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A first-half blitz put Ireland 22-0 ahead on the half hour mark and Andy Farrell's men were able to contrl the contest from then on. England looked to work their way back into the match, and had a try before the break through Fraser Dingwall, but Ireland hit back immediately in the second half courtesy of Dan Sheehan. The hosts again hit back through Ollie Lawrence but Jamie Osborne sealed victory 10 minutes from time. Sam Underhill added a late consolation for Steve Borthwick's men, who are now reeling from back-to-back defeats. Ireland prosper from fast-paced start The clash started at a frenetic pace and after Jack Crowley’s penalty gave Ireland a 3-0 lead, Jamison Gibson-Park bagged the first try of the afternoon. Tom Curry was penalised for coming in at the side and the Irish scrum-half opportunistically took the penalty quickly in the corner and darted over the line. Crowley added the extras to make it 10-0. As much as England showed glimpses of their own attacking threat, they lacked the clinical edge they showed against Wales two weeks ago, with a series of kicking and set-piece errors dogged their opening 40 minutes. Crowley miscued a second penalty attempt but Ireland were able to extend their lead shortly after, as Stuart McCloskey tore through England's line to relaease Robert Baloucoune to finish in the corner. Freddie Steward’s subsequent protestations earned him a yellow card to only deepen mire England found themselves in. Referee Andrea Piardi was forced off with a knee injury, replaced by assistant Pierre Brousset, and Ireland continued to tighten their grip on proceedings in south west London. Baloucoune, alongside Gibson-Park, was enjoying a wonderful afternoon and after exploiting a gap in England’s defence, it was his simple pass to Tommy O’Brien, one of four first-half replacements, that ensured Andy Farrell’s men went 22-0 up. It took until the 40th minute for England to finally breach Ireland’s excellent defensive effort as Dingwall powered through a gap after Marcus Smith, on for Steward, delayed his pass to create the space. Ireland take control The home side may have had the final say of the opening salvo, but the pendulum of momentum swung back in Ireland’s favour at the start of the second. Henry Pollock, on his first start Guinness Six Nations start, was sinbinned for illegally stopping Ireland’s charge for the line before England’s defence then ran out of men as Sheehan powered over to secure the try bonus point. Back up to 15 upon Pollock’s return, the 21-year-old was decisive in the build-up as England struck back through Lawrence, who had the simple task of dotting down after he was played in by George Ford. Osborne then saw yellow to help England’s hopes of a comeback but Crowley’s successful penalty on the hour-mark pushed the men in green’s advantage to 18 points. England continued to fight but Ireland kept thwarting their efforts as Baloucoune sprinted over to divert Tommy Freeman into touch with the Northampton Saints man metres from the line. Crowley took Ireland to 35 points soon after, the most points Ireland have ever scored at Allianz Stadium, and that total was increased with 10 minutes left as Osborne capped off a lovely Irish move by stretching over the line despite Guy Pepper’s best efforts. There was still time for Underhill to get another back for England but the result was beyond doubt by that stage, as England were left licking their wounds after defeat at home. This is the official channel for the Guinness Six Nations - Rugby's Greatest Championship ⬇️ Subscribe for highlights, interviews, features, classic archive and more! ⬇️ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCL5bAcVfbxSAs-UM5f5ncWg
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We came from behind to secure an impressive New Year’s Day victory away to Brentford. Bryan Mbeumo fired the hosts into an early lead with their first shot on target, but two poachers’ finishes either side of the interval put us ahead. First Gabriel Jesus headed in after Thomas Partey’s shot was saved, then Mikel Merino was in the right place to prod home from a corner. Gabriel Martinelli with a pure strike made it 3-1, and ensured we started 2025 how we spent much of 2024 – by recording a comfortable away day win. It was the hosts, so strong at home so far this season, who struck first. Having barely been in our half in the opening 10 minutes, Bryan Mbeumo picked up a pass from Mikkel Damsgaard that had looked to have taken him away from goal. But he strode into the area, checked onto his left foot while Riccardo Calafiori backed off, and beat David Raya low down at his near post. It was their first attempt on goal, but the goal clearly lifted their confidence. As we tried to get a foothold back in the game, Jurrien Timber picked up a yellow card that rules him out of the Brighton match on Saturday. Thomas Partey nearly got on the end of a dangerous Martin Odegaard free-kick but was flagged offside anyway. At the other end Keane Lewis-Potter tested Raya with a shot that the former Brentford man had to claw out from on the line after the initial effort squirmed through his grasp. We grabbed the leveller on the half hour. Gabriel Martinelli was challenged on the edge of the area while getting his shot away, and the loose ball fell to Partey. His drive was only parried by Mark Flekken and there was Jesus in the right place to head in the rebound. It was the Brazilian’s sixth goal in his last four appearances. There was little to choose between the sides in the first half. We saw a lot more of the ball, but Brentford got back well in numbers, and many of our attacks fizzled out around the area. Soon after the restart we went ahead, and like the equaliser, it was a real opportunist finish. This time Ethan Nwaneri’s inswinging corner caused confusion and Flekken made a hash of his clearance. Jesus sent his shot goalwards, it was blocked but there was Merino to stab in the loose ball. Within three minutes we had increased our advantage. Once again Nwaneri – making his first Premier League start back at the venue where he broke the record for our youngest debutant – was involved. His cross from the right wasn’t dealt with and this time Martinelli was the man to rifle the dropping ball into the net. A crisp finish from the Brazilian, and he soon set up compatriot Jesus with a run from deep. Raya found Martinelli with a long pass, the winger broke into the area, rolled it into Jesus but his cute finish went just the wrong side of the near post. But we had done enough to inflict on Brentford’s second home defeat this season. The win takes us back up to second with 39 points as we reach the halfway point of the Premier League season, with 19 games played. Enjoy highlights, training, behind the scenes and documentaries to get closer to the likes of Bukayo Saka, Martin Odegaard, Alessia Russo, Leah Williamson, Kai Havertz, Gabriel Jesus, Kim Little, Declan Rice, Beth Mead, Gabriel Martinelli, Ben White, Stina Blackstenius and more. Subscribe to the Official Arsenal YouTube Channel: https://arsn.al/youtube Follow us on Facebook: https://arsn.al/facebook Follow us on X: https://arsn.al/twitter Follow us on Instagram: https://arsn.al/instagram Follow us on TikTok: https://arsn.al/tiktok