The Prague Post - Farrell welcomes bonus-point win over 'tough' Welsh

EUR -
AED 4.201515
AFN 73.219391
ALL 93.8316
AMD 420.769288
ANG 2.048304
AOA 1049.66713
ARS 1702.629926
AUD 1.64872
AWG 2.062144
AZN 1.949421
BAM 1.953352
BBD 2.302625
BDT 140.963975
BGN 1.934446
BHD 0.43106
BIF 3400.568499
BMD 1.144046
BND 1.475358
BOB 7.91701
BRL 5.932343
BSD 1.143272
BTN 108.915567
BWP 15.419543
BYN 3.317058
BYR 22423.309528
BZD 2.299319
CAD 1.624426
CDF 2569.528638
CHF 0.918995
CLF 0.026821
CLP 1055.60063
CNY 7.76705
CNH 7.762218
COP 3837.703664
CRC 520.845057
CUC 1.144046
CUP 30.31723
CVE 110.127001
CZK 24.180165
DJF 203.320377
DKK 7.47429
DOP 67.72543
DZD 152.258183
EGP 56.206433
ERN 17.160696
ETB 183.324475
FJD 2.58606
FKP 0.85621
GBP 0.856605
GEL 3.014608
GGP 0.85621
GHS 12.987612
GIP 0.85621
GMD 82.94777
GNF 10026.435952
GTQ 8.725105
GYD 239.138247
HKD 8.973271
HNL 30.599789
HRK 7.534465
HTG 149.533275
HUF 353.199204
IDR 20559.657935
ILS 3.430595
IMP 0.85621
INR 108.893202
IQD 1497.629877
IRR 1574150.65068
ISK 144.001562
JEP 0.85621
JMD 180.983211
JOD 0.811174
JPY 184.563331
KES 147.959961
KGS 100.044231
KHR 4578.223047
KMF 493.084401
KPW 1029.642164
KRW 1750.357116
KWD 0.354952
KYD 0.952798
KZT 540.657233
LAK 25814.426505
LBP 102376.418058
LKR 382.928482
LRD 207.498172
LSL 18.543844
LTL 3.378072
LVL 0.692023
LYD 7.327818
MAD 10.691303
MDL 20.109625
MGA 4846.884042
MKD 61.631843
MMK 2401.361952
MNT 4097.409763
MOP 9.235347
MRU 45.626825
MUR 53.827816
MVR 17.68739
MWK 1982.498418
MXN 19.993703
MYR 4.657457
MZN 73.116437
NAD 18.543844
NGN 1566.039792
NIO 42.067469
NOK 11.242287
NPR 174.268149
NZD 2.003707
OMR 0.439886
PAB 1.143257
PEN 3.890242
PGK 5.022706
PHP 70.364618
PKR 317.848617
PLN 4.287388
PYG 6951.289394
QAR 4.179263
RON 5.228983
RSD 117.331155
RUB 87.9791
RWF 1673.688085
SAR 4.291431
SBD 9.219345
SCR 15.655175
SDG 687.004071
SEK 11.029631
SGD 1.477473
SHP 0.854146
SLE 27.857954
SLL 23990.085272
SOS 653.386957
SRD 42.977291
STD 23679.450753
STN 24.469444
SVC 10.003465
SYP 126.453849
SZL 18.540929
THB 37.948441
TJS 10.597727
TMT 4.015603
TND 3.374172
TOP 2.75459
TRY 53.544694
TTD 7.748257
TWD 36.545194
TZS 3003.125287
UAH 50.917196
UGX 4172.789348
USD 1.144046
UYU 45.98238
UZS 13695.837854
VES 730.934989
VND 30083.844253
VUV 137.53604
WST 3.178798
XAF 655.130335
XAG 0.018332
XAU 0.000274
XCD 3.091843
XCG 2.060427
XDR 0.815089
XOF 655.138914
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.196616
ZAR 18.555331
ZMK 10297.794597
ZMW 21.006493
ZWL 368.382475
  • CMSC

