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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Lee Calvert

France 17 – 38 Ireland: Six Nations 2024 opener – as it happened

Dan Sheehan (right) celebrates after scoring Ireland's fourth try during the Six Nations match against France.
Dan Sheehan (right) celebrates after scoring Ireland's fourth try during the Six Nations match against France. Photograph: Harry Murphy/Sportsfile/Getty Images

Here’s the full match report

A complete dismantling by Ireland against a French team that looked undercooked, underprepared, under committed and under some sort of collective course of mogadon. Most of that was due to the pressure Farrell’s team put on right from the off and was merely exacerbated by the Willemse red card rather than caused by it.

Joe McCarthy gives his man of the match award to his brother Andrew after Ireland's victory in the Six Nations match against France.
Joe McCarthy gives his man of the match award to his brother Andrew after Ireland's victory. Photograph: Harry Murphy/Sportsfile/Getty Images

Updated

FULL TIME! Ireland have a record win in Marseille

80 mins. France have a late lineout 8m out from Ireland’s line. And in a perfect summation of the evening, it’s stolen by the men in green and the game is over.

Ireland's players (right) celebrate their victory as France's players form a huddle at the end of their Six Nations match.
Ireland's players (right) celebrate their victory as the Franch players form a huddle. Photograph: Clement Mahoudeau/AFP/Getty Images

Updated

79 mins. This is an absolute paddling.

TRY! France 17 - 38 Ireland (Ronan Kelleher)

78 mins. An easy kick at goal is spurned by Ireland and Crowley duly puts it in the corner. A simple catch and drive follows, which Lowe lends his weight to for the replacement hooker Kelleher to ground from the back of the maul.

Jack Crowley converts and this is now the biggest score Ireland have put on the board against France.

Ronan Kelleher of Ireland (hidden) scores his side’s fifth try during the Six Nations match against France.
The Ireland players celebrate after Ronan Kelleher goes over for his side’s fifth try of the game. Photograph: Harry Murphy/Sportsfile/Getty Images

Updated

75 mins. Tuilagi spills the ball in the tackle, Ireland are on it to drill a kick back deep into French territory which Jalibert has to nudge into touch.

72 mins. France are left with no option but to force it now, but the more phases the attack completes the more shapeless it becomes and all Ireland have to do is fan across the field to contain it. It looks busy from Les Bleus, but it has all the cutting edge of a raw sausage.

France needs two coverted tries for a draw, assuming Ireland don’t score again. Never gonna happen.

70 mins. France have hit the Sod It! button and are flinging it all over the place, and of course they look brilliant, but credit to the Irish defence they marshall the threat pretty well. Ramos attempts to find Bialle-Biarrey with an angled grubber into the 22, but Gibson-Park – who has had a blinder tonight – is across to cover it. Poor option from Ramos.

66 mins. Ireland are looking very comfortable, with good rhythm to their attack around halfway. Le Garrec is on at scrum half and manages to nick the ball at a ruck, but it’s only brief respite for Les Bleus

Some will make a point about the Willemse card stymying the home side, but France were a long way short before that happened and this has continued for the most part when it’s been fourteen players each.

Speaking of which, O’Mahony is back on.

TRY! France 17 - 31 Ireland (Dan Sheehan)

62 mins. McCarthy takes the ball in the lineout and an immediate maul drive commences that twists and turns the Frech pack before Sheehan breaks off to ground it.

Crowley nails another outstanding kick from way out left.

Dan Sheehan dives over to score Ireland’s fourth try during the Six Nations match against France.
Dan Sheehan dives over to score Ireland’s fourth try during the Six Nations match against France. Photograph: Harry Murphy/Sportsfile/Getty Images
Ireland’s Dan Sheehan celebrates scoring their fourth try with Josh van der Flier and Andrew Porter against France.
Sheehan celebrates his try with Josh van der Flier and Andrew Porter. Photograph: Dan Sheridan/Inpho/Shutterstock
Ireland's Jack Crowley kicks a conversion during the Six Nations match against France.
Jack Crowley’s trusty right boot does the business. Photograph: Daniel Cole/AP

Updated

60 mins. Ireland are back in a dominant position in the French half. They have a penalty advantage in the 22, with Crowley calling for the ball but Alldritt gets among the ruck to frustrate the attack.

