Dubai Telegraph - Three key Irish takeaways from Autumn Nations Series

EUR -
AED 4.268348
AFN 72.644925
ALL 95.516681
AMD 429.450195
ANG 2.080952
AOA 1066.940946
ARS 1619.310336
AUD 1.625972
AWG 2.093493
AZN 1.98043
BAM 1.955118
BBD 2.345482
BDT 142.940138
BGN 1.940855
BHD 0.439247
BIF 3467.290505
BMD 1.162245
BND 1.488681
BOB 8.047193
BRL 5.877243
BSD 1.164494
BTN 111.695037
BWP 16.472254
BYN 3.24067
BYR 22779.993656
BZD 2.342083
CAD 1.598726
CDF 2612.149237
CHF 0.91464
CLF 0.026819
CLP 1043.955837
CNY 7.914774
CNH 7.919977
COP 4404.863452
CRC 528.215743
CUC 1.162245
CUP 30.799481
CVE 110.22655
CZK 24.31021
DJF 207.367664
DKK 7.471262
DOP 69.57573
DZD 154.270186
EGP 61.40658
ERN 17.433669
ETB 181.830172
FJD 2.561762
FKP 0.871953
GBP 0.872
GEL 3.115269
GGP 0.871953
GHS 13.316355
GIP 0.871953
GMD 84.267207
GNF 10211.437945
GTQ 8.883901
GYD 243.635013
HKD 9.103688
HNL 30.970197
HRK 7.532628
HTG 152.466815
HUF 361.702584
IDR 20458.933129
ILS 3.393104
IMP 0.871953
INR 111.541198
IQD 1525.567836
IRR 1533000.593877
ISK 143.572521
JEP 0.871953
JMD 184.005813
JOD 0.824077
JPY 184.442989
KES 150.107638
KGS 101.638735
KHR 4672.370137
KMF 492.792107
KPW 1046.008455
KRW 1740.903348
KWD 0.358716
KYD 0.970461
KZT 546.699295
LAK 25539.0912
LBP 104282.623097
LKR 382.546556
LRD 213.105662
LSL 19.289871
LTL 3.431807
LVL 0.703031
LYD 7.394421
MAD 10.734555
MDL 20.145972
MGA 4847.309113
MKD 61.623504
MMK 2440.794791
MNT 4159.171684
MOP 9.392424
MRU 46.743694
MUR 54.823516
MVR 17.910628
MWK 2019.295609
MXN 20.149374
MYR 4.59029
MZN 74.271763
NAD 19.289871
NGN 1592.845004
NIO 42.855051
NOK 10.814225
NPR 178.71166
NZD 1.985555
OMR 0.446324
PAB 1.164494
PEN 3.992307
PGK 5.07323
PHP 71.603608
PKR 324.347558
PLN 4.246552
PYG 7096.52452
QAR 4.245019
RON 5.155838
RSD 117.349065
RUB 84.565601
RWF 1703.505766
SAR 4.403345
SBD 9.316927
SCR 15.774497
SDG 697.932139
SEK 10.984146
SGD 1.488491
SHP 0.867733
SLE 28.595478
SLL 24371.690047
SOS 665.56783
SRD 43.52959
STD 24056.116125
STN 24.491457
SVC 10.189446
SYP 128.612249
SZL 19.29327
THB 37.895028
TJS 10.86501
TMT 4.079478
TND 3.408311
TOP 2.798406
TRY 52.908283
TTD 7.904243
TWD 36.69962
TZS 3039.439752
UAH 51.419363
UGX 4372.47475
USD 1.162245
UYU 46.643729
UZS 13945.135519
VES 592.917692
VND 30630.955755
VUV 137.276573
WST 3.145456
XAF 655.728262
XAG 0.015287
XAU 0.000256
XCD 3.141025
XCG 2.098768
XDR 0.815516
XOF 655.728262
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.315726
ZAR 19.39541
ZMK 10461.600028
ZMW 21.922353
ZWL 374.242279
  • RBGPF

