Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Ireland's Grand Slam hopes


Can Ireland win the Grand Slam? I believe they can and should. I think that for Ireland to win the tournament on points diffference would be a huge injustice to them. I feel that they have been the best team by far in the 6 nations and to win based on points would be an underachievement. Ireland lead the way in terms of players nominated for player of the tournament with Heaslip, O'Driscoll and O'Connell with O'Driscoll favourite to land the award for a third time. Man for man the irish are better players in most positions and i think that they will win on saturday.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Liverpool crush Madrid


Liverpool reaffirmed their formidable reputation in the UEFA Champions League as they eliminated Real Madrid from the last 16 of the competition with a sensational 4-0 second-leg victory at Anfield.
In the build-up to the match, Reds boss Rafa Benitez called for his side - who held a 1-0 first-leg lead over their Spanish opponents - to be offered greater respect due to a Uefa ranking as the best team on the continent after lifting the European Cup in 2005 and reaching the final two years later.
And a goal from Fernando Torres followed by a Steven Gerrard penalty and a second strike from the Liverpool captain before a late Andrea Dossena effort ensured Benitez's point was proven as record-breaking, nine-time winners Real crashed out at the first knockout stage of the tournament for the fifth successive season.

Sunday, March 1, 2009


Ireland 14 England 13: Ireland will reflect on this 80 minutes at Croke Park grateful for several outstanding individual performances but primarily for the fact that England once again displayed such gross indiscipline that ultimately proved their undoing.
Prop Phil Vickery and replacement scrumhalf Danny Care both received yellow cards, the first on the basis of accumulated team transgressions, the second for a stupid shoulder in the back of Irish prop Marcus Horan, off the ball. During the time the English were down to 14 men – those two sin bins take the total in England’s last four matches to a staggering 10 – Ireland managed eight points and that proved decisive.
England coach Martin Johnson should be livid because those indiscretions plus another ridiculously high penalty count effectively cost the visitors the match. His Ireland counterpart Declan Kidney will be grateful to have escaped on a day when Ireland huffed and puffed but lacked the vision to get around a resolute English defence. Kick and chase and lumbering carries around the fringes were never going to discommode England unduly unless the latter was done at pace.
It was largely missing all evening.