The ball is put in the corner and the visitors will come again.

Subs have happened for France

Posolo Tuilagi, Reda Wardi ,Dorian Aldegheri and Julien Marchand are on for Paul Gabrillagues, Cyril Baille , Uini Atonio and Peato Mauvaka

56 mins. France were holding up their end of the scrum when they were mismatched, but now the packs are balanced – with Danty added to the flank! – the blue eight marmalise the Irish pack through Andrew Porter’s side.

The home side will have a lineout on halfway.

YELLOW CARD! Peter O'Mahony (Ireland)

After all that, Ref Dickson dispatches the Ireland captain to the bin for his blatant maul collapse some time ago.

Irelan’s Peter O'Mahony leaves the pitch after being shown a yellow card by referee Karl Dickson.
Irelan’s Peter O'Mahony leaves the pitch after being shown a yellow card by referee Karl Dickson. Photograph: Harry Murphy/Sportsfile/Getty Images

Updated

TRY! France 17 - 24 Ireland (Paul Gabrillagues)

54 mins. Undeterred, France catch and drive a lineout on the Irish 5m line which is moving towards the line before it’s collapsed illegally by Peter O’Mahony. On the advantage Gabrillagues drives to the line, reaching the ball far enough to kiss the whitewash, which is all that’s needed

The ref has given it on the pitch, so there will have to be compelling evidence to overturn it, which Ben Whitehouse the Replay Sauron cannot find!

Ramos bends the conversion over. Game possibly on!

Updated

50 mins. Some busy possession from France around halfway, but it’s a little shapeless and it allows Doris to put in a huge counter-ruck at a loosely marshalled breakdown.

Fickou can’t gather a flying catch attempt, but the reason was that Crowley was messing with him in the air. Jalibert kicks a terrible touch about 10 metres from where he started, but France will have an attack in the Ireland half at least.

France's Gael Fickou collides with Jack Crowley of Ireland in the air.
France's Gael Fickou collides with Jack Crowley of Ireland in the air. Photograph: Ben Brady/Inpho/Shutterstock

Updated

TRY! France 10 - 24 Ireland (Calvin Nash)

46 mins. O’Mahony claims a towering take in and Irish lineout on France’s 22. There’s no rolling maul this time but they work the phases up into double figures, patiently moving the blue defence around for Henshaw to straighten and two passes later Nash is over in the left corner for a debut try.

Crowley nails a fabulous touchline conversion.

Calvin Nash dives over to score Ireland's third try during the Six Nations match against France.
Calvin Nash dives over to score his first international try. Photograph: Harry Murphy/Sportsfile/Getty Images
Calvin Nash (centre) celebrates with team-mates Andrew Porter (right) and Jamison Gibson-Park after scoring Ireland's third try during their Six Nations match against France.
Nash (centre) celebrates with teammates Andrew Porter (right) and Jamison Gibson-Park. Photograph: Harry Murphy/Sportsfile/Getty Images

Updated

MISSED PENALTY France 10 - 17 Ireland (Thomas Ramos)

42 mins. France grab their first lineout of the half and get a full rumble on in the maul which McCarthy moves through illegally. It’s 40 metres out, but that doesn’t put Ramos off and he’s very close to nailing it, unfortunately the ball drifts right.

SECOND HALF!

Jalibert puts his pied through the ball to resume the match. Doris fields it and Gibson-Park kicks clear.

Updated

Make no mistake France were bobbins for 90% of that half and it took the world’s daftest double offence dismissal to inject some energy into them. Ireland were solidly on top physically and tactically, but as soon as France decided to start taking things seriously the cracks in the green wall opened with worrying ease.

