Six Nations 2006
Ireland keep title hopes alive
Scrum.com
March 11, 2006
Report Match details
Date/Time: Mar 11, 2006, 15:30 local, 15:30 GMT
Venue: Lansdowne Road, Dublin
Ireland 15 - 9 Scotland
Attendance: 49500  Half-time: 12 - 9
Pens: O'Gara 5
Pens: Paterson 3
Ireland fly-half Ronan O'Gara kicks for goal against Scotland at Lansdowne Road, March 11 2006
Ronan O'Gara lands one of his five penalties
© Getty Images
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Tournaments/Tours: Six Nations
Teams: Ireland | Scotland

Ireland set up a possible RBS 6 Nations championship decider against England next Saturday as five penalties from the boot of fly-half Ronan O'Gara saw them edge their rain-doused duel with Scotland.

Eddie O'Sullivan's side, the only one left remaining in the hunt for a Triple Crown and championship double, fittingly won on the occasion of the 6 Nations fixture to be played at the old Lansdowne Road.

And just like the Dublin 4 stadium, the game took on a pre-historic look as O'Gara and Scotland winger Chris Paterson took part in a virtual penalty shoot-out to determine the winners. It was the powerful Irish pack who garnered more chances for their kicker - O'Gara landed four penalties from five attempts in the first half to hand Ireland a 12-9 lead at the interval. Paterson notched three from three.

O'Gara had the only two scoring opportunities of a second half controlled by the home side - he struck a 56th-minute penalty through the uprights and narrowly failed with an injury-time effort, but thoughts by then were already turning to next weekend's mouth-watering trip to Twickenham.

Crucially, Ireland, playing against the wind, opened well and got their best start of the championship. Shane Horgan and Malcolm O'Kelly both went close during a frantic first two minutes of action and with the Scots offside, O'Gara mopped up with a successful penalty.

The Munster man added a second on 10 minutes, but a silly obstruction by O'Kelly at the restart allowed Paterson to get the visitors off the mark at 6-3.

Geordan Murphy was the guilty party on 17 minutes when he deliberately knocked on at a ruck and Paterson sent the resultant place kick through the posts from 28 metres.

Ireland looked the more dangerous with ball in hand though, and after Murphy had entered the line to good effect, O'Gara - who had just pushed another effort wide - kicked them back in front on 24 minutes.

The nip and tuck nature continued with Paterson replying after a fine counter attack from the hosts. A Dan Parks kick through had the hosts scuttling back behind their line for the ball but full-back Murphy did well to gathered in possession ahead of the lurking Sean Lamont.

A Scottish infringement at the breakdown on 37 minutes allowed O'Gara to slot his fourth kick for a 12-9 half-time lead.

The failure of the Scottish lineout to function was one of their key downfalls and Ireland took advantage of this to dominate territorially in the second half.

Nine minutes in and the hosts should have had a first try to toast their championship farewell to Lansdowne. A rolling maul saw the Irish rumble into the visitors' 22 and they looked to have an overlap out on the left, but Murphy's low-slung pass gave Andrew Trimble little chance of making the corner and Hugo Southwell did well to bundle the Ulster youngster into touch.

It was all Ireland at this stage. One highlight for the Scots was a trademark bone-crunching tackle by captain Jason White on Irish hooker Jerry Flannery, but in attack, there were only crumbs of possession for the Sale flanker's charges.

Sensing this, coach Frank Hadden brought on a new half-back pairing in Chris Cusiter and Gordon Ross - hooker Scott Lawson replaced the misfiring Dougie Hall.

But a first win in Dublin for the Scots in eight years never looked on the cards despite the tight score line.

Ireland captain Brian O'Driscoll and his team mates can haul their tired bodies in front of a television set for tomorrow's France v England clash, safe in the knowledge that with their Twickenham date kicking off at 5.30pm next Saturday, they will know exactly what they must do to pick off their first championship title since 1985 and first since the Five Nations went all "Sixy."

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