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Ireland 29 – 16 England

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Ireland created history by sealing a historic Six Nations Grand Slam after victory over England

Ireland created history by sealing a historic Six Nations Grand Slam after victory over England

Ireland claimed a historic first Six Nations Grand Slam in Dublin, and fourth ever, courtesy of a 29-16 victory over England at a fervent Aviva Stadium, after the visitors lost full-back Freddie Steward to a first half red card.

Previous Ireland Grand Slam wins in 1948 (Belfast), 2009 (Cardiff) and 2018 (Twickenham) had each been won away from home, but tries from hooker Dan Sheehan (two), centre Robbie Henshaw and replacement Rob Herring confirmed a title-winning success.

Ireland – Tries: Sheehan (33, 68), Henshaw (62), Herring (77). Cons: Sexton (35, 63, 70). Pens: Sexton (19).

England – Tries: George (73). Cons: Farrell (73). Pens: Farrell (8, 15, 51).

Skipper Johnny Sexton also added nine points with the boot in his final Six Nations Test, becoming the all-time leading points scorer in the championship in the process.

Johnny Sexton led Ireland to Grand Slam success in the final Six Nations Test of his career Johnny Sexton led Ireland to Grand Slam success in the final Six Nations Test of his career

Johnny Sexton led Ireland to Grand Slam success in the final Six Nations Test of his career

England skipper Owen Farrell had earlier kicked his side into a 6-0 lead, but Steward’s harsh red card for making head contact with opposite number Hugo Keenan proved a decisive moment.

Despite the hosts putting in a nervy performance on the whole, nothing could sour Ireland’s day after a marvellous championship clean sweep for Andy Farrell’s squad.

Farrell had kicked the visitors 6-0 ahead by the 15th minute before Sexton kicked Ireland onto the scoreboard with a penalty from 37 metres out after England prop Kyle Sinckler was penalised at the breakdown – becoming the record Six Nations points scorer of all time in doing so.

Sexton converted a penalty against England to become the all-time Six Nations points scorer Sexton converted a penalty against England to become the all-time Six Nations points scorer

Sexton converted a penalty against England to become the all-time Six Nations points scorer

Another unnecessary penalty – Ellis Genge taking a player out off the ball – handed Ireland a chance to attack in the 22 and they took ruthless advantage as the outstanding Sheehan stormed through off a superbly disguised Josh van der Flier inside ball, skittling England defenders on his way to grounding. Sexton converted with aplomb for a 10-6 lead.

Dan Sheehan romped through to score a nervy Ireland's first try Dan Sheehan romped through to score a nervy Ireland's first try

Dan Sheehan romped through to score a nervy Ireland’s first try

The game-changing moment came shortly before the interval as foul play by Steward – taking out Keenan with a tucked arm, and connecting with the Ireland full-back’s head after he had lost the ball – resulted in a red card as South African referee Jaco Peyper confirmed he could find no mitigation.

Hugo Keenan was hit in the head by Freddie Steward in an incident very late in the first half Hugo Keenan was hit in the head by Freddie Steward in an incident very late in the first half

Hugo Keenan was hit in the head by Freddie Steward in an incident very late in the first half

Referee Jaco Peyper produced a red card to Steward for the tackle Referee Jaco Peyper produced a red card to Steward for the tackle

Referee Jaco Peyper produced a red card to Steward for the tackle

It appeared a harsh decision, with the England man turning away and bracing for contact after a knock-on more than initiating a forceful act, though Keenan would not return for the second half such was the ferocity of the impact.

The start of the second half saw Farrell next to score points off the tee after another scrum decision went England’s way, reducing the gap to a single point.

As tension built around the stadium, Ireland finally clicked into ruthless gear in the 62nd minute as the returning Henshaw leapt over for their crucial second try off a Bundee Aki short ball.

Robbie Henshaw scores Ireland's second try Robbie Henshaw scores Ireland's second try

Robbie Henshaw scores Ireland’s second try

A fabulous choke tackle maul – led by the effervescent Sexton and Aki – stemmed England’s attacking response, but Sheehan soon had his second try, diving over in the corner after a scintillating piece of play filled with quick passes, pacy lines of running and finished by a magnificent Jack Conan offload out of contact.