It remains advantage to Ireland, but this is far from over – something both coaches will be emphasising right now.

Some key questions from Andy Bradshaw

“Have the French players stopped listening to Edwards? Has Farrell worked out how to beat an Edward’s defence? How many French players’ family members will Edwards need to feed into the wood chipper at half-time for them to start remembering how to defend?”

Updated

HALF TIME!

40 mins. PEEEEP! The conversion is the last act of the half

TRY! France 10 - 17 Ireland (Damian Penaud)

39 mins. Ireland are under pressure again, and it’s worrying that they give away another penalty as the hammer comes down. Mauvaka taps and goes and is held up just short, which means Lucu can move it left through hands for Penaud to score.

Ramos converts.

France's Damian Penaud (centre) celebrates after scoring his side's first try against Ireland.
France’s Damian Penaud dives over the line put the hosts back into the game. Photograph: Shaun Botterill/Getty Images
France's Damian Penaud (centre) celebrates after scoring his side's first try against Ireland.
Penaud (centre) celebrates, as do his teammates and the French fans. Photograph: Daniel Cole/AP

Updated

38 mins. Hang on a second though, the compromised French scrum manages to win a penalty for the home side to have another go at the Irish 5m line. On an advantage for offside the blue shirts are pummelling the green defence before a huge tackle from Keenan causes Penaud to spill the ball. The ball is put in the corner once more

35 mins. The rare flash of positivity that is this France attack is extinguished as Beirne gets up ahead of Ollivon to nick a 5m attacking lineout. Gibson-Park clears with a kick to touch.

33 mins. The red appears to have woken France up a bit as their tempo immediately improves as well as the (legal) aggression. They win a penalty in the ruck and are into the Ireland 22 via the boot of Jalibert.

RED CARD! Paul Willemse (France)

31 mins. Willemse has clearly had enough of this poor performance and so ejects himself from the game as he is too high as the second man in the tackle once again, clacking an Irish head with his shoulder. He and France can have no arguments.

Unless they are arguing about the stupidest cards ever.

France’s Paul Willemse is shown a red card after receiving a second yellow during the Six Nations match against Ireland.
France’s Paul Willemse reacts after receiving a red card. Photograph: Andrew Matthews/PA

Updated

TRY! France 3 - 17 Ireland (Tadhg Beirne)

29 mins. That penalty was a small interlude in the usual running of the game which is Ireland dominating, particularly in the carry as they continue to bounce France off all over the park. After a big Doris drive Crowley pops a short ball to Beirne on the angle, that bamboozles Danty in defence and the blue bonneted lock races over to score.

Crowley adds the extra two.

Tadhg Beirne on his way over to score Ireland’s second try of their Six Nations match against France.
Tadhg Beirne surges through the French defence ... Photograph: Andrew Matthews/PA
Tadhg Beirne dives over to score Ireland’s second try of their Six Nations match against France.
Then dives over to extend Ireland’s lead. Photograph: Daniel Cole/AP

Updated

PENALTY! France 3 - 10 Ireland (Thomas Ramos)

26 mins. One thing that is going OK for France is the scrum and a penalty won there 40 metres out is calmly hammered over by Ramos.

Updated

I’ll do my best, Nicola!

MISSED PENALTY! France 0 - 10 Ireland (Jack Crowley)

23 mins. The new man tees it up. It’s in line with the right hand post and not too far out but he pushes even further right to miss. They are the ones you have to get a this level.

22 mins. From a scrum on the French 22, Gibson-Park takes the ball up the short-side to feed Crowley who steps inside to move up to the 5m line. The forwards force over the France line, but the ball is held up.

However, Les Bleus were offside again.

19 mins. Willemse is out of the bin and joins his team in time to see Beirne charge down an attempted Lucu box kick. Ireland pounce on the ball and move it left where the ball is agonisingly fumbled by Henshaw when a try looked on.

The crowd are now utterly silent, save for a few muttered swears (probably)

17 mins. Amid all that, the decision is made that Willemse’s card will remain yellow, the deciding factor being Porter dropping in height in the tackle.

