Italy vs Ireland - Conor Murray and Keith Earls see off valiant Italians to secure bonus-point win
Re-live the action from the Six Nations clash at the Stadio Olimpico
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Your support makes all the difference.Italy were not able to capitalise on their half-time lead as Ireland recovered from a Six Nations scare to emerge from the Stadio Olimpico with a 26-16 victory in the bag and, crucially for their championship hopes, a try-scoring bonus point.
Early scores from Quinn Roux and Jacob Stockdale put Ireland 12-3 to the good, with the home side's response in-between the scores coming from the boot of fly-half Tommaso Allan.
But Italy responded in the best possible way to lead into half-time. First Edoardo Padovani finishes a well-worked move before centre Luca Morisi was on hand to finish a breakaway counter attack, with scrum-half Tito Tebaldi proving hugely influential in their recovery.
Ireland needed to bounce back and it looked nervy when Johnny Sexton put the second-half restart short, but the visitors soon regained their composure and Keith Earls put them back in front with the third try for the men in green, before Conor Murray got on the back of a driving lineout maul to seal the bonus point.
Italy attempted to earn a losing bonus point deep into time added on, but Ian McKinley's penalty effort floated wide and Conor O'Shea’s side left empty handed for the third consecutive match.
Re-live the live action below.
What time does it start?
Italy vs Ireland kicks off at 3:00pm (GMT) on Sunday 24th February.
Where can I watch it?
The match will be shown live on ITV from 2:15pm. The match will also be available on ITV Hub.
Highlights will be shown on Sunday at 6pm on BBC Two.
Line-ups
Italy: Hayward; Padovani, Campagnaro, Morisi, Esposito; Allan, Tebaldi; Lovotti, Ghiraldini, Ferrari, Ruzza, Budd, Tuivaiti, Mbanda, Steyn
Replacements: Bigi, Traore, Pasquali, Sisi, Zanni, Palazzani, McKinley, Castello
Ireland: Kearney; Earls, Farrell, Aki, Stockdale; Sexton, Murray; Kilcoyne, Cronin, Furlong, Dillane, Roux, O’Mahony, O’Brien, Murphy
Replacements: Scannell, McGrath, Ryan, Henderson, van der Flier, Cooney, Carty, Conway
Form guide…
France: LLWLLL
Scotland: LWLWWL
Head-to-head…
Ireland 54 (Beirne x2, McGrath, Larmour x3, Cronin, Ringrose) Italy 7, Autumn Internationals, November 2018
Ireland 56 (Henshaw x2, Murray, Aki, Earls, Best, Stockdale) Italy 19 (Allan, Gori), Six Nations, February 2018
Italy 10 (pen try) Ireland 63 (Stander x3, Earls x2, Gilroy x3, Ringrose), Six Nations, February 2017
Odds…
Italy to win: 25/1
Ireland to win: 1/100
Draw: 75/1
Prediction…
Ireland by 35 points
Good morning and welcome to The Independent's live coverage of today's Six Nations clash between Italy and Ireland, brought to you from the Stadio Olimpico in Rome.
After today's match concludes, the first three rounds of the championship will be in the bag and we'll be past the halfway point of the tournament, and Ireland know that they cannot afford anything other than a bonus-point victory to keep their championship hopes alive following Wales' win over England yesterday.
The match gets underway at 3pm, but follow all the build-up here as we tick down to kick-off.
Here's how the two teams line-up today:
Italy: Jayden Hayward; Edoardo Padovani, Michele Campagnaro, Luca Morisi, Angelo Esposito; Tommaso Allan, Tito Tebaldi; Andrea Lovotti, Leonardo Ghiraldini, Simone Ferrari; Federico Ruzza, Dean Budd, Jimmy Tuivaiti, Maxime Mbanda, Braam Steyn.
Replacements: Luca Bigi, Cherif Traore, TIziano Pasquali, Dave Sisi, Alessandro Zanni, Guglielmo Palazzani, Ian McKinley, Tommaso Castello.
Ireland: Rob Kearney; Keith Earls, Chris Farrell, Bundee Aki, Jacob Stockdale; Johnny Sexton, Conor Murray; Dave Kilcoyne, Sean Cronin, Tadhg Furlong, Uthan Dillane, Quinn Roux, Peter O'Mahony, Sean O'Brien, Jordi Murphy.
Replacements: Niall Scannell, Jack McGrath, John Ryan, Iain Henderson, Josh Van Der Flier, John Cooney, Jack Carty, Andrew Conway.
Referee: Glen Jackson (New Zealand).
Assistant referees: Wayne Barnes and Karl Dickson (both England).
For the first time in an eternity, Rory Best does not feature today. The Ireland skipper has missed one Six Nations match since 2007, an extraordinary feat that not only makes him the second-most capped player in Six Nations history, but has also consigned Leinster Sean Cronin to a role as his understudy.
But that ends today, and at his 68th appearance, Cronin will be making his first Six Nations start of his career. However, Joe Schmidt doesn't expect any let-off from what he normally demands from his starting hooker.
Just 10 minutes away from kick-off in Rome and it's a gloriously sunny day in the Italian capital. That could prove ominous for Italy, given the attacking potential that Ireland withhold and the first-choice back line that Joe Schmidt has selected.
The hosts are also without talismanic captain Sergio Parisse, who is ruled out with concussion after playing for Stade Francais last weekend, and having not won a Six Nations match in their last 19 attempts, do the Azzurri have any realistic chance of winning today? The odds are against them.
And here come the teams!
With the Six Nations trophy on display in front of them, the players emerge from the underground changing rooms to a warm and sunny welcome. Time for the anthems.
The Italian national anthem rings out in front of what is sadly not a full Stadio Olimpico, and it's a sign of the current state of the national team. The club sides may be flourishing in Benetton and Zebre, but without a Six Nations victory to their name since before the last World Cup, Italy need to give the supporters something to come and watch.
That said, it's a passionately sung anthem that ends with tears in the eyes of some players, and we're ready to go!
2 mins: Bundee Aki makes an immediate impression on the game as he strips the ball off Braam Steyn, who was so impressive in the defeat by Wales. O'Mahony was in attendance to help the centre, but Ireland can't counter as the ball is thrown loosely into touch.
3 mins: Hayward has a nice early run and it takes a good tackle to stop him on an angle. However, Italy flanker Mbemba goes off his feet to seal the ruck and referee Glenn Jackson spots it immediately, awarding the penalty to the Irish. However, after Sexton found touch in the Italy half, the ball is immediately knocked on and the first chance to attack goes as quickly as it came about.
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