Northern Edition
Select Edition
Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

Andy Farrell on Ireland's Six Nations injury crisis: 'It is what it is'

By PA
Ireland head coach Andy Farrell during the launch of the Guinness Six Nations Rugby Championship at The Hub in Edinburgh, Scotland. (Photo By Ross MacDonald/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

Ireland boss Andy Farrell is relishing his Guinness Six Nations return as he negotiates a lengthy injury list and an ongoing transitional phase.

ADVERTISEMENT

Farrell guided Ireland to back-to-back championship titles, including a grand slam in 2023, before temporarily stepping aside last year to lead the British and Irish Lions’ triumphant tour of Australia.

Under interim head coach Simon Easterby, Ireland won four of five matches in the 2025 Six Nations but ultimately finished third following an emphatic round-four defeat at home to eventual champions France.

VIDEO

Farrell, who was back to oversee an inconsistent autumn campaign, takes his side to Paris for the opening match of this year’s tournament on Thursday, February 5.

The Englishman has plenty to ponder amid a host of absentees and suggestions Ireland are a team in decline ahead of next year’s World Cup.

“Not being involved last year and being on the other side of the fence, I think the appreciation of the Six Nations just grows really,” Farrell said at Monday’s Six Nations launch event in Edinburgh.

“The older you get, the more privileged you are to be involved in this competition, the more you realise how special it is.

ADVERTISEMENT

“Things are forever moving and changing and you’ve always different dynamics. There’s always injuries. It’s just the type of sport we have.

“Whether that injury list is a bit bigger than normal…you have to bring players in that might not have got that chance. It is what it is.

“People are always retiring, loss of form, all of that. We’re at where we’re at.

“We’ve got some good experience there making sure we learn from these experiences together as a group and connect together as a group and hopefully gel together for the here and now and the not too distant future as well.”

Farrell has major front-row concerns after Jack Boyle joined fellow props Andrew Porter and Paddy McCarthy in the treatment room.

ADVERTISEMENT

Centre Robbie Henshaw will also miss the start of the tournament, while Calvin Nash, Jimmy O’Brien, Ryan Baird, Shayne Bolton, Mack Hansen, Jordan Larmour and Tom Ahern are all sidelined.

Connacht prop Billy Bohan, Munster second-row Edwin Edogbo and Ulster scrum-half Nathan Doak are the three uncapped players in the squad.

Captain Caelan Doris insists there is plenty of belief among Ireland’s players, despite November wins over Japan and Australia being bookended by dispiriting defeats to New Zealand and South Africa.

“Evolution is the most important thing,” said Doris, ahead of joining the squad at a pre-tournament training camp in Portugal.

“Off the back of November, it was mixed results-wise, it was mixed performances-wise, so keeping things moving in the right direction, plenty of areas for growth, and that’s going to come from hard work.

“We’ve obviously got France first up which sharpens the mind, and we’re looking for a strong performance away from home. Momentum is so important in this competition.

“At the core, I still feel there is a lot of belief there. There’s an understanding and an awareness that we need to grow and need to get better, and there’s a willingness to do that as well.”

Related

RugbyPass App Download

News, stats, live rugby and more! Download the new RugbyPass app on the App Store (iOS) and Google Play (Android) now!


Whether you’re looking for somewhere to track upcoming fixtures, a place to watch live rugby or an app that shows you all of the latest news and analysis, the RugbyPass rugby app is perfect.

ADVERTISEMENT
Play Video
LIVE

{{item.title}}

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

0 Comments
Be the first to comment...

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Long Reads

Comments on RugbyPass

Close
ADVERTISEMENT