That’s some good news for France, which they need as they have been utter dreck so far.

TRY! France 0 - 10 Ireland (Jamison Gibson-Park)

16 mins. A kick blootered forward by Lowe is this close to rolling dead, but stops short to force Ramos to play it and boot clear. Advantage Ireland.

From the restart the men in green move it quickly right and Aki straightens to get in behind the French line before he offloads to his scrum-half to score.

Crowley converts.

Ireland’s scrum-half Jamison Gibson-Park (right) runs towards the line before going over to score Irelands’s first try during the Six Nations match against France.
Ireland’s Jamison Gibson-Park (right) scampers towards the French tryline … Photograph: Andrew Matthews/PA
Ireland’s scrum-half Jamison Gibson-Park (right) dives over the line to score Irelands’s first try during the Six Nations match against France.
And dives over to score Irelands’s first try. Photograph: Clement Mahoudeau/AFP/Getty Images
Ireland’s Jamison Gibson-Park celebrates scoring their first try with teammates during their Six Nations match against France.
Gibson-Park celebrates his try with teammates. Photograph: Dan Sheridan/Inpho/Shutterstock

Updated

14 mins. France win their first penalty of the game after Beirne ignores the ref imploring him to not use his hands in a ruck. The lineout is won tidily on the Irish 10m line, but the attack fizzles out as Jalibert’s kick is easily marked by Lowe.

10 mins. Apart from the little spurt up the right earlier, the opening has belonged entirely to Ireland, and the latest example of this is Lucu slicing a left foot clearance just about to his own 22.

YELLOW CARD! Paul Willemse (France)

8 mins. Ben Whitehouse in the TMO shack calls for ref Dickson to have a look at Willemse driving his shoulder into Andrew Porter’s head in the tackle. It’s pretty obvious, and the ref dispatches him; France are down to 14 while the bunker reviews whether it should be a red.

PENALTY! France 0 - 3 Ireland (Jack Crowley)

7 mins. It’s an easy opportunity and Crowley makes it so from the tee.

6 mins. Mauvaka is caught offside at a ruck, wide left ten metres inside the French half. Crowley puts it in the corner as O’Mahony shows some early ambition with his captaincy.

The ball is pulled into a maul from the lineout, but the roll can’t get, er, rolling and so Crowley calls it for the backs to have a go. A few phases later France have at least two people offside in the line.

3 mins. France receive the ball and calm it down quickly, allowing Lucu to settle his replacement nerves by booming a decent clearing kick up to near halfway. A tidy lineout from Ireland follows but the it comes to nought and Les Bleus pounce, moving the ball right through hands to Penaud to be forced into touch by Lowe.

Ireland win a lineout during the Six Nations match against France.
Ireland win a lineout during the Six Nations match against France. Photograph: Andrew Matthews/PA

Updated

Kick-Off!

Jack Crowley kicks long as the game and tournament heaves into life

Updated

AnthemWatch

A Bontempi organ backing track just about holds Ireland’s Call together before an a capella La Marseille blows the sodding roof off.

The teams are on their way out of the tunnel into a flashing tumult of noise of pyrotechnics. The Marseille lads and lasses in the crowd are absolutely pumped for this one.

Caelan Doris and his Ireland teammates make their way onto the pitch alongside their French opponents.
Caelan Doris and his Ireland teammates make their way onto the pitch alongside their French opponents. Photograph: Ramsey Cardy/Sportsfile/Getty Images
France fans in the stands ahead of the Six Nations match against Ireland.
Allez Les Bleus! Photograph: Andrew Matthews/PA

Updated

“You can’t really expect to slip in a Billy Joel reference without risking this sort of backlash,” says Scott Blair. “Ahem: Tadgh Furlongest Time.”

Outstanding. Keep them coming.

ITV have just done some pre-match interviews and it’s the Wigan one-two punch as Andy Farrell and Shaun Edwards chat about what’s to come. As someone from the same geography, it still feels so very strange that they are leading lights in rugby union.

