 3, B Corrigan, O Minogue Cons: D Green 4

SCOTLAND: J Brown; N Moncrieff (C Waugh 74), J Ventisei, K Yule, F Watson; M Urwin (R Wolfenden 71), N Cowan (H Patterson h-t); O McKenna (J Shearer h-t), J Roberts, O Blyth-Lafferty (J Stewart 66); C Moss (B Godsell h-t), D Halkon; C Lindsay (O Duncan 59), B Allen (S Stephen h-t), R Logan.

IRELAND: D Green; C Molony, G O’Leary Kareem (E Smyth 66), C Fahy, C Mangan; S Wisniewski (D Hicks 64), C Logan (W Wootton 61); B Bohan (P Moore 68), H Walker (C Magee 53), A Mullan (T McAllister h-t); M Ronan (D Walsh 65), B Corrigan; M Foy, B Power (O Minogue 59), E McCarthy.

Referee: T Bertazza (Argentina).

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