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Ireland survive a major scare in unconvincing win over Argentina

By PA
Ireland's Thomas Clarkson is congratulated after winning a scrum penalty versus Argentina (Photo by Brendan Moran/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

Ireland survived a major scare as they kickstarted their autumn campaign by holding off a spirited Argentina side to return to winning ways with an unconvincing 22-19 victory in Dublin. Andy Farrell’s men were seeking a response to being knocked off the top of the world rankings following last week’s deflating defeat to New Zealand.

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Fly-half Jack Crowley claimed the opening try at the Aviva Stadium and also kicked seven points, including a superb drop goal, to supplement first-half scores from Mack Hansen and Joe McCarthy.

However, Felipe Contepomi’s impressive Pumas refused to roll over and were within touching distance until the final whistle thanks to 14 points from Tomas Albornoz and Juan Cruz Mallia’s eye-catching solo effort.

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Felipe Contepomi on the passion of Argentina | RPTV

Leinster and Argentina legend Felipe Contepomi chats to former teammate Brian O’Driscoll about coaching Argentina. Watch the full clip on RugbyPass TV

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Felipe Contepomi on the passion of Argentina | RPTV

Leinster and Argentina legend Felipe Contepomi chats to former teammate Brian O’Driscoll about coaching Argentina. Watch the full clip on RugbyPass TV

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But, on an evening when Cian Healy moved alongside Brian O’Driscoll as Ireland’s joint most-capped player, the Six Nations champions hung on, despite a scoreless second half from the hosts.

Head coach Farrell made just one change to his starting XV following the 23-13 loss to the All Blacks, replacing Bundee Aki with Robbie Henshaw at inside centre. Ireland appeared to have made a nightmare start when a poor pass from Henshaw’s midfield partner Garry Ringrose gifted Matias Moroni a third-minute try.

22m Entries

Avg. Points Scored
2
11
Entries
Avg. Points Scored
1.3
10
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Yet Argentina’s joy was short-lived as, following a review, Moroni was yellow carded for head-on-head contact with Crowley in the build-up, prompting the score to be disallowed. Crowley then capped an eventful opening five minutes by diving over and converting before Hansen quickly added another after being teed up by Tadhg Beirne following a fine break from Ringrose.

Argentina, coached by former Leinster fly-half Contepomi, were chasing a first win on Irish soil at the 11th attempt to claim another scalp of 2024 following victories over France, New Zealand, Australia and South Africa. Their quest almost became more difficult in the 15th minute but Beirne dropped the ball just before grounding at the end of a rampaging run.

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A pair of penalties from fly-half Albornoz, either side of Beirne’s frustration, reduced the Pumas’ deficit, with the second of those kicks coming on the back of Ireland prop Finlay Bealham being sin binned for a crocodile roll on rival tighthead Joel Sclavi.

Following the early promise, the hosts were struggling to gain control of a chaotic contest. Crowley’s superb 40-yard drop goal kept the scoreboard ticking over in Bealham’s absence before McCarthy bulldozed over to register Ireland’s third try following another three points from the boot of Albornoz.

Argentina dominated the closing stages of the half and only the power of the Irish pack, plus some good fortune when Albornoz’s crossfield kick bounced in the in-goal area, ensured the hosts led 22-9 at the interval.

Pockets of passionate Pumas fans dotted around the ground were finally able to celebrate a try five minutes into the second period thanks to a moment of magic from Mallia. The full-back collected the ball on halfway and cut Ireland open, evading tackles from Ringrose, Caelan Doris, Hansen and James Lowe to touch down underneath the posts.

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Proceedings were starting to become slightly uncomfortable for the hosts and Albornoz moved the Pumas within three points after lock McCarthy was yellow carded as punishment for repeated Irish infringements.

Veteran prop Healy, who made his international debut in 2009, received rapturous applause, including from the watching O’Driscoll, when he came on for his 133rd Test appearance in the 67th minute.

The game was still very much in the balance at that stage as Ireland searched in vain for their first points of a stuttering second period. Argentina were no doubt sensing an upset.

Yet their momentum was derailed by replacement prop Francisco Gomez Kodela conceding a crucial late penalty and being yellow carded for ploughing into the head of Doris, before the relieved hosts overcame a nervy climax to scrape success.

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Comments

26 Comments
R
RedWarrior 23 days ago

Good performance from Argentina. Ireland just could not make the breakthrough in the second half. Byrne should really have done better to get that try down in the first half when Argentina were hanging on. Ireland repeatedly went for the maul instead of taking 3s and could not make a dent. Great break by Argentina at the death to give themselves a chance of stealing it. I don't think Comtemponi or Argentina are going down the conspiracy theory nonsense that some South Africans and New Zealanders are spouting below. We know that if it wasn't for TMOs NZ would have won the Irish series and the 2023 RWC. They should keep their cultish clownshow to themselves.

B
B 24 days ago

Players head movement exaggerating the impact is simply poor sportsmanship and should be given a thorough review to stamp it out.


In the other code they would've been just a penalty, on report, play on.

K
KiwiSteve 24 days ago

I think this victorious victory demonstrates once and for all Ireland are going to win the world cup.