Sheehan notched his second and Ireland's third six minutes later Sheehan notched his second and Ireland's third six minutes later

Sheehan notched his second and Ireland’s third six minutes later

Dan Sheehan celebrates after scoring his second try of the game against England Dan Sheehan celebrates after scoring his second try of the game against England

Dan Sheehan celebrates after scoring his second try of the game against England

Sexton drilled over the touchline conversion with arms aloft, and though England did land a second half punch in the form of a wonderful Jamie George maul try, Jack Willis was soon sin-binned for a dangerous lift tackle on Ross Byrne, and replacement hooker Herring then stretched out to confirm the bonus-point.

That left the Aviva Stadium awash with renditions of the Fields of Athenry on a momentous day.

Replacement hooker Rob Herring scored Ireland's fourth try with four minutes to go Replacement hooker Rob Herring scored Ireland's fourth try with four minutes to go

Replacement hooker Rob Herring scored Ireland’s fourth try with four minutes to go

2023 Six Nations final standings

Team W D L SD BP P
Ireland 5 0 0 79 4 27
France 4 0 1 59 4 20
Scotland 3 0 2 20 3 15
England 2 0 3 -35 2 10
Wales 1 0 4 -63 2 6
Italy 0 0 5 -60 1 1

What they said…

Ireland head coach Andy Farrell told ITV Sport post-match…

“It’s the fourth time we’ve done it, it’s the first time we’ve done it at home – it means so much to everyone here and the millions of Irish around the world to be able to do it on St Patrick’s weekend.

“Winning a Grand Slam is always a bit special. It was squeaky bum time for a while, credit to France for the pressure they put on for the last couple of games. We knew that it was win at all cost.

“The game was stop-start – it was a proper old-fashioned Test match but, again, we were disappointed with some aspects on the game, but we were a bonus-point win again, so I think that’s where we’re at at the moment.

“Hopefully, there’s bigger fish to fry for Johnny (Sexton) with the World Cup etc, but it’s unbelievably fitting for him to have this moment to lift the trophy.

“He actually wanted to go and lift it up with somebody else and I said he mustn’t, he’s got to do this and relish his moment because he deserves it.

“He’s one of the best, if not, the best, that Ireland have produced, and what a way for him to go out of the Six Nations, lifting the trophy on a Grand Slam.”

England skipper Owen Farrell told ITV Sport…

“First of all, congratulations to Ireland. Winning the Grand Slam is special, so it has been a brilliant effort from them over this Six Nations.

“I thought we showed a tremendous amount of fight. I thought we probably gave too many penalties away in the first half, which allowed Ireland in, but we fought all the way to their line and when we did get down there we came away with some points.

“Obviously the game changed with the red card. We still showed a brilliant amount of fight after that, worked hard for each other and stuck in it.

“We looked like we were causing problems at some points, but against a top team like Ireland it showed through in the end.”

What’s next?

Ireland complete their 2023 Six Nations campaign with a record of five wins from five, having beaten France and England in Dublin, and won on the road vs Wales, Italy and Scotland.

Farrell’s side are next in international action in August for their Rugby World Cup warm-up Tests, with two games announced so far vs Italy (August 5) at Murrayfield, and England (August 19) at the Aviva Stadium.

Ireland’s Six Nations 2023 fixtures

Saturday, February 4 Wales 10-34 Ireland
Saturday, February 11 Ireland 32-19 France
Saturday, February 25 Italy 20-34 Ireland
Sunday, March 12 Scotland 7-22 Ireland
Saturday, March 18 Ireland 29-16 England

England finish their campaign under Borthwick with three defeats from five and two wins, after home losses to Scotland and France at Twickenham, a loss to Ireland in Dublin, as well as a home win over Italy and away win vs Wales.

Borthwick’s charges have announced four Rugby World Cup warm-up fixtures for August: vs Wales (August 5) in Cardiff, Wales (August 12) at Twickenham, Ireland (August 19) in Dublin, and Fiji (August 26) and Twickenham.

England’s Six Nations 2023 fixtures

Saturday, February 4 England 23-29 Scotland
Sunday, February 12 England 31-14 Italy
Saturday, February 25 Wales 10-20 England
Saturday, March 11 England 10-53 France
Saturday, March 18 Ireland 29-16 England

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Beth Mead not in England’s World Cup plans unless ‘miracle happens’, says Sarina Wiegman | Football News

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England manager Sarina Wiegman expects Beth Mead to miss out on this summer’s World Cup, saying that unless a “miracle happens” she will not be in her plans for the tournament.

Mead, who claimed the Golden Boot and player of the tournament award when the Lionesses won the Euros last summer, has been sidelined by an ACL injury sustained in November.

