Wales v Ireland: Six Nations – live

Wales v Ireland: Six Nations – live
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Wales v Ireland: Six Nations – live
Author: Lee Calvert
Published: Feb, 22 2025 13:44

Matt Sherratt restores some semblance of order by recalling Gareth Anscombe to the ten shirt, moving Ben Thomas into a more familiar role of inside centre. Elswhere in the backs there’s a recall for Max Llewellyn at 13, Scarlets youngster Ellis Mee is on the wing and Tom Rogers moves to fullback. The latter two changes forced by injury to Josh Adans and Liam Williams.

In the forwards, WillGriff John is in at tighthead while Tommy Reffell is given the the job of disrupting Ireland’s terrifying breakdown work in the back row. Ireland on the face of it have made a lot of changes, but many are more a return to the norm as players come back from injury - Mack Hansen and Joe McCarthy the most obvious – or a rotation of quality for quality like Henshaw replacing Bundee Aki at centre. Jamie Osborne at fullback and Tom Clarkson at prop appear to be genuine “let’s have another proper look at you at this level” selections.

Wales: Blair Murray; Tom Rogers, Max Llewellyn, Ben Thomas, Ellis Mee; Gareth Anscombe, Tomos Williams; Nicky Smith, Elliot Dee, WillGriff John; Will Rowlands, Dafydd Jenkins; Jac Morgan (capt), Tommy Reffell, Taulupe Faletau. Replacements: Evan Lloyd, Gareth Thomas, Henry Thomas, Teddy Williams, Aaron Wainwright, Rhodri Williams, Jarrod Evans, Joe Roberts.

Ireland: Jamie Osborne; Mack Hansen, Gary Ringrose, Robbie Henshaw, James Lowe; Sam Prendergast, Jamison Gibson-Park; Andrew Porter, Dan Sheehan (capt), Tom Clarkson; Joe McCarthy, Tadhg Beirne; Peter O’Mahony, Josh Van der Flier, Jack Conan. Replacements: Gus McCarthy, Jack Boyle, Finlay Bealham, James Ryan, Cian Prendergast, Conor Murray, Jack Crowley, Bundee Aki.

A match of contrasts awaits. Wales are a team on zero wins from fourteen attempts, shorn of a legendary head coach for the second time and a squad with so many lineup changes it’s like Mark E Smith is is charge. But, in defence of the actual new man in charge, Cardiff’s Matt Sherratt, many of this week’s selection swaps do put people back in the position they regularly play – a novel idea that only bold new thinking could deliver. Apparently.

Ireland meanwhile come off the back of dishing out a whomping to Scotland – their second win of the tournament – and have taken the selection approach that you don’t change the engine in the threshing machine simply because what you’re feeding into it is softer this week. Plus, the Triple Crown and the possible third championship on the bounce is still on.

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