    0.0400

    21.99

    +0.18%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    22.15

    -0.14%

  • RIO

    1.0700

    94.42

    +1.13%

  • BCC

    0.4500

    75.93

    +0.59%

  • RBGPF

    2.5400

    68.15

    +3.73%

  • GSK

    2.3600

    53.66

    +4.4%

  • RELX

    0.5500

    31.93

    +1.72%

  • NGG

    2.6700

    82.85

    +3.22%

  • AZN

    11.2900

    195.15

    +5.79%

  • BCE

    0.4000

    21.42

    +1.87%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13

    +0.46%

  • BTI

    1.2100

    61.77

    +1.96%

  • RYCEF

    0.5400

    19.68

    +2.74%

  • VOD

    0.1400

    13.15

    +1.06%

  • BP

    1.2500

    37.4

    +3.34%

Farrell welcomes bonus-point win over 'tough' Welsh
Farrell welcomes bonus-point win over 'tough' Welsh / Photo: Paul Faith - AFP

Farrell welcomes bonus-point win over 'tough' Welsh

Ireland coach Andy Farrell said he and his team would gladly "take" the bonus-point win they secured over a dogged Welsh side that kept alive their slim hopes of the Six Nations title.

Text size:

The Irish won 27-17 but the outcome of Friday's match was in the balance throughout a riveting, if error-strewn, contest.

Victory guaranteed the Irish will round off their campaign in a Triple Crown decider at home to Scotland next weekend.

The chance to reclaim the title they won in 2024 may have gone by then should reigning champions France secure a bonus-point win over the Scots in Edinburgh later on Saturday.

Farrell, who made five changes to the starting XV that hammered England 42-21 a fortnight ago, preferred to look at the match as one in which the Welsh produced one of their best performances for a long time.

Coming off the back of going close to beating Scotland last time, Wales have a chance to end their 15-match Six Nations losing run against Italy in Rome next Saturday.

"I actually thought Wales did fantastically well to stay in the game," said Farrell.

"They played tough, they hung on in there and kept it close on the scoreboard. I thought they were tremendous.

"It was a proper Test match and for us to come away with a bonus-point win, we'd certainly take that with how the game unfolded because it was a different game to the game we played last time around."

Farrell said Ireland had been unable to seize the initiative as they had done against England.

"We weren't playing rugby on the front foot because of how well they defended," he said.

"I thought we came up against a rock-solid defence who kept knocking us back and we should have been just a little bit more patient at times," added the 50-year-old Englishman.

- 'Enough noise' -

An area of concern for Farrell and the coaching staff was the amount of times the Irish were penalised for offside when the Welsh put them under pressure in their own 22.

"The offside is the hotbed, isn't it, for referees at this moment in time," said Farrell.

"To keep giving them another opportunity and then another opportunity, it gives them the territory and the feel-good factor that they're after, there's no doubt."

Jamison Gibson-Park, Ireland's man of the match against England, felt he and his teammates had perhaps tried to play too much on the front foot.

The 34-year-old New Zealand-born scrum-half, who was winning his 50th cap, said Ireland's natural inclination to attack had at times rebounded on them.

"We're an attacking team and if teams give us space, we want to be able to attack it," he said.

"I think... we certainly, I probably overdid it.

"As game drivers we probably played a little bit more than we needed to, certainly in our own area and through the middle half of the pitch."

Gibson-Park, who became Ireland's undisputed first choice scrum-half in 2024, admitted hard work lay ahead in the coming week.

"There's plenty to look at," he said.

"There's areas we can improve on for sure."

As much as Gibson-Park stands out on the pitch, both for Leinster and Ireland, he remains humble about it.

To the extent that he declined captain Caelan Doris's invitation to lead the team out against the Welsh.

"I think there'd been enough noise already, so I was happy to take my normal role," he said.

However, he admitted a video broadcast on Irish Rugby's website earlier in the week of his family celebrating his landmark Test had an impact on him.

"I was certainly caught on the hop, I didn't know it was coming and for sure, it was pretty emotional seeing it," he said.

I.Horak--TPP