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16th October 2015
04:36pm BST

Standing in their way are an Argentina side that wasted a golden opportunity to topple the All Blacks, in their opening game, before swatting all other Pool C comers aside.
Ireland have won all of their last five encounters with los Pumas but, last summer for example, the South Americans have not always managed to face the men in green with a full deck. Still, Ireland should have no fear going into their third game, in this World Cup, at the Millennium Stadium [1pm kick-off].
Both teams were named on Friday afternoon and neither coach is holding anything back.
Here is the current State of the Nation...
Argentina bounced back from their disheartening loss to New Zealand - they led at half-time but stuttered after the break - to easily deal with Georgia, Namibia and Tonga.
In doing so, they scored 179 points. That makes them the World Cup's highest scoring team. They are also third on the try-scoring list [22], with only South Africa [23] and the All Blacks [25] ahead.
Juan Martin Hernandez, Santiago Cordero, Joaquin Tuculet and Tomas Cubelli have all excelled but their brawny pack remains Ireland's greatest concern.
Aside from the suspensions of Marcelo Bosch [tip tackle - one week] and Mariano Galarza [interference with opponent's eyes - nine weeks], Argentina are in decent nick.
Their biggest game, thus far, was their opener against New Zealand so, thanks to squad rotation, they have avoided any big injuries since.
Argentina's dangerman is fullback Joaquin Tuculet. The 26-year-old, who had spells with Cardiff and Grenoble in the past, possesses dangerous pace and a mean side-step.
The Pumas' back three - with Santiago Cordero and Juan Imhoff also in form - are their biggest attacking weapon.
Maradona has vowed to pay the Pumas another World Cup visit if they reach the semis.
Ireland are not only doing it for themselves and the nation - they are doing it for Paulie.
"We have confidence in our back-rows, Jamie Heaslip brings cohesion and the other two lads [Jordi Murphy and Chris Henry] bring freshness and vitality."- Joe Schmidt, Ireland Head Coach
"These games are like El Clasico, they are derbies. I know Ireland has European teams but for us it has become a nice challenge, a great derby."- Argentina's Juan Martin Hernandez
Rory McIlroy dropped by, earlier in the week, to give some golfing tips. Some lads can't be helped, however...
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