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Ireland 24-14 Wales: Six Nations champions defeated in Dublin

Tadhg Furlong is congratulated after scoring Ireland's second try against Wales
Image: Tadhg Furlong is congratulated after scoring Ireland's second try

Wales suffered their first Six Nations defeat in almost two years as Ireland registered an impressive 24-14 victory in Dublin.

The defending champions' last loss in the tournament came at the Aviva Stadium in 2018 and once again they came away empty-handed.

First-half tries from Jordan Larmour and Tadhg Furlong sandwiched a Tomos Williams score to give Ireland a 12-7 interval lead - a scoreline which flattered Wales.

Josh van der Flier extended Ireland's advantage on 47 minutes with a try off a driving maul and they withstood a spell of Welsh pressure before Andrew Conway crossed late on to clinch a bonus-point win.

Jordan Larmour scores Ireland's first try against Wales
Image: Jordan Larmour crosses for Ireland's first try

Ireland dominated territory during the opening half-hour at the Aviva Stadium but it took a moment of individual quality from Larmour to break the deadlock on 19 minutes.

The full-back right-stepped inside Nick Tompkins and held off three Wales defenders to score his seventh Test try.

It was an extremely soft try for Wales to concede, taking the shine off a resolute defensive display during the opening stages, but they hit back eight minutes later off their first meaningful attack.

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DUBLIN, IRELAND - FEBRUARY 08: Tomos Williams of Wales breaks away to score his teams first try during the 2020 Guinness Six Nations match between Ireland and Wales at Aviva Stadium on February 08, 2020 in Dublin, Dublin. (Photo by Michael Steele/Getty Images)
Image: Tomos Williams breaks away to score Wales' only try

Biggar passed to Alun Wyn Jones and then regathered a lovely offload from the Wales skipper to send half-back partner Williams over for a well-worked score.

However, Williams undid his good work on 30 minutes when he fumbled the ball on his own line after Jones had won a pressure lineout.

Ireland put the squeeze on at the scrum to win penalty advantage and Furlong drove over the line a couple of phases later with the help of Rob Herring and Peter O'Mahony.

Johnny Sexton converted to make it 12-7 at the interval.

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On 47 minutes Ireland finally made their dominance count where it mattered most. Having stolen a Wales lineout, Ireland again opted for touch from a penalty and Van der Flier scored off a driving maul to make it 19-7.

Wales followed suit at the other end, declining a shot at goal in favour of a lineout, and they came agonisingly close to a second try.

Hadleigh Parkes scored Wales' only try in their Grand Slam-clinching win over Ireland last year and he looked set to repeat the trick when he ran onto a crash ball from close range, only to lose control as he stretched out to ground the ball.

Hadleigh Parkes is unable to keep control of the ball as he reaches for the tryline
Image: Hadleigh Parkes is unable to keep control of the ball as he reaches for the tryline

Ireland finished strongly and clinched a try bonus-point with five minutes remaining. Replacements John Cooney and Ross Byrne combined to good effect, with Larmour turning provider to put Conway over in the corner.

Wales did have the final say, Justin Tipuric touching down from a driving maul on the last play.

The good

Andrew Conway dives over to score Ireland's fourth try despite the tackle of Johnny McNicholl of Wales
Image: Andrew Conway dives over to score Ireland's bonus-point try despite the efforts of Johnny McNicholl

Robbie Henshaw carried with purpose on his return to the starting side and also produced some deft offloads before his afternoon was cut short by a failed HIA.

Wales captain Jones also showed great handling as he looked to offload at every opportunity, but the visitors were frustrated at the breakdown by the excellent CJ Stander, who won three turnover penalties - although the man of the match was sin-binned in the final minute.

CJ Stander is congratulated by Peter O'Mahony after winning a turnover penalty
Image: CJ Stander was Ireland's turnover king

Ireland held the edge in the kicking stakes with Sexton, Conway and Larmour producing some inch-perfect kicks.

There was a great battle at the set-piece, Wales winning a scrum penalty on their own five-metre line off an Ireland put-in, but the hosts gained the ascendancy as the match wore on.

The bad

Dejected Wales players after their loss to Ireland
Image: Wales were well beaten

Wayne Pivac will be furious at the soft nature of Ireland's first try. Wales had six defenders to Ireland's three attackers down the right flank, yet Larmour somehow found a way through.

Having been starved of possession for long spells, Wales finally enjoyed a spell of pressure on midway through the second half. They eked out a number of penalties as they set up camp in the Ireland 22, but the hosts won a scrum penalty and survived.

Ireland's failure to turn territory into points during the first half-hour looked as though it would prove costly, but Andy Farrell's men eventually found a way through the wall of red.

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