Having named a 25-player squad for next month’s friendlies against Brazil and Australia, Wiegman told a press conference regarding Arsenal forward Mead: “I had a conversation with her, she’s doing well, she’s in her rehab, she’s doing good, but the World Cup is actually too early.

“So what we said is she’s not in our plans now, just really take the time to get back well. But if a miracle happens and she goes so fast, then we will reconsider it – but at this moment, I don’t expect that.”

It marks a shift from Wiegman, who said in early February that it was too early to plan for a World Cup without Mead in the squad. Wiegman was also reluctant to push Mead on her availability following the death of her mother.

“It’s a little early to say,” Wiegman said last month. “But I don’t want to push it.

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Beth Mead won the Golden Boot as England won the Euros last summer under Sarina Wiegman

“She’s had so many things going on in her life that I don’t want to push it at this moment, and we’ll see how her recovery and rehab goes, and then we’ll sit down at a point, and that will be very shortly, and then we’ll look at the future a little bit.

“But I don’t want to look too much forward right now because she just comes from a very hard situation.”

Later in February, Mead told Sky Sports News that she was “ahead of schedule” in her recovery from a knee injury and has not ruled out a return at this summer’s World Cup.

She said: “Realistically next season is sensible – but I’m not sensible! The World Cup is obviously my motivation. I want to do my best to get to a World Cup.

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Speaking in February, Beth Mead says her mum’s passing has acted as further motivation in her recovery from injury as she targets a return at this summer’s World Cup

“If it’s not meant to be, it’s not meant to be but it’s something for me to strive and reach towards.

“I’m ahead of schedule so far – I want to keep it that way. It’s a long injury and there are a lot of ups and downs.

“The rehab is going well. [I’m] 11 weeks post-op, counting down the days.

“It’s going very slowly but it’s been good for me to sit down and reflect to look back on the year we’ve had, the legacy that we’ve created as a women’s team.”

Hampton, Morgan earn recall for Brazil, Australia friendlies | Zelem, England miss out

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England manager Sarina Wiegman discusses her selection for the Lionesses squad and says there won’t much change between now and the World Cup

Sarina Wiegman has handed recalls to Hannah Hampton and Esme Morgan while uncapped Lucy Parker also returns to the fold as the Lionesses prepare for back-to-back fixtures against Brazil and World Cup co-hosts Australia in April.

Twice-capped Aston Villa goalkeeper Hampton returns for the first time since last summer’s Euros triumph.

Manchester City defender Morgan won her three senior caps last October and November, while fellow defender Parker, of West Ham, is the only uncapped member of the 25-player squad.

Dropping out from February’s selection are the injured Emily Ramsey along with Lotte Wubben-Moy, Katie Zelem and Ebony Salmon.

Chelsea forward Fran Kirby continues to be absent as she recovers from a knee injury, while Bethany England also misses out despite scoring six goals since joining Tottenham from Chelsea in January.

England squad in full

Goalkeepers: Mary Earps, Sandy MacIver, Ellie Roebuck, Hannah Hampton

Defenders: Millie Bright, Lucy Bronze, Jess Carter, Niamh Charles, Alex Greenwood, Maya Le Tissier, Esme Morgan, Lucy Parker, Leah Williamson

Midfielders: Laura Coombs, Jordan Nobbs, Georgia Stanway, Ella Toone, Keira Walsh

Forwards: Rachel Daly, Lauren Hemp, Lauren James, Chloe Kelly, Jess Park, Alessia Russo, Katie Robinson

What is the World Cup schedule?

The group stage will begin on July 20 and run over a two-week period finishing on August 3 and see group winners and runners-up progress to the round of 16, which takes place from August 5 to August 8.

The quarter-finals, which will be held in Wellington, Auckland, Brisbane and Sydney, are scheduled for August 11 and 12.

The first semi-final will then be played on August 15 in Auckland, with the other semi-final taking place on August 16 at the Accor Stadium in Sydney, which will then host the final on August 20.

A third-place play-off will be played the day before the final on August 19 in Brisbane.

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Rangers vs Celtic: Police investigating alleged Craig McPherson headbutt towards Fran Alonso in SWPL match | Football News

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Rangers coach Craig McPherson is being investigated by police over an alleged headbutt on Celtic Women boss Fran Alonso.

The incident took place after Monday’s Old Firm match, live on Sky Sports, as McPherson approached Alonso on the pitch at Broadwood Stadium.

