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4th February 2018
05:30am GMT

"But those last few minutes, all those phases, to grind it out like that, for Hendy [Iain Henderson] to claim the 22, then Keith [Earls] to take the crossfield kick, to keep it going through so many phases, to get a bit of go-forward, then for Johnny to pull the trigger and produce a bit of magic – they are the moments you want to play sport for, when you snatch a win like that. "There's a good feeling in the dressing room at the moment, so we'll enjoy it and we know we've got a fair bit of work ahead of us."
Less than a minute before Sexton slotted his 46-metre drop goal he was hanging back and stretching his tired muscles. Hope was heading out the window but perhaps, just perhaps, the Ireland No.10 had the foresight to know he would need to step up. Was he merely oiling the tools he was about to use?
We asked Murray how Sexton had signalled that the drop was on. He said:
"You've got a rough idea of the distance he needs for a drop-goal, and then you're communicating with the forwards but also keeping an eye on him. "I think it was just a look really. You can judge by his body language, and then he just gave me a flick of the eyebrows to know he needed it, we got a bit of momentum and a quick ruck, and that was perfect for us. "It's much more difficult to do when it's slow and there's no momentum. The French perhaps thought we would go again with the forwards, so I think we timed it quite well. "Sometimes it doesn't work. It's a really difficult thing to do, so as a 15 I thought it was a really clinical way to close out the game."It certainly was. Championship-winning campaigns are often graced with moments like this.
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