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4th February 2015
03:20pm GMT

While Lancaster got one over Schmidt last year at Twickenham, and Declan Kidney the three times before that, the New Zealander will target their Dublin meeting, in March, as a win at all costs affair. Lancaster's reputation, like Kidney's when he was in charge of Ireland, was severely dented by a summer trip to New Zealand. Schmidt, who has led Ireland to nine wins in his last 10 matches, will have had the England match circled in red for a number of months and will see it as Ireland's greatest test ahead of the World Cup.
Back row: A wealth of ball-carrying, line-breaking and break-down foraging options in both squads. The likes of Chris Henry, Ben Morgan and Robin Copeland may not be available but Irish and English back rows are impressive. Schmidt is likely to use Peter O'Mahony as his enforcer/spoiler with Jordi Murphy the ball-carrier and the indefatigable Jamie Heaslip for spade-work.
The breakdown has proven key in recent years and any team presenting clean, quick ball here holds the key. The English back row of Tom Wood, Chris Robshaw and Billy Vunipola [later replaced by Ben Morgan] won this battle, over Ireland, at Twickenham last year and hold the edge. Vunipola has been in devastating for this season but Ireland should be able to match his broken play impact if Sean O'Brien returns for their March 1 date at the Aviva Stadium.
World-class players in key positions: In jerseys No 5 (Lawes/O'Connell), No 7 (Robshaw/O'Brien), No 9 (Care/Murray) and No 15 (Brown/R.Kearney), both sides have exceptional players that, in effect, cancel each other out. Ireland hold the edge at loose-head (Cian Healy over Joe Marler) and out-half (Johnny Sexton, when fit, over George Ford). Everywhere else across the park, the sides are evenly matched. If Ireland get Andrew Trimble back for the latter stages of the tournament, their back three would shade their English counterparts.
WEAKNESS: If both teams have a soft-spot, it would be the lack of dead-eyed goal-kickers at Test level. Ian Madigan and George Ford are set to deputise for Sexton and Owen Farrell [for the opening fixtures]. They have 19 Test caps between them but only five starts and zero in the Six Nations. Both have decent kick percentage returns for their club but keeping the stats above 80% at international level is another matter.
Scotland [33/1]: Vern Cotter - Schmidt's former boss at Clermont - has added steel to Scotland since his appointment, in summer 2014. The Scots returned home from North America on a winning streak and extended it by defeating Argentina at Murrayfield. The All Blacks denied them a history-making win, thanks to a late comeback, but a sense of belief has been instilled.
Italy [250/1]: The Azzurri slipped back, in 2014, following two years of genuine progress under Jacques Brunel. The famous Roman triumph over Ireland, in March 2013, is a fading memory and the coach has few new faces to call on. Callow youth is mixed with grizzled experience. Winger Leonardo Sarto has proven he can score Test tries against the very best but Italy, like France, need a goal-kicker who can dispatch scoring opportunities more than anything else.
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