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Sean Farrell reports from the Aviva Stadium
THE NEXT TIME Ireland start a tournament campaign, it will be the World Cup. And only then will we find out if they have successfully solved the conundrum of their slow starts in tournaments.
Jonathan Sexton’s terrific drop-goal in Paris this time last year papered over numerous cracks that preceded it. A year earlier, the Edinburgh bus debacle occurred before a loss to Scotland and Wales took a draw from Dublin in 2016′s opening round.
Soldier Field later that year stands as a clear case for the contrary. But weighed against the 14-man win in the opening Test of a series in South Africa is the loss to the Wallabies in Brisbane or even the stodgy 2015 win over Italy in Rome.
Next weekend in Murrayfield will issue a reminder that there won’t be much room for a run-up when it comes time to do the business in Japan.
“I am frustrated that we do tend to start slow,” said Joe Schmidt, branching off from a list of reasons his sides were unable to make inroads into England during yesterday’s 20-32 loss.
“Looking further ahead, into the World Cup, we’ve got to hit the ground running. In November, Argentina wasn’t great, but we stepped it up the following week.
“Even last year in the Six Nations, I don’t think we were great against France. But we built our way into the competition and finished it off strongly. We’ve tended to finish Six nations strong, even going back to (2014 and 2015) winning in France and winning in Scotland and obviously England last year.