Simon Easterby hails Ireland’s mentality in Wales to keep Grand Slam dream alive - chof 360 news

Simon Easterby praised Ireland’s mentality for “digging ourselves out of a hole” to overcome Wales in the Six Nations and keep their Grand Slam dream alive.

Ireland started as massive favourites in Cardiff to inflict a 15th-successive defeat on Wales following the departure of their head coach Warren Gatland.

But, having lost centre Garry Ringrose to a 20-minute red card midway through the second quarter, Ireland found themselves 18-10 adrift before rallying in the closing stages to triumph 27-18 and win an eighth Triple Crown in the Six Nations era.

“I’m pleased with the result because we go down a man and then we go down on the scoreboard,” said interim Ireland boss Easterby.

“We had a lot of possession and territory for 30 minutes, but we but didn’t get our accuracy right in scoring the points that we needed.

“We came in at half-time and felt, if we played in the right way, we could dominate them.

“I’m pleased with the way we responded to being in a bit of a hole and digging ourselves out of it and taking the game away from them in the last 20.”

Ireland host France in Dublin in two weeks’ time with a third-successive Six Nations title very much in sight.

Wales v Ireland – Guinness Men’s Six Nations – Principality Stadium

Ireland’s Dan Sheehan lifted the Triple Crown trophy after their Six Nations victory against Wales in Cardiff (Joe Giddens/PA)

They conclude their programme against in Rome on the final weekend of the Championship on March 15.

It remains to be seen whether Ringrose will be available for the Stadio Olimpico clash after making head-on-head contact with Wales centre Ben Thomas, with Easterby insisting the sanction “could have been yellow”.

On Ireland’s three wins, Easterby said: “We would certainly have taken this a few weeks back.

“The mark of this group is they always want to get better and chase down things that other teams can’t do. That’s something that will continue to drive the team over the next couple of weeks towards France.

Wales v Ireland – Guinness Men’s Six Nations – Principality Stadium

Jamie Osborne scored Ireland’s match-clinching try against Wales (David Davies/PA)

“Getting this result in a different way to winning in Scotland and beating England at home means we keep building the experiences and keep driving the mentality to do things well.”

Wales’ losing run continued for interim head coach Matt Sherratt, but this was undoubtedly their best performance for some time.

Despite only taking a handful of training sessions since his appointment, Sherratt – who again stressed he had no interest in doing the job full-time – implemented a clear and cohesive game plan, far detached from anything Wales had produced in losing to France and Italy.

He said: “If I’m honest, I think we got a bit more of the training week on the field than I imagined. Credit to the players, we’ve only really had three days training.

“To replicate what we did Tuesday and Thursday, as many times as we did, I was pretty pleased. It shows a good group, very engaged all week.

“We asked for two things – show the crowd some emotion and ambition. Within the structure, which was important, we did that.”

Eight minutes remained when debut-making winger Ellis Mee’s late effort was ruled out following several replays.

Wales v Ireland – Guinness Men’s Six Nations – Principality Stadium

Wales winger Ellis Mee fell short of the try line in the closing stages against Ireland (Joe Giddens/PA)

Wales would have reduced Ireland’s lead to one point – 24-23 – had it stood with a touchline conversion to come.

“It was a big moment,” said Sherratt. “It was a very tough call. You could tell that by the length of time it took (to check).

“You never know (what happens) if that’s awarded. Ireland are a good team and they have a habit of finishing strongly.”

Get the latest news delivered to your inbox

Follow us on social media networks

PREV Jack Draper’s Qatar Open glory bid ends in defeat to Andrey Rublev - chof 360 news
NEXT Wales have been reborn and that’s priceless for the Six Nations - chof 360 news