Northern Edition

Select Edition

Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

Stats dominance shows how Ireland cruised to another Six Nations title

DUBLIN, IRELAND: March 16: Bundee Aki #12 of Ireland defended by Pierre Schoeman #1 of Scotland during the Ireland V Scotland, Six Nations rugby union match at Aviva Stadium on March 16, 2024, in Dublin, Ireland. (Photo by Tim Clayton/Corbis via Getty Images)

Ireland’s second Guinness Six Nations title in succession didn’t result in another Grand Slam, but there is little doubt as to who were the best team in the tournament. And the stats back that up.

ADVERTISEMENT

Ben Kay and Ross Hamilton have analysed the entire tournament to look to explain where the areas of dominance were and where certain teams lacked.

“No real surprises that Ireland are the champion side. From week one it almost looked like it was going to be a procession,” said Ben Kay on the latest episode of Beyond 80 on RugbyPass TV.

Video Spacer

How Ireland created that great quick tap try vs Scotland | RPTV

Video Player is loading.
Current Time 0:00
Duration 0:00
Loaded: 0%
Stream Type LIVE
Remaining Time 0:00
 
1x
    • Chapters
    • descriptions off, selected
    • captions off, selected
      Video Spacer

      How Ireland created that great quick tap try vs Scotland | RPTV

      Beyond 80 break down a well created Andrew Porter try, as part of a full wrap up this year’s Six Nations. Watch the full episode exclusively on RugbyPass TV

      Watch now

      “Having said that, the last couple of rounds were probably their toughest games.”

      Ireland were edged by England thanks to a last minute Marcus Smith drop goal and against Scotland at the Aviva Stadium in their last match, they were made to work hard for the win.

      “If we do look at the tournament as a whole, they were the best side and they still won the championship, of course, but it was some of their stats across every games,” explained analyst Hamilton.

      “We have hundreds of stats that we go through, some are a bit more important ones. To be at the top of any of those lists is quite impressive, to have one or two. To be at the top of so many attacking stats, like Ireland are, is unseen before.

      Ireland stats
      Ireland’s attacking statistics showed how they dominated multiple facets of play throughout the tournament.
      ADVERTISEMENT

      “To have that level of dominance… Credit where it’s due to Ireland, they had so many; the most points scored in the competition, the most tries, they had the most carries, they had the most running meters,  they had the most meters gained over the gain line, the most post-contact meters, the most in-contact meters, the most carries over the gain line, the most tacklers committed to their carries, most line breaks, highest possession time, highest territory time, that gave them the fastest average ruck speed, and the most red zone entries.

      “The fact that they have so many of those that are so dominant across all the teams, just gave them everything they needed and was enough in the end – with obviously a loss against England – but enough to get them the championship.”

      Six Nations

      P
      W
      L
      D
      PF
      PA
      PD
      BP T
      BP-7
      BP
      Total
      1
      Ireland
      5
      4
      1
      0
      20
      2
      France
      5
      3
      1
      1
      15
      3
      England
      5
      3
      2
      0
      14
      4
      Scotland
      5
      2
      3
      0
      12
      5
      Italy
      5
      2
      2
      1
      11
      6
      Wales
      5
      0
      5
      0
      4

      While they were certainly tested at times, the way they adapted is what stood out for former England second row Kay.

      ADVERTISEMENT

      “If you think about all those stats and think about watching Ireland play as well, the impressive thing is the variation in the way they can find different ways to score.

      “A lot of teams have a USP where they’re very good at certain things, be that a lineout drive, or the forwards play when they get into the red zone, but Ireland can do everything on attack.”

      Currently ranked number two in the world behind South Africa and ahead of New Zealand, Ireland will face the world champion Springboks in South Africa in July for a two-test series, kicking off at Loftus Versfeld in Pretoria on July 6.

      You can watch the full episode of Beyond 80 on RugbyPass TV now.

      ADVERTISEMENT

      Boks Office | Episode 39 | The Investec Champions Cup is back

      Argentina v France | HSBC SVNS Hong Kong 2025 | Men's Match Highlights

      New Zealand v Australia | HSBC SVNS Hong Kong 2025 | Women's Match Highlights

      Tokyo Sungoliath vs Shizuoka BlueRevs | Japan Rugby League One 2024/25 | Full Match Replay

      Reds vs Force | Super Rugby W 2025 | Full Match Replay

      The Rise of Kenya | The Report

      New Zealand in Hong Kong | Brady Rush | Sevens Wonders | Episode 4

      The Fixture: How This Rugby Rivalry Has Lasted 59 Years

      Trending on RugbyPass

      Comments

      6 Comments
      E
      Ed the Duck 377 days ago

      Great piece guys. Pretty clear that “From week one it almost looked like it was going to be a procession” through to the title being wrapped up before France and England even took to the field that there was no serious contenders to Ireland.

      Hopefully Mr. Bishop will have a look at this since he is still arguing that England and France were actually ‘probable’ contenders and were only a small distance away from dethroning Ireland…! 😂😂😂

      K
      KiwiSteve 377 days ago

      Ireland are going to win the World 🌎 cup 🗑️.

      b
      by George! 377 days ago

      First in all that aye! It all amounts to shiite in light of RWC 23. Oh well, four more years.

      Load More Comments

      Join free and tell us what you really think!

      Sign up for free
      ADVERTISEMENT

      Latest Features

      Comments on RugbyPass

      J
      JW 30 minutes ago
      'Matches between Les Bleus and the All Blacks are rarely for the faint-hearted.'

      Well a) poor French results doesn’t seem to effect the situation much. In fact one of the reasons given for this selection policy is that the French don’t tune in for foreign rugby content on the other side of the world, at a time when theyre not having their vino. So who would know the results? And b) this is the crux of the matter, they are legally abided to play them as part of WRs tier 1 reciprocal tours programme. The only real choice for the SH team is to treat it the same, which is fine when teams are happy to do that, but the AB’s have a totally anthesis policy/mentality so would never use the games in the same way.


      So alligned with b) the only real option is to complain to those in control. I suspect that’s why weve seen France reneging on the practice, and you can only be left to think that if they hadn’t reneged, WR would have done something more drastic about it. Which of course would mean not just telling them to bugger off when they want to tour, it’s no one playing them (from t1 at least) at all (assuming they have no interest in scheduling match’s outside the windows, like Ireland and NZ are doing).


      Then of course that means no involvement of France in the Nations Championship. Which means they are automatically the last ranked team in 6N to qualify, so the actual worst team in 6N gets to compete in it, making a mockery of the promotion and relegation WR wanted to happen between T1 and T2 for qualifying purposes. Yup, b) is just something nobody wants to happen. Well done FFR and LNR for making the tour work instead (how well is yet to be seen).

      111 Go to comments
      TRENDING
      TRENDING Blues lose All Black for season ahead of Hurricanes derby Blues lose All Black for season ahead of Canes
      Search