Absolutely deserve it, mind.

Updated

Officials for this evening, for those who like to know exactly what illegality will be ignored in this particular match

Referee: Karl Dickson (Eng)

Assistant Referees: Matthew Carley (Eng) & Jordan Way (Aus)

Television Match Official: Ben Whitehouse (Wal)

Pre-match reading.

Have a gander at what our other writers (the ones whose opinions can be trusted) predict for the tournament this year

Holler at me this fine evening with everything you reckon either on the emither or X-ing @BloodAndMud

Teams

Fabien Galthie swaps his all Toulouse halfbacks for the all Bordeaux pairing of Maxim Lucu and Mathieu Jalibert, while Yoram Moefana is given a wing berth. In the forwards, Paul Willemse returns after missing the World Cup, Uini Atonio is unretired, and Francois Cros joins Charles Ollivon and new captain Gregory Alldritt in the back row.

Andy Farrell has finally bestowed non-placeholder status on Jack Crowley who is first choice at stand-off now Sexton has vacated. The backs also have Robbie Henshaw back in for the injured Ringrose at outside centre, and there’s a debut for Calvin Nash on the wing. Peter O’Mahoney captains the side from flanker with James Ryan giving way to the promising Joe McCarthy Richard Nixon, Studebaker, television in the second row.

FRANCE Thomas Ramos; Damian Penaud, Gaël Fickou, Jonathan Danty, Yoram Moefana; Matthieu Jalibert, Maxime Lucu; Cyril Baille, Peato Mauvaka, Uini Atonio, Paul Gabrillagues, Paul Willemse, François Cros, Charles Ollivon, Grégory Alldritt (capt).

Replacements: 16 Julien Marchand, 17 Reda Wardi, 18 Dorian Aldegheri, 19 Posolo Tuilagi, 20 Cameron Woki, 21 Paul Boudehent, 22 Nolann le Garrec, 23 Louis Bielle-Biarrey.

IRELAND Hugo Keenan; Calvin Nash, Robbie Henshaw, Bundee Aki, James Lowe; Jack Crowley, Jamison Gibson-Park; Andrew Porter, Dan Sheehan, Tadhg Furlong, Joe McCarthy, Tadhg Beirne, Peter O’Mahony (capt), Josh van der Flier, Caelan Doris.

Replacements 16 Ronan Kelleher, 17 Cian Healy, 18 Finlay Bealham, 19 James Ryan, 20 Ryan Baird, 21 Jack Conan, 22 Conor Murray, 23 Ciaran Frawley.

Preamble

Welcome to Paris Marseille as we kick off the 2024 Six Nations Championship with a Friday night humdinger.

Loss is a difficult thing, but some say it’s not the most terrible thing you can experience as it means you had something truly special to begin with. Indeed, it has been posited that knowing that this can’t go on forever is the very thing that compels such strong feelings and effort in a relationship.

Whatever the truth of it, these two sides have known some loss recently.

Ireland have bade farewell for the last time to their captain and fulcrum of the last decade, Johnny Sexton, who headed into retirement to do elaborate, beautifully timed runarounds with his kids and to fume at everyone around him in a non rugby context. France for their part are without their cubic marvel, Antoine Dupont, while he attempts to wash the World Cup loss off by hopefully plunging into the sweet scented waters of an Olympic Sevens win sur mon sol. Romain Ntamack is not here either, for the far more mundane reason of being injured.

What to expect, then, with both teams featuring some percentage of a new pivot partnership as well as new captains? This game last year settled early that Ireland were on for the grand slam that came their way in March, but any such result here will unlikely harbour such a definitive portent.

Both teams will benefit from the enforced departure from the Stade de France, meaning they can enter the fray today in a different arena to the one in which their souls were splintered into a thousand pieces not too many months ago.

Neither coach will wish to revisit something even vaguely akin to that trauma in a few hours; each will feel they’ve already lost enough.

Updated

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