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Dublin: 15 °C Monday 20 May, 2013

Robshaw expecting Irish backlash after Twickenham demolition

The young England captain will be content ‘grind out’ any manner of win in Dublin this Sunday.

England's Chris Robshaw pictured at the Guinness Made of More RBS 6 Nations launch.
England's Chris Robshaw pictured at the Guinness Made of More RBS 6 Nations launch.

THERE IS SUDDENLY an unexpected added element to this Sunday’s visit of England in the Six Nations.

On top of all the history with the Old Enemy, all the rivalry and necessity for precious points; the last two remaining contenders for a Grand Slam come face to face.

Ireland, look like a side reinvented.

Despite conceding the vast majority of possession against Wales, the ruthlessness in attack and feverish work ethic in defence ensured they would begin this year’s tournament in the best possible fashion.

The second hurdle, is against another side who have happy recent memories of facing Declan Kidney’s side. Perfectly set up, some would feel, for that infamous Irish underdog mentality to click in and topple the Chariot.

England’s young captain, however, appears more streetwise than his predecessor. He expects an ambush in Dublin.

“It will be pretty tough.” Says Chris Robshaw as he sits in a Twickenham function room. “I’m sure there will be a backlash from the game last year when they came here. I’m sure that will be tough.

“Whenever you play Ireland – especially in Ireland – it’s always emotional, passionate, very intense as well. I’m sure it will be exactly the same (this time) and I’m sure it’ll be a challenge.”

Last time out, on the final day of last year’s Six Nations, the green challenge wilted after England’s powerful front row snipped the stem.

Mike Ross was honest enough to admit last week that the scrum was going backwards even before his departure through injury that day. But if Ireland are to have any kind of attacking platform, Ross will be a necessity against a side who have no qualms about playing an eight-man game.

“That’s what you want in a team.” Says the Harlequins back row of a scrum which dominated New Zealand and pushed South Africa all the way in November.

Grind

“You want an attacking game-plan, and you want a scrum and maul that you can go back to if you need points.

“You look at the England team of a few years ago, if you need points you can put it in the corner and they will grind something out. You know they’re not coming away without something.

“It’s about having that mix. It went through Owen (Farrell) and Brad (Barritt) in the last game. But it’s about; maybe we’re going to scrum a couple of times, then we’re going to go wide, then we’re going to go through the middle .

“It’s like playing chess. You want to keep their defence guessing. I think that’s what the best teams do, they always have an option somewhere. And it’s about fitting the team you’re playing aswell: certain teams defend in certain ways whether it’s tight or wide and there is space out there, but you have to find it.”

The Guinness Rugby conversations will continue this Thursday at 18.30 on Today FM, with former England and Ireland stars Jeremy Guscott and Paul Wallace in studio to debate the weekend’s all important clash and previous meetings between the nations.

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Comments (8 Comments)

  • “The last two remaining contenders for a grand slam”…technically Italy are still in the mix. Stranger things have happened in sport and any team that beats France deserves the appropriate level of respect, of which is lacking in that statement mentioned in the article

    Reply
    • i think it’s probably fair to omit Italy from the list of grand slam contenders. i don’t think its a lack of respect to them, just the honest truth. that’s the writers job no?

      Reply
    • How is it the truth? As it stands Italy have a 100% record in this tournament and it was no fluke they beat France, something we struggle to do at the best of times. For a country who always moans about the arrogance of England in sports we’d do well to respect Italy come the 16th of March and every other game before that instead of dubbing this the “Slam Decider” this weekend.

      Reply
  • Weak journalism. Surprised it hasn’t been amended yet.

    Reply
  • Ireland Will give Italy 100 per cent respect on match day, and the way they beat France for the second time in three years is a massive achievement, something Ireland can’t do at the moment. But it doesn’t change the fact that Italy are not grand slam contenders. I think they might be contenders to finish third, at best.

    Reply
  • All decent opinions. For objectivity one should look to the bookies. It’s their job and they take the emotion out of it. As an avid Irish rugby fan or not I would say England are favourites due to strength and depth with Ireland next. I would love to see Italy surprise the championship again though not necessarily at our (Irish) expense.

    Reply

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