Ireland 28-6 Scotland
Ireland ease past Scotland
ESPN Staff
February 2, 2014
Date/Time: Feb 2, 2014, 15:00 local, 15:00 GMT
Venue: Lansdowne Road, Dublin
Ireland 28 - 6 Scotland
Attendance: 51000  Half-time: 11 - 3
Tries: Heaslip, RDJ Kearney, Trimble
Cons: Sexton 2
Pens: Sexton 3
Pens: Laidlaw 2
Ireland's Andrew Trimble darts over for the game's opening try, Ireland v Scotland, Six Nations, Aviva Stadium, Dublin, Ireland, February 2, 2014
Andrew Trimble crossed for Ireland on the stroke of half-time
© Getty Images
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Ireland kicked off their 2014 Six Nations campaign with a straight forward 28-6 win over Scotland at the Aviva Stadium on Sunday.

Match Analysis

  • Man of the Match: Jamie Heaslip was the official Man of the Match and while he played well, for us, Peter O'Mahony deserved the honour.
  • Key Moment: Andrew Trimble's try on the stroke of half-time was a body blow for Scotland. They had plenty of possession in the first-half but weren't clinical. Ireland, in turn, saw an opportunity and took it. Rugby at its most brutal.
  • Hero: Devin Toner played well for Ireland in the locks as did Chris Henry in the back-row.
  • Villain: Ross Ford's lineout was a shambles and it ruined a potential platform for Scotland. Pat MacArthur should start against England.
  • Talking point: For all Scotland's possession in the first 40, they only troubled Ireland's try line once only for Dave Denton to be bundled into touch. Ireland, without Sean O'Brien and Paul O'Connell, didn't need to get out of second gear for their triumph.
  • Play of the Game Jamie Heaslip went close in the first-half in a great-try-that-wasn't. Jonathan Sexton made a superb individual break from his own half, danced around three of Scotland's defenders before floating a delicious pass to the left flank where the rampaging Heaslip took it up but was tackled into touch by Max Evans a millisecond before he grounded it.
  • Tom Hamilton

Jamie Heaslip grabbed the try that broke Scotland's resolve on the day he assumed the captaincy after talismanic lock Paul O'Connell was felled by a chest infection on Saturday night. Tries from wing Andrew Trimble and full-back Rob Kearney cemented victory in head coach Joe Schmidt's first Six Nations clash.

Unruffled Ireland refused to let Munster lock O'Connell's absence shake them off their stride, dispatching Scotland in what ultimately became a routine victory. Ireland coped admirably without bullish ball-carriers O'Connell and flanker Sean O'Brien, with Chris Henry and Peter O'Mahony impressing. But Kiwi boss Schmidt will be at pains to warn Ireland just how much of a step up the visit of Wales will prove in round two on Saturday.

After the gut-wrenching 24-22 last-gasp loss to New Zealand in November, Ireland were desperate to hit back to winning ways. Objective one complete, Schmidt will demand more when Warren Gatland and Wales roll into town next week.

Scotland dominated territory and possession in a gritty first-half, only for Ireland to break that stranglehold in the final exchanges. Scott Johnson has been at pains to build an extra attacking dimension to his Scotland side. The visitors were prepared to whip the ball wide at every turn, but in doing so failed to find sufficient midfield incision.

Impressive number eight David Denton powered close after a scrum deep in the Ireland 22, that followed the hosts failing to clear their lines on a number of occasions. After that Scotland were unable to threaten seriously again in the half, with Duncan Weir's drop-goal fake not leading to any gain.

Laidlaw struck the post with a penalty after five minutes, and later he punted to the corner when he should have shot at goal. Scotland lost the ensuing line-out, squandering any points at all in going for the ill-judged jugular of a try.

Crucially the hosts kept defensive shape and discipline, admittedly escaping punishment when O'Driscoll was rushed into a blind pass from a set scrum move that gifted Scotland good field position. As time ticked down on the half, Sexton slinked through two Scotland tackles to race from danger zone to the other.

He fired out a pass to Heaslip, who cantered down the left wing heading for the corner. he touched down as he rolled the tackle, only for TMO Carlo Damasco to rule him in touch. Ireland sustained the pressure from two driven line-outs in the Scotland 22 though, claiming just reward for persistence when Trimble sneaked home in the right corner.

Heaslip capped a water-tight driven line-out as Ireland wrestled control after the break, bundling over to blunt the Scots' power. Dave Kearney was forced into touch in his own 22 after misreading Weir's punt into the corner.

Toner hit a ruck from the side after the line-out to gift Scotland a penalty, and Laidlaw delivered the points from the tee. Ireland then built tight phases for the first time in the match, Henry blasting in three times, with O'Mahony, Heaslip and Best all burrowing in too.

Sexton's wayward pass handed Scotland a scrum, but Ireland managed to turn it over. Luke Marshall found Dave Kearney with a dangerous wide pass, before Ireland won a penalty with Scotland killing the ball. Ireland punted to the corner, pushing for their second try. And skipper Heaslip delivered after a fine driven line-out, to make up for the score ruled out in the first half. The Leinster loose-forward's ninth Ireland try in his 61st cap, converted by Sexton, put Ireland in control.

Sexton, O'Driscoll and Dave Kearney produced a smart midfield combination that almost unlocked Scotland's dogged defence. Sean Lamont strayed offside to hand Ireland a kickable penalty, and Sexton slotted his third goal of the day.

Weir's astute chip into the left corner forced Ireland into a pressure line-out five metres from their own line as Scotland battled for a foothold. Replacement Jack McGrath produced a fine turnover to set Ireland back on the front foot, only for Tim Swinson to steal an intercept. Ireland recovered the ascendancy though, with Sexton's tactical kicking to the fore.

And the hosts added their third try when Rob Kearney capped a neat break from Henry, for a score on his 50th cap. Sexton converted to stretch Ireland's advantage to 22 points, before making way for Ulster's Paddy Jackson.

Schmidt emptied his bench with the match clearly won, with more than one eye on the fast-approaching visit of Wales to Dublin, on Saturday. Scotland's replacements battled manfully to force some kind of consolation, but in truth the visitors were outclassed. Paddy Jackson's chip almost put Dave Kearney in for a try at the death, but the TMO ruled it out.

Dave Denton tries to get through © Getty Images
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