relive all the tests after the defeat of the Blues against the XV of Clover

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Undefeated for 14 games, the XV of France saw their streak come to an end on Saturday against Ireland, on the second day of the Six Nations Tournament. Brave but sometimes imprecise, the Blues say goodbye to the Grand Slam.

The clash between Ireland and France, on the occasion of the second day of the Six Nations Tournament, kept all its promises, Saturday February 11, at the Aviva Stadium in Dublin. But after eighty minutes of play full of suspense, the XV of Clover managed to put an end to the series of invincibility of the Blues (32-19), which therefore stops at 14 successes in a row.

9th minute: Keenan opens the scoring for Ireland

On their lawn, Jonathan Sexton’s teammates were the first to shine thanks to Hugo Keenan. Found in the meantime, the rear managed to resist the return of the Habs before flattening (5-3). Sexton did not miss his transformation (7-3).

Elected man of the match during the Irish success in Wales, Hugo Keenan distinguished himself from the start of the shock against the XV of France.  The Irish back scored the first try, converted by Jonathan Sexton, and the Clover XV led 7-3 after 11 minutes of play.

18th minute: on the counter, Penaud puts the Blues in front

Shortly after the quarter of an hour, still alive thanks to penalties from Thomas Ramos, the Blues scored their first try after a magnificent comeback of almost 60 meters from Damian Penaud (7-11, then 7- 13 after transformation).

The Blues do not wait long to react in Ireland.  On the counter-attack, Damian Penaud breaks through the first curtain then Anthony Jelonch relays him before giving back to the first who offers himself a decisive final sprint.  France take the lead 13-7 after the transformation of Thomas Ramos.

21st minute: Lowe’s acrobatic test validated by video

But barely three minutes later, James Lowe managed to flatten off after an acrobatic gesture against Damian Penaud to restore the advantage to the Irish (12-13). The use of the video, for a foot of the winger in touch before concluding, will not invalidate the test.

The facial expression of James Lowe does not deceive: the 2nd Irish try is played to the nearest centimeter.  The video referee estimates that the winger dressed in green flattens well within the limits of the field and Ireland returns to a point of the Blues (12-13).

27th minute: the XV of Clover exploits the numerical superiority

Just before the half hour mark, Uini Atonio received a yellow card. The Irish forwards did not fail to sanction the French in the process thanks to the pillar Finlay Bealham. After his transformation (19-13), Jonathan Sexton overtook Jonny Wilkinson as the second best director in the history of the competition.

Double punishment for France.  Uini Atonio receives a yellow card, so the Irish forwards sanction in stride thanks to the pillar Andrew Porter.  Jonathan Sexton is in charge of transforming and overtakes Jonny Wilkinson as the 2nd best director in the history of the Six Nations tournament.

72nd minute: Ringrose puts an end to French hopes

With the Greens in front at the break (22-16), the second period gave rise to an explanation on foot between the French and the Irish… Until the fourth try by three-quarter center Garry Ringrose, less than ten minutes from final whistle, which swept away the hopes of the Habs. The Leinster player, well shifted on the left wing, managed to flatten after two missed tackles from the Blues.

Offensive bonus for the XV du Clover against France.  Three-quarter center Garry Ringrose concludes a well-executed action with two percussions to offer himself a test that looks like a victory.  Ross Byrne converts and Ireland leads 32-19 with 8 minutes remaining.

After their narrow success against Italy (24-29) six days ago, Antoine Dupont’s partners therefore suffered their first defeat in this 2023 Tournament in Dublin (32-19).


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