    0.8900

    61.68

    +1.44%

  • BCC

    -3.4100

    65.99

    -5.17%

  • BCE

    -0.4000

    23.79

    -1.68%

  • RIO

    -5.9000

    103.69

    -5.69%

  • GSK

    -0.8289

    49.67

    -1.67%

  • BTI

    -1.6100

    65.09

    -2.47%

  • RYCEF

    -0.8300

    15.1

    -5.5%

  • RELX

    0.9400

    32.4

    +2.9%

  • CMSC

    -0.1150

    22.98

    -0.5%

  • BP

    0.7292

    44.35

    +1.64%

  • NGG

    -6.7900

    80.64

    -8.42%

  • JRI

    -0.5565

    12.45

    -4.47%

  • CMSD

    -0.4500

    23.05

    -1.95%

  • VOD

    -0.8000

    14.68

    -5.45%

  • AZN

    -3.3800

    181.58

    -1.86%

Three key Irish takeaways from Autumn Nations Series
Three key Irish takeaways from Autumn Nations Series / Photo: Paul Faith - AFP

Three key Irish takeaways from Autumn Nations Series

Ireland's final Autumn Nations Series Test the 24-13 loss to South Africa, a "mad" match according to Irish head coach Andy Farrell, gives the hosts much to ponder ahead of the daunting Six Nations opener against France in Paris.

Text size:

AFP Sports picks out three key takeaways for Ireland and Farrell after defeats to the Springboks and New Zealand, eventually seeing off Japan comfortably and a record win over Australia:

Fly-half debate unresolved

Both Sam Prendergast and Jack Crowley were in the sin bin at the end of what Farrell termed a 'chaotic' first-half, which left the Irish without a specialist fly-half.

That rather sums up the overall picture two years out from the Rugby World Cup as neither of them has nailed down the undisputed first choice spot for the pivotal position.

Both Crowley and Prendergast are talented playmakers but have yet to show they can take a game by the scruff of the neck as their two legendary predecessors Ronan O'Gara and Johnny Sexton did so regularly.

Filling such huge boots and meeting the very high expectations of Irish rugby fans would be daunting for anyone.

Whilst Prendergast has a plentiful box of tricks Crowley is more assured in defence -- the Munster man produced two brilliant examples towards the end of the Springbok match.

Prendergast's perceived weakness in defence is a sore point with Farrell, who took exception to what he called "loaded questions" about the Leinster playmaker's technique and body position ahead of Saturday's match.

Discipline is key to success

Saturday's match and the record number of cards -- four yellow and one 20-minute red -- for an Irish side can hopefully for them be put down as an aberration.

However, it does not augur well for when they next come under significant and constant pressure -- two of their cards came close to half-time when the 'Boks were all over them -- inside their 22 and France will have taken note.

Ill discipline has was a feature during last season's inconsistent Six Nations campaign and in the November Tests.

Farrell acknowledged that his team had been their own worst enemy at times against the Boks.

"A few stupid errors from ourselves playing the ball through the ruck, and I think with three offside penalties," he said.

The positive to take from the chaos is that even down to 12 the Irish did not crack and indeed 'won' the second-half 6-5 as their defence held firm against waves of attacks.

"Going down to 12 men, how the lads came out and showed the bottle for the country, certainly in that first 10 minutes of that second half, it was absolutely amazing," said Farrell.

Stars on the wane

"These two Tests will either show that the Irish are reinvigorated or that this team has run its course," former Ireland fullback Hugo MacNeill told AFP ahead of the 46-19 win over Australia a week ago.

However, what was a record victory for the Irish over the Australians came against a far from vintage Wallabies outfit.

The Springboks, still at the top of their game and the undisputed number one team in the world, exposed not only deficiencies in the Irish side but that several players, who had been among their most reliable performers, may indeed have run their course.

Chief among them is Bundee Aki: the powerful breaks that lit up the 2023 Six Nations and then the World Cup -- leading to him being nominated for world player of the year -- appear now to be beyond his 35-year-old legs.

The 68-times capped New Zealand-born centre, who was a replacement against Australia, made just four metres from seven carries.

Question marks must hover also over British and Irish Lions prop Andrew Porter and his fellow Lion and Leinster teammate Jack Conan.

Porter is dynamic round the pitch but when under pressure in the scrum falls foul of the referees -- he was penalised on several occasions in the 2023 World Cup quarter-final defeat and yellow-carded on Saturday.

At 33, Conan also appears to be showing his age. He was unable to match the dynamism shown by Ryan Baird against the Springboks when the latter limped off and the back row is one area where Farrell has plenty of options.

B.Krishnan--DT