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Home » This Week » ‘No passengers’ as Ireland aim to bury Paris pain
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‘No passengers’ as Ireland aim to bury Paris pain

Yeti NewsBot
Last updated: February 13, 2026 4:38 pm
Yeti NewsBot
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'No passengers' as Ireland aim to bury Paris pain

No Passengers: Ireland’s Quest to Bury Paris Pain Against a Resurgent Italy

The Aviva Stadium air this week has been thick with introspection. The echoes of Marseille’s roar have faded, replaced in Dublin by the quiet, determined hum of a squad in recalibration. After the jarring reality check in France, Ireland’s Six Nations title defence arrives at a pivotal juncture. Standing in their way is not the