Rangers are also investigating the incident, while the Scottish FA’s compliance officer is set to look into the matter too.

A Celtic spokesperson added: “Clearly this is a hugely concerning incident, falling well below any acceptable standard.

“We understand the matter is now being investigated and it will be up to all relevant authorities to take any appropriate action.”

Police Scotland’s spokesperson said: “We have received a report regarding an incident at Broadwood Stadium on the evening of Monday, March 27, 2023. Enquiries to establish any criminality are at an early stage.”

‘I was called a little rat’

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Highlights of Rangers against Celtic from the Scottish Women’s Premier League

Rangers looked set to secure a vital victory at Broadwood until Caitlin Hayes’ 99th minute equaliser ensured the rivals would share the points.

Alonso, who has previously worked under Ronald Koeman and Mauricio Pochettino at Everton and Southampton respectively, told Sky Sports he was called a “little rat” as the footage was shown to him after the match.

The 46-year-old Spaniard said: “I don’t know. You can see there, somebody pushed me from behind. I never talked to (McPherson) the whole game.

“It’s obviously disappointing to concede a goal in the last minute, I totally get it. But I don’t know.

“I was called a ‘little rat’, I don’t know why.”

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Rangers forward Brogan Hay scored after miscommunication between Celtic pair Kelly Clark and Pamela Tajonar

When asked about the incident after the match, Rangers head coach Malky Thomson told Sky Sports: “Without me seeing it at all, I don’t know that I can comment on it.

“If that’s the case, then there will be an investigation and we’ll obviously look at it.”

Former Morton and Falkirk midfielder McPherson, 52, had spells as assistant manager at Morton and Dumbarton before joining up with Thompson in the summer of 2021.

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Caitlin Hayes scored in the 99th minute with the last kick of the game to equalise against Rangers in the SWPL

The 1-1 draw – in the first SWPL league game televised live by Sky Sports – ensured Celtic and Rangers remained second and third, respectively.

Glasgow City are top of the table, eight points clear of Alonso’s side, with nine matches to play this season.

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Anthony Joshua says he will retire from boxing if he loses to Jermaine Franklin | ‘I’m not here to battle people’ | Boxing News

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Anthony Joshua says he will retire from boxing if he loses against Jermaine Franklin on Saturday at the O2 Arena.

The two-time world champion is making his return to the ring this weekend to face the American heavyweight after successive defeats to Oleksandr Usyk.

Joshua will be looking to win his first professional fight since December 2020 but has admitted he will step away from boxing if he loses a third successive bout.

“I will. I will retire if I lose. I’m not here to battle people. If people want me to retire I will retire,” he told MailOnline.

“I’m not going to fight if people don’t want me too. It’s not even about the money. It’s about the competitor in you. That’s what’s important.

“It [pressure] comes with the business and it comes with the territory, I know that.

“I know when I am retired, I am gonna be chilling. I’m gonna be thinking f**k everyone. I am done.

“You lot put so much pressure on me so when I am done, the chains are going to be gone. I am going to be laughing and loving life.”

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Anthony Joshua should retire if he is beaten by Jermaine Franklin, while Tyson Fury ‘didn’t believe’ he could defeat Oleksandr Usyk, says Johnny Nelson

Nelson expects Joshua to ‘get it done’

Former WBO cruiserweight champion Johnny Nelson expects Joshua to beat Franklin but thinks the 33-year-old should retire if he loses.

“I’d expect Anthony Joshua to get it done. But Jermaine Franklin is 29 years old, (has had) 22 fights, won 21, stopped 14 of his opponents and in his last fight against Dillian Whyte people say he should have won. But that’s questionable,” he said.

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Anthony Joshua discusses his thoughts on his showdown with Jermaine Franklin and his training regime going into the fight.

“My big question is this: Anthony Joshua, after losing two fights on the bounce, has had to relook at his confidence to think ‘who am I, do I belong here, do I want this?’

“For Anthony Joshua that’s everything. Because he’s had to go through a bit of turmoil, mentally, emotionally and come to terms with the fact that he’s no longer the best fighter, officially, in the world.

“He’s got to get in the queue again like everybody else. If Anthony Joshua loses, he jacks it in. If he doesn’t jack it, he should jack it. Because it’s a hard mountain to climb.

“Especially when you’ve had the success and the heights that he’s had. So he can’t afford to lose. That’s a must. Then from that, it’s confidence building.”

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