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'Unbelievable' Prendergast and 4 other Ireland v Argentina talking points

By PA
Sam Prendergast lines himself up for the team photo before the Ireland rugby captain's run at UCD Bowl in Dublin. (Photo By Brendan Moran/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

Ireland’s autumn schedule continues with Argentina’s visit to Dublin.

Andy Farrell’s side will bid to respond against Los Pumas after last week’s deflating 23-13 defeat to New Zealand knocked them off the top of the world rankings.

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Here, the PA news agency picks out some of the main talking points ahead of Friday’s match.

Bouncing back
The All Blacks defeat was a sour start to the autumn for Ireland. Following a big billing and plenty of expectation, a capacity Aviva Stadium crowd was largely subdued as the below-par hosts slipped to a first home loss in more than three years. Ireland are determined to bounce back – and have a track record of doing so. Only once during the reign of head coach Farrell, which spans 51 games, have they been beaten twice in a row: defeats to Wales and France at the start of the 2021 Guinness Six Nations.

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Ireland
14:10
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Argentina
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Second chances
Farrell conceded some of his players are “lucky enough” to be retained after making just one change to his starting team. The Englishman, who has recalled centre Robbie Henshaw in place of Bundee Aki, expressed a desire to give individuals an opportunity to make amends when explaining his thinking. He also referenced Ireland’s relatively limited player pool. Based on comments made by captain Caelan Doris, the starting XV are well aware that their opening November outing has increased the pressure to perform.

History awaits Healy
A sizeable chunk of Ireland’s autumn squad were still at primary school when Cian Healy made his Test debut against Australia in 2009. Fifteen years on, the veteran prop is poised to make history by moving alongside former team-mate Brian O’Driscoll as Ireland’s most-capped player. Having largely provided back-up for first-choice loosehead Andrew Porter during the Farrell era, the 37-year-old will win the 133rd cap of his career, if he is brought on from the bench. “He’s been a legend of our squad for all these years and he continues to be so,” said Farrell.

Pumas ready to pounce?
Argentina have never beaten Ireland in Dublin but are well capable of snapping that statistic. Pumas head coach Felipe Contepomi has extensive inside knowledge of the hosts having spent a decade with Leinster as a player and a coach. The 47-year-old, who succeeded Michael Cheika following last year’s fourth-placed finish at the World Cup, has also masterminded some impressive results. Argentina, who sit fifth in the Test rankings – above Scotland, England and Wales, have already beaten France, New Zealand and world champions South Africa in 2024.

“Unbelievable” Prendergast poised for debut
While there is a familiarity to Ireland’s starting line-up, Farrell has reshuffled his bench. The inclusions of scrum-half Craig Casey and forward Ryan Baird ahead of Conor Murray and Iain Henderson are a nod towards the future. More notable is the selection of rookie fly-half Sam Prendergast. The 21-year-old, who is joined among the replacements by fellow uncapped Leinster player Thomas Clarkson, impressed on the recent Emerging Ireland tour to South Africa and will be eager to seize a chance to put pressure on starting 10 Jack Crowley. “He’s an unbelievable player,” skipper Doris said of Prendergast. “He’s probably one of the most skillful guys I’ve come across.”

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H
Hellhound 46 minutes ago
South Africa will beat England at a canter

Very good article and no, you are definitely not the only one. You hit the nail on the head with both teams. England will fall back to the WC semi ta tics, whereas the Boks will run it. They mean to destroy, not only with their forwards but with their backs too.


There is immense speed in that backline. England need a miracle. The Boks have the best defence and attack this year. This Bok team is different from the one from the semi. Most the same players, but way different tactics from last year.


Manie Libbok has a lot to prove and with Sacha basically making the 10 his own with exceptional games this year, I'm sure he will be out to showcase just how dangerous he is. No one in the team except a few is absolutely certain of their places. The rest is going to go hard at the English to prove why they should be considered every time.


These Boks targeted the English game as the toughest of the Autumn nations series. This is the game they want to win. They want to prove that the WC semi result was a fluke. They want to show just why they are the current Kings of rugby.


It's hard to stop a team who has lost only 2 Tests this year, both by a point. It could've been 11/11. What makes it scarier is that in each and every Test, they swapped many players and still came away with wins. The ability to muscle and grind out wins is this team's best attribute.


They believe in their coaches and each and every team mate. They are full in. Playing on the day or not. This is going to be a slaughter. Before the teams was named, I had the Boks by a winning margin of 12-15 points, but after it was named, I changed it to 20+.


The English is going to give the Boks the ball and the Boks is going to run them ragged. This team wasn't chosen to play the same boring strategy of the WC semi.

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