THIS WEEK HAS involved plenty of chat about the brutality England are going to bring to Dublin on Saturday, but that may be missing the point.
Ireland’s forward pack has every right to consider itself the best in Test rugby after a stunning 2018, although Joe Schmidt’s world doesn’t involve his squad allowing themselves to succumb to such thoughts.
Instead, the likes of James Ryan, Rory Best, Tadhg Furlong and CJ Stander will be keen to do their talking – or rather their physical and technical application – on the pitch once again.
Ireland’s pack was superb in November. Source: Gary Carr/INPHO
For starters, the Irish scrum comes into this Six Nations in better shape than ever after dismantling Argentina and New Zealand in the November Tests.
With scrum coach Greg Feek remaining an influential part of the coaching set-up, Ireland had a 100% return on their own feed, winning eight penalties and three free-kicks, while they also won three scrums against the head.
The sight of Cian Healy, Best and Furlong ploughing forward through the Pumas and All Blacks packs was a thrilling one for scrum nerds and everyday fans alike.
Having had a 97% return on their own scrum feed in the Six Nations, Ireland’s November form in that set-piece was very much a continuation of their growth.
The Grand Slam saw Ireland excel at maul time, on both sides of the ball, as the likes of Ryan, Dan Leavy, Stander and Peter O’Mahony caused havoc, most notably against England on the final day of the championship.
Indeed, 2018 felt like the year in which Ireland’s pack went from being a unit that aimed to provide a clean and stable platform to one that seeks to bring a destructive edge.
Forwards coach Simon Easterby is hopeful that this development continues in the upcoming Six Nations.
“We don’t just want to contain a team, we want to go after a team,” said Easterby yesterday.
“I think there’s always little subtleties to how you play against different teams. How we might scrummage against one team may be slightly different to another.
Scrum coach Greg Feek will leave after the World Cup. Source: Dan Sheridan/INPHO
“Same in the maul. Same in the lineout, on attack and defence. So every game offers you the ability to keep building on your core foundations, especially at set-piece because it’s such an important area of the game but also to potentially take a little bit of success out of certain areas, whether that be the scrum which was really good in the autumn.
“The work that Greg has done in terms of, not just the guys who start but building the depth again, it is so important that we have that ability to bring guys into the squad whether they make the bench or whether they train with the guys during the week, making sure those sessions are competitive.