U20 Six Nations Championship: Ireland V Scotland – Irishrugby.ie – March 9 2018

Jack O’Sullivan Stars As Ireland Under-20s Return To Winning Ways
Harry Byrne converted and also split the posts in the seventh minute after Scotland, who enjoyed a brilliant comeback victory over England in the last round, were caught offside. Byrne’s second successful penalty, towards the end of the opening quarter, made it 13-0.

In their final home game of the season, the Ireland U-20s lost experienced hooker Ronan Kelleher to injury in the 22nd minute. Soon after, a good spell for Scotland thanks to the influence of captain Robbie Smith saw out-half Ross Thompson open their account from the tee.

He tagged on a second penalty following strong carrying from Smith and Finlay Richardson, although the Scottish skipper joined his opposite number Kelleher on the sidelines just when it appeared that the Scots were finding their feet.

Ireland responded with some powerful play in the lead up to half-time. A memorable surge from Michael Silvester saw the full-back hauled down just in time by the Scottish defence. However, from a close-in scrum, number 8 O’Sullivan drove up close before flanker Agnew picked from the ruck and dived over for a 35th minute try.

Number 10 Byrne missed the conversion and was also off target with a central penalty from a scrum, early on the resumption. Angus Kernohan then lost his balance in attempting to deal with a loose ball in defence, allowing Rowe to notch an unconverted 51st-minute try for an 18-11 scoreline.

Ireland’s response was an emphatic one, with sustained pressure on the left leading to a try from Ulster-capped lock Dalton, who picked from a ruck five metres out and showed his strength to make the line. Twelve points in arrears, Scotland were not prepared to go down without a fight. Blindside Hughes crossed at the back of a 58th-minute lineout maul and Thompson’s conversion made it a five-point game.

This put McNamara’s charges on high alert inside the final quarter and the Irish bench had the desired impact as they curbed the growing influence of the Scottish attack, as well as offering some timely direction and energy when Ireland got on the front foot.

Jack O’Sullivan saved the best for last. There were 74 minutes on the clock when he cut past a defender on the Scottish 22-metre line and showed great feet and awareness to jink around covering full-back Paddy Dewhirst and score just to the left of the posts. Replacement Conor Dean added the extras to the bonus point try and Ireland were out of sight at 30-18.

There was still enough time for Scotland to have the final say through McBeth on the stroke of 80 minutes, but Tommy O’Brien and his Ireland team-mates deservedly emerged with the spoils, including their third try-scoring bonus point of the Championship run.

Indeed, on a dramatic night in the U-20 Six Nations, previously unbeaten leaders France lost 22-6 to England and Italy made history with their first ever U-20 win over Wales, triumphing 18-7 in Colwyn Bay.

That means Ireland head into the final round still with a shot at claiming the title. They are third in the table on 12 points, trailing France and England who both have 15 points. McNamara’s side need to get the better of the English in Coventry next Friday night (kick-off 8pm), and hope that Wales do them a favour in beating France at Parc Eirias.

Referee: Ludovic Cayre (France)

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