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Ireland rack up eye-watering scoreline against Portugal in Lisbon

By PA
Portugal players after the International Rugby Test match between Portugal and Ireland at Estádio Nacional do Jamor in Lisbon, Portugal. (Photo By David Fitzgerald/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

Ireland ran in a record-breaking 16 tries in a one-sided 106-7 rout of Portugal in Lisbon to register their biggest Test win in the first encounter between the two nations.

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Connacht pair Hugh Gavin and Shayne Bolton went over twice on their debuts and there was also a brace each for club team-mate and flanker Cian Prendergast and Leinster wing Tommy O’Brien.

With fly-half Jack Crowley landing 12 of his 15 conversion attempts – Ireland were also awarded a penalty try – the margin of victory eclipsed their previous biggest win when they scored 13 tries in an 83-3 defeat of the USA in 2000.

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Ireland’s interim head coach Paul O’Connell was without 17 players, who are all on tour with the British & Irish Lions, but his new-look side ruthlessly exposed the chasm between them and their hosts.

O’Connell made six changes following last week’s 34-5 win against Georgia in Tbilisi and the Irish went over for four converted tries in the opening 14 minutes.

22m Entries

Avg. Points Scored
1.7
4
Entries
Avg. Points Scored
5.8
18
Entries

Centre Stuart McCloskey touched down in the corner after full-back Jimmy O’Brien’s break straight from the kick off and fellow centre Gavin stormed over for his first debut try in the ninth minute.

Tommy O’Brien finished off another scything break in the corner and opposite wing Bolton sprinted in after breaking clear for a try on his debut, with Crowley adding his fourth conversion.

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Portugal full-back Nuno Guedes had a try disallowed for a forward pass before the Wolves were dealt another blow when captain Tomas Appleton was carried off on a stretcher due to an ankle injury.

Crowley sent Tommy O’Brien in for his second try and prop Tom Clarkson bulldozed through a tired tackle for Ireland’s sixth score in the 33rd minute.

Bolton out-sprinted Portugal’s defence to touch down Craig Casey’s kick ahead and the latter’s miss pass after hooker Gus McCarthy’s break sent Gavin over for his second score.

Crowley landed his seventh conversion to put Ireland 54-0 ahead at the interval.

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Scrum-half Casey followed up Bolton’s break to score under the posts 90 seconds after the restart and Prendergast barged over for an unconverted score to extend Ireland’s lead to 66-0 in the 51st minute.

Portugal were given some respite when centre Vincent Pinto’s offload set up flanker Nicolas Martins for a converted score but Ireland hit straight back.

Attack

153
Passes
211
90
Ball Carries
139
288m
Post Contact Metres
674m
8
Line Breaks
21

Replacements Calvin Nash and Cian Frawley touched down soon after stepping off the bench and Prendergast then notched his second try.

When debutant flanker Alex Kendellen went over for another converted score in the 73rd minute, Ireland moved 92-7 ahead.

Replacement scrum-half Ben Murphy’s try nudged Ireland nearer to triple figures and Portugal’s misery was complete when they conceded a penalty try in the final play of the game for bringing down a maul.

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Comments

4 Comments
s
sf 28 days ago

Erasmus and SA have always been cheats

T
TI 28 days ago

What a pointless match. Soul-crushing and demoralizing for the outsider, zero benefit and pure injury risk for the favorite.


2023 RWC media gushing aside, I always maintained, that the Portuguese lacked quality forwards to be competitive against the top teams.


And unfortunately, forwards win matches, and to have a crop of elite ones, you need the numbers, the large talent pool. Portugal don’t have that.


There’s only so much you can do on having another country (France) running your development program at Pro D2 club level.


To get a larger player pool, you need more popularity and money, both of which are intertwined.


Not a lot of room for progress unless the underlying numbers change.

S
SadersMan 29 days ago

“Eye watering”? Ridiculous overhyping. Pathetic for the global game, more like it.

I
IkeaBoy 29 days ago

Yep! Big time!!!


I've had more meaningful shyte’s after a four day rip at the Guinness.


Beating a toddler in an arm wrestle feels great. Probably. For an hour or two…


Doesn't make you great at arm wrestling though.

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