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14th March 2015
06:40pm GMT

Ireland looked like they had a Schmidt Special [trick play] planned as Rob Kearney and Tommy Bowe jogged over to get involved in what would be a 10-man maul. It was supposed to be a cheeky wink at Warren Gatland's famous 13 and 15-man lineouts.
All that went up in smoke as Rory Best's wayward throw was snatched by Sam Warburton and a penalty was conceded. The turnover boosted Wales and it could have easily been avoided.
The out-half kicked restarts out on the full, chipped possession away into the Welsh midfield, dragged a penalty wide, missed tackles and put too much on his kicks out of hand. On the occasions he did find his aerial range, Welsh players such as Leigh Halfpenny, Liam Williams and even Jamie Roberts dominated the skies.
Having earned plaudits for the GAA background of each of the Irish back three, ir begged the question: 'What GAA clubs did these Welsh lads play for growing up?'
Where Ireland lost the game v Wales. #bbc6nations pic.twitter.com/KP8jXm1xGS
— Conor McNamara (@ConorMcNamaraIE) March 14, 2015
Ireland were not helped by referee Wayne Barnes at two key stages. The eight-minute siege of the Welsh line between 45 and 53 minutes and the attacking Irish maul in the left-hand corner at the end. Wales were constantly going offside and not releasing in the tackle but Barnes decided to penalise the attacking team.
He was never going to give a second penalty try, at the death, but to whistle Ireland when they had the forward momentum was plain wrong.
Barnes was blinkered when it came to scrums. Ireland bossed that area but only once did they get a penalty. Wales fans would argue Barnes yellow-carded two of their men and awarded Ireland a penalty try.
However, the glaring omission from Ireland's game was their lack of invention in the backline and inability to work the ball and manipulate the numbers to create clean breaks. They had four in the whole game and two were from O'Connell.
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