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Published 18:54 1 Feb 2020 GMT
Updated 12:17 2 Feb 2020 GMT
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Conor Murray under pressure from Jonny Gray of Scotland as he kicks down-field. (Photo by Seb Daly/Sportsfile)[/caption]
With referee Mathieu Raynal sticking his oar in and disrupting the flow of the game, to the frustration of both sides, the second half struggled to replicate the freneticism of the first.
Ireland worked their way into promising attacking positions only to be turned over by the dogged Scots - with Jonny Gray and James Ritchie the pick of that bunch. Their lineout was humming nicely but the Scottish pack was the dominant one and they were putting the hosts under the pump.
Farrell reacted by withdrawing Healy for Dave Kilcoyne but the Munster loosehead lasted only a minute as he shipped a big knock and was left sprawled out and concussed. Play raged on and Hogg let Ireland off a jagged hook by shelling the ball forward, under zero pressure, when a certain try beckoned. The Scots had to settle for three points from the tee.
Hastings and Sexton traded more penalties and Murray's final significant action was a good clearing kick up the left-hand touchline. Soon after, with the clock at 59:51, the Limerick native was replaced by John Cooney.
There were still messy moments but Cooney provided a significant spark, off the bench, and Ireland kept their noses in front. Andrew Conway was obstructed by Johnson and captain Sexton kicked his side 19-12 clear.
The Scots thundered forwards and ploughed through phase after phase on the Irish line. Bundee Aki and James Ryan put their bodies on the line, so did O'Mahony, but it was Stander that essentially won the day with another clutch turnover when it really counted.
Ireland must get better, and will get better. This tournament is won by teams with momentum. Ireland have that now and next in sight is a revenge mission against Wales.
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