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29th February 2016
03:37pm GMT

"Look, obviously the gap squeezed up a wee bit. They were moving late and moving into areas we were looking to throw to, to set up our maul. "The areas we lost them is more concerning. We were reasonably good in the middle of the pitch but to turn over a couple of big opportunities 5 metres from their line is disappointing."Did Ireland train for this by closing gaps, sending shooters up, tackling and contesting in the air? You hope to God they did but it sure as hell did not look like it. Let's take a look at the three Irish failures when it really, truly counted.
Toner jogs forward to fake for a short throw but England gamble on CJ Stander being the jumper.
George Kruis steals the throw but Stander somehow wrestles possession back on the deck.
Ireland cannot bring out the set-play they wanted but play spreads left and wide before Conor Murray's wild pass at Best's head sees the ball bounce loose. Jonathan Joseph clears upfield and Rob Kearney wins the foot-race to mop up the ball but 70 metres have been conceded in no time.
Again, the gap is closed considerably and Toner's feint forward is ignored. Chris Robshaw lifts Kruis on his own but Best's throw clears him. It does not evade Maro Itoje.
The lifters - Mike Ross and Jack McGrath - cannot be faulted as they get Ryan up higher and quicker than their counterparts. The fault lies with Best as his throw drifts slightly to the right, although Itoje slapping the ball back with one hand deserves some praise.
England retain the ball and clear through Ben Youngs. They won the next lineout [to Stander] and camped in and around the English 22. James Haskell was binned for his late hit on Murray, Ireland went for the line again.
Best found Toner at the front here, the rolling maul forced England to concede a penalty but Ireland played on and scored through Murray's snipe.
After nearly blowing it, Ireland leave this visit to the 22 with seven points.
Itoje manages to slap for the ball but - we'll call it accidentally - connects with Ruddock's left hand. The ball comes loose and Mako Vunipola profits. He passes to Ford to clear.
This one, somewhat harshly, is on Ruddock.
A mixture of craftiness from England, athleticism from Itoje and Irish errors combined to spoil several scoring chances.
The last time the Irish lineout faltered so badly was in Cardiff last March as Wales ended our Grand Slam hopes.
By Saturday afternoon, those hopes were gone. By Saturday evening so was any last shred of championship hope.Explore more on these topics: