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Ireland player ratings vs Australia | 2024 Autumn Nations Series

By Liam Heagney at Aviva Stadium, Dublin
Ireland players celebrate the win-clinching Gus McCarthy try versus Australia (Photo by Tim Clayton/Corbis via Getty Images)

Ireland player ratings live from Aviva Stadium: Andy Farrell came into this expecting his Irish side to produce their best performance of this Autumn Nations Series but they failed to deliver and had to instead make do with a tension-filled 22-19 success that was a nervous reprise of the similarly narrow three-point win over Australia two years ago.

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The Wallabies may have come unstuck six days earlier in Scotland, but they were fully tooled up here and their defiant effort was considerably helped by the insider knowledge of Joe Schmidt, Farrell’s old Ireland boss in his days of coaching the defence.

The pre-game sparkle for this 150th-anniversary game in front of a sold-out Dublin crowd didn’t carry over into an error-ridden opening period where Ireland coughed up a dozen turnovers, looked tired and ended up 5-13 behind at the break.

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Andy Farrell chat ahead of Australia | RPTV

Sit down with the Ireland head coach before his last game of the Autumn Nations Series. Watch more clips like this on RugbyPass TV.

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An early second-half uptick soon changed the complexion but their 15-13 lead was short-lived and it needed sub Gus McCarthy to be driven over for a converted 73rd-minute try to restore an advantage they took to the finish.

The now sabbatical-taking Farrell and Schmidt will resume their intriguing coaching battle in next summer’s British and Irish Lions tour down under.

22m Entries

Avg. Points Scored
1.5
12
Entries
Avg. Points Scored
4.3
3
Entries

In the meantime, it will be left to interim boss Simon Easterby to solve the worryingly stuttering Irish attack which three of this month’s four visiting teams largely figured out how to shackle. Here are the Ireland player ratings:

15. Hugo Keenan – 5.5
The afternoon could have been so much easier for Ireland if he hadn’t knocked on four minutes in with the line at his mercy, a mishap in keeping with his mixed fortunes this month. Stuck at it and eventually had his moment when retaining the kick that gained the territory for the Caelan Doris score on 48 minutes.

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14. Mack Hansen – 5
The only Irish back to start all four matches in the series, a quiet first half was followed by a similarly muted second. Didn’t have the gas or the footwork to make a telling difference.

13. Robbie Henshaw – 6.5
Missed the catch that led to a panicked Ireland’s concession of the opening try on 19 minutes but did better when winning a scamper back to deny Andrew Kellaway 11 minutes later. His head-to-head with Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii didn’t spark but he carried hard in the second half.

12. Bundee Aki – 5
In regal form last weekend, that display wasn’t repeated here. How he was defensively sucked during the creation of the sole Australian try typified his general lack of zip. Was better after the break but exited on 56.

11. James Lowe – 4.5
One of the four Ireland players named last Sunday in World Rugby’s 2024 dream team, his display wasn’t at all reflective of that honour. An example? The pass into touch and not Ronan Kelleher’s hands that butchered a 27th-minute try chance.

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10. Sam Prendergast – 5.5
Shouldn’t be blamed for Ireland being 15-19 down when he departed 14 minutes from the finish. He was busy on both sides of the ball, making two first-half try-saving scrambles. Didn’t threaten gain line with ball in hand and had some iffy kicks (including a missed conversion), but touch finders and wristy passing gave Ireland edges that weren’t grasped in an attack too hung up on a multi-faceted approach.

9. Jamison Gibson-Park – 4.5
Another of the 2024 world’s best, he was way off his game here and it was a relief to have Craig Casey replace him on 66 minutes. His aimless kick on 47 minutes that gave Australia an easy catch in the 22 was an example of it just not clicking for the usually reliable performer.

1. Andrew Porter – 5.5
The first of the half-dozen forwards to start every Irish game this month, his restricted opening period away from a solid scrum gave way to a busier second half in the trenches before getting subbed on 67 minutes.

2. Ronan Kelleher – 6
Worked hard at the set-piece but couldn’t nail the one first-half lineout he needed to, his catch missing Tadhg Beirne. Was important in upping the second-half tempo before he too exited with 13 minutes left.

3. Finlay Bealham – 5
Solid scrummaging but he was one of the biggest culprits when it came to turning over first-half ball in general play. For instance, there were knock-ons either side of the opening Australian score.

4. Joe McCarthy – 4.5
Touted by Clive Woodward as a potential Lions Test starter, he wasn’t the best version of himself which was very disappointing as he needs to add a greater consistency to what he delivers game to game.

5. James Ryan – 5.5
Put in a valuable shift when the contest was ugly for Ireland, tackling regularly and being generally solid in what he did, including under the restart. Hooked, though, on 54 minutes along with his partner McCarthy.

6. Tadhg Beirne – 6.5
Back to blindside after excelling last week at lock, the World Rugby dream team pick provided excellent ball off the top of the lineout for two of Ireland’s three tries. Moved into second row for the closing 26 minutes.

7. Josh van der Flier – 6.5
His 23rd-minute try was the third game in the series where he scored. It was tough going against an excellent Australian back row but his effort eventually helped to make a match-winning difference.

8. Caelan Doris – 6.5
Tough day for the British and Irish Lions skipper in waiting, even though he was awarded the sponsor’s official player of the match award. Just five carries for eight metres in the entire opening half highlighted how Schmidt had a viable plan to shut him down. Hit back in the second half with a try after the restart, but a holding on penalty on 62 minutes cost three points.

Replacements:
16. Gus McCarthy – 7
A superb 13-minute impact from the bench capped by his all-important try.

17. Cian Healy – 6
What a way to become Ireland’s all-time caps holder, the 67th-minute sub helping his team to their comeback success and revelling in the moment.

18. Tom O’Toole – 5.5
Quickly gave up the penalty that gave Australia back the lead on 55 minutes just after his introduction, but he settled into it better after that. Was Iain Henderson’s back lifter at the lineout for the decisive maul try.

19. Iain Henderson – 6.5
Disappointed in his previous cameos this month, his effort was greatly improved. Some polished lineout takes and maul leading.

20. Peter O’Mahony – 5.5
Took some punishment but still helped drive Ireland on to get the job done.

21. Craig Casey – 7.5
Best effort yet in an Ireland shirt. He was the perfect sub to up the ante when things were looking worrying.

22. Jack Crowley – 7
Sucked up his huge personal disappointment to provide valuable impetus in his 14 minutes. It was his clever kick in behind that forced Australia to concede the lineout that led to McCarthy’s vital try.

23. Garry Ringrose – 5
Only recalled to the bench and not the starting XV, he was given 24 minutes for Aki. Good energy but couldn’t make a telling difference with Ireland over-playing attack moves.

  • Ratings index10/10 – Perfect, 9. Exceptional, 8. Very good, 7. Good, 6. Satisfying, 5. Average, 4. Insufficient, 3. Bad, 2. Very bad, 1. Terrible, 0. Unacceptable.

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J
JW 13 hours ago
The Fergus Burke test and rugby's free market

I can guarantee that none of the three would have got a chance with Ireland in the state they arrived from NZ.

Why would you think they would?

Two of them were at Leinster and were bench-warmers when they arrived

Sometimes you can be beyond stupid JW.

Haha look who's talking! Hello? Can you just read what you wrote about Leinster to yourself again please lol

It took prob four seasons to get James Lowe's defence up to the required standard to play international footy. If Jacob Stockdale had not experienced a big slump in form he might not have gotten the chance at all.

I'm really not sure why you're making this point. Do you think Ireland are a better team than the All Blacks, where those players would have been straight in? This is like ground hog day the movie with you. Can you not remember much of the discussions, having so many readers/commentors? Yup, 26/7/8 would have been the perfect age for them to have been capped by NZ as well.


Actually, they would obviously have been capped given an opportunity earlier (where they were ineligible to for Ireland).


TTT, who was behind JGP at the Hurricanes, got three AB caps after a couple of further seasons acting as a backup SR player, once JGP left of course. In case you didn't see yourself contradicting your own comments above, JGP was just another player who became first choice for Ireland while 2nd (or even 3rd/outside the 23 in recent cases) for Leinster. And fair enough, no one is suggesting JGP would have surpassed TJP in three or four years either. He would have been an All Black though, and unlike in your Leinster example, similar performances from him would have seen TJP move on earlier to make way for him. Not limited him like he was in Ireland. That's just the advantage of the way they can only afford so many. Hell, one hit wonders like Seta Tamanivalu and Malakai Fekitoa got rocketed into the jersey at the time.


So not just him. Aki and Lowe both would have had opportunities, as you must know has been pointed out by now. It's true that the adversity of having to move to Ireland added a nice bit of mongrel to their game though, along with their typical development.


Aki looked comfortable as the main 12 in his first two seasons, he was fortunate SBW went back to league for a season you could say, but as a similar specialist he ultimate had to give the spot back again on his return. There's certainly no doubt he would have returned and flourished with coachs like Rennie, Wayne Smith, and Andrew Strawbridge, even Tom Coventry. All fair for him to take up an immediate contract instead of wait a year of course though.


It's just whatever the point of your comments are meant to make, your idea that these players wouldn't have achieved high honors in NZ is simply very shortsighted and simplistic. I can only think you are making incorrect conclusions about this topic because of this mistake. As a fan, Aki was looking to be the Nonu replacement for me, but instead the country had the likes of Laumape trying to fill those boots with him available. Ditto with Lowe once Rieko moved to center.

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