R
RedWarrior 23 days ago

All Black Website: 🤡


Humble heroes

Despite their ferocity on the rugby field and their superstar status in the eyes of fans around the world, the All Blacks are known for being humble.🤡

M
Mark 24 days ago

You kiwis just love the Irish

H
Hellhound 24 days ago

Argentina had a chance to level up at 22 all but they went for the win and instead got a yellow card. That was a shame. The Pumas came back into the game with a passion. There is no team, not even my beloved SA who can come back from such a big deficit to almost again claim victory.


The Irish was very very lucky. It's not the first time this year that the Argies came back to claim victory. Unfortunately lost by 3 points. Argentina stuttered in the first half but that second half they just took over.


What a team. They are a really exciting team. Despite the loss, well played Argentina. Good start for the SH and a lucky win by the Irish helped by the ref to win this one.

D
DrinkAwayTheConcussion 24 days ago

Only got to see the first half, some very impressive footy from Ireland.

N
NE 24 days ago

Ireland were in top gear in the first 40. Cannot begin to work out what went so wrong after the break. To be kept scoreless after the break defies belief.

C
ClintP 24 days ago

TMO refereeing again instead of being used when called upon, as agreed in other comments the first yellow wasn’t even a penalty, more a rugby collision. If the head knock is severe enough to warrant a card why does neither player ever go off for a HIA?

S
SadersMan 25 days ago

A very poor yellow card call which rubbed out a legit ARG try imo. It wasn't even a penalty. The Irish player was perched lower than the tackler & raised his height into the him thus causing the head clash. As we know, not all head clashes are necessarily foul play, & for me this was such an instance. Ten in the bin for Paul Williams & TMO.

D
DrinkAwayTheConcussion 24 days ago

I agree that sort of contact should be play on, but it was refereed correctly as the the law is applied these days.

Correct decision. But the law is an ass.

L
LRB 25 days ago

Well said, card was a joke. Irish player milked it too

J
JWH 25 days ago

*Referee helps Ireland survive

R
Rodrigo N 25 days ago

Agree. Just in the last play of the match I counted at least one penalty by Irish players. As it happens with all emerging nations, it´s demoralizing and exhausting to always be on the wrong side of any refereeing decision just by default.

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H
Head high tackle 46 minutes ago
'Razor's conservatism is in danger of halting New Zealand's progress'

I really dont know what the problem is Nick. Cane was immense this year and no one below him demanded the job. TJ perhaps less so but he was always going to start the season at 9 anyway due to the thing they call experience. I think guys like Lakai will have learnt a lot from the likes of Cane and Ill garrantee TJ has helped the Roigard/Ratima/Hothem settle in to their roles much better than they would have had there been no experience around. At the start of 2024 these guys had 3 tests between them. Im glad TJ was around.

The biggest fail area from my pov is centre. Razors lack of desire to change what is clearly failing is a worry. Is he waiting for a full year of SR? Is he not sure? I dont know the answer of course but He fiddled where he shouldnt have and didnt touch the area he should have. WJ at 15 is an experiment. Its not a clear decision yet either. WJ is an amazing attacking player. He isnt an amazing kicker or an amazing decision maker.

The 10 position is being handled very badly too. Its Dmac but BB is constantly in there, Its BB but no 15 to back that up or its no one. GET RID of the centre pairing and get Love in at 15. The backs will function way better. All the players get their SR backs working far better than Razor has gotten, and with no dedicated backs coach in the ABs its a clear problem area.


Also this comparing SA with NZ when 1 side is retaining all their stars and the other side has had some major changes isnt a apples with apples comparison. Imagine comparing a F1 racing team where 1 team was 100% settled and the other was brand new....Just not a comparison worth doing as it proves nothing other than the blatently obvious.

14 Go to comments
J
JW 1 hour ago
'Razor's conservatism is in danger of halting New Zealand's progress'

Razor is compensating, and not just for the Foster era.


Thanks again for doing the ground work on some revealing data Nick.


This article misses some key points points that are essential to this debate though;


Razor is under far more pressure than Rassie to win

Rassie is a bolder selector than Razor, and far more likely to embrace risk under pressure than his counterpart from New Zealand.

It doesn't realise the difficulties of a country like South Africa, with no rugby season to speak of at the moment, to get full use out of overseas internationals

Neither world player of the year Pieter-Steph du Toit nor all-world second row Eben Etzebeth were automatic selections despite the undue influence they exert on games in which they play.

The last is that one coach is 7 years into his era, where the other is in his first, and is starting with a far worse blank slate than where upon South Africa's canvas could be layered onto after 2017.

The spread at the bottom end is nothing short of spectacular. Seventeen more South Africans than New Zealanders started between one and five games in 2024.

That said, I think the balance needs to be at least somewhere in the middle. I don't know how much that is going to be down to Razor's courage, and New Zealands appetite however.


Sadly I think it is going to continue and the problem is going to be masked by much better results next year, even forgotten with an undefeated season. Because even this article appears to misconstruing the..

known quantities

as being TJP and Sam Cane. In the context of what would need to change for the numbers above to be similar, it's players like Jordie Barrett, Beauden Barrett, Rieko Ioane, Sevu Reece, Ethan Blackadder, Codie Taylor, where the reality needs to be meet face on.


On Jordie Barrett at Lienster, I really hope he can be taught how to tackle with a hard shoulder like Henshaw and Ringrose have. You can see in these highlights he doesn't have the physical presence of those two, or even the ones behind him in NZ like ALB and AJ Lam. I can't really seem him making leaps in other facets if he's already making headlines now.

14 Go to comments
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