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Sean O'Brien has broken his arm

Ireland encountered stiff resistance from a gritty Argentina side as they were made to work for a 28-17 victory in a hard-fought Test at Aviva Stadium on Saturday.

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However, an injury to Ireland backrow Sean O’Brien marred Joe Schmidt’s side’s hard-fought win.

O’Brien left the field in the 38th minute, clutching his arm and Schmidt confirmed that he had broken it and will require surgery. Schmidt described the Leinster backrow as ‘devastated’.

Having just returned from a long injury layoff, the fresh setback casts doubt on O’Brien’s participation in next year’s Rugby World Cup in Japan.

Crushing 54-7 winners against Italy in Chicago last Saturday, Joe Schmidt’s side enjoyed no such walkover in Dublin as they were made to wait until after the hour to make the result safe thanks to Luke McGrath’s converted try.

Ireland welcomed back captain Rory Best and Sean O’Brien also came in for his first Test since November 2017, but the fragile Leinster man’s match ended with an arm injury sustained in innocuous circumstances during an even first half.

Kieran Marmion and Bundee Aki both crossed in the opening 25 minutes with Bautista Delguy’s brilliant try in between and a trio of Nicolas Sanchez’s penalties keeping the margin to a point at half-time.

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The Pumas’ scrum was relentlessly exposed, though, and proved their undoing when McGrath crossed shortly after a Johnny Sexton three-pointer.

Though successfully maintaining their winning form, Ireland’s performance will have done little to scare New Zealand ahead of next weekend’s showpiece encounter.

Argentina, with a squad comprised almost entirely of Jaguares players, began brightly as Sanchez slotted two penalties either side of Marmion’s ninth-minute score.

Greasy conditions contributed to a string of early handling errors but the visitors defied the conditions to produce a thrilling try midway through the half.

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Jeronimo de la Fuente burst through the line and the ball was quickly worked wide for Delguy to cross in the corner and establish a six-point lead.

Argentina’s scrum began to come under increasing scrutiny as Ireland forced a turnover and demonstrated patience through several phases to eventually work an opening that Aki exploited.

Sanchez and Sexton traded penalties before the interval and the home side’s frustration with their failure to pull away was exacerbated when Marmion limped off with an ankle problem just before the hour.

The tension was relieved through McGrath as the 25-year-old darted into a gap to open an eight-point lead, before Sexton struck the last of his three penalties to consign Pablo Matera to a defeat in his first match as Argentina captain.

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Hellhound 8 minutes ago
South Africa player ratings | 2024 Autumn Nations Series

There is this thing going around against Siya Kolisi where they don't want him to be known as the best national captain ever, so they strike him down in ratings permanently whenever they can. They want McCaw and reckons he is the best captain ever. I disagree.


Just like they refuse to see SA as the best team and some have even said that should the Boks win a third WC in a row, they will still not be the best team ever. Even if they win every game between now and the WC. That is some serious hate coming SA's way.


Everyone forget how the McCaw AB's intimidated refs, was always on the wrong side, played on the ground etc. Things they would never have gotten away with today. They may have a better win ratio, but SA build depth, not caring about rank inbetween WC's until this year.


They weren't as bad inbetween as people claim, because non e of their losses was big ones and they almost never faced the strongest Bok team outside of the WC, allowing countries like France and Ireland to rise to the top unopposed.


Rassie is still at it, building more depth, getting more young stars into the fold. By the time he leaves (I hope never) he will leave a very strong Bok side for the next 15- 20 years. Not everyone will play for 20 years, but each year Rassie acknowledge the young stars and get them involved and ready for international rugby.


Not everyone will make it to the WC, but those 51/52 players will compete for those spots for the WC. They will deliver their best. The future of the Boks is in very safe hands. The only thing that bothers me is Rassie's health. If he can overcome it, rugby looks dark for the rest of the rugby world. He is already the greatest coach in WR history. By the time he retires, he will be the biggest legend any sport has ever seen

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J
JW 22 minutes ago
'They smelt it': Scott Robertson says Italy sensed All Blacks' vulnerability

No where to be seen OB!


The crosses for me for the year where (from memory);


This was a really hard one to nail down as the first sign of a problem, now that I've asked myself to think about it. I'd say it all started with his decision to not back form and fit players after all the injuries, and/or him picking players for the future, rather ones that could play right now.


First he doesn't replace Perofeta straight away (goes on for months in the team) after injury against England, second he falls back to Beauden Barrett to cover at fullback against Fiji, then he drops Narawa the obvious choice to have started, then he brings in Jordan too soon. That Barret selection (and to a lesser extent Bell's) set the tone for the year.


Then he didn't get the side up for Argentina. They were blown away and didn't look like they expected a fight and were well beaten despite the scoreline in my opinion. Worst performance of the year in the forth game and..


Basically the same problems were persistent, or even exaggerated, after that with the players he did select not given much of an opportunity, with this year having the most number of unused subs I can remember since the amateur days.


What I think I started to realise early on was that he didn't back himself and his team. I think he prepared the players well, don't get me wrong, but I'll credit him with making a conscious choice in tempering his ambition and instead choosing cohesion and to respect (the idea of it being important in himself and his players) experience first and foremost (after two tight games and that 4th game loss). I think he chose wrong in deciding not to be, and back, himself. Hard criticism.


And it played out by preferring Beauden to Dmac on the EOYT (though that may have been a planned move).


I hope I'm right, because going through all the little things of the season and coming up with these bullets, I've got to wonder when I say his last fault is one we have seen at the Crusaders, playing his best players into the ground. What I'm really scared of now is that not wanting a bit of freshness in this last game could be linked with all these other crosses that I want to put down to simple confidence issues. But are they really a sign that he just lacks vision?


Now, that's not to say I haven't seen a lot of positives as well, I just think that for the ABs to go where they want to go he has to fix these crosses. Just have difficult that will be is the question.

22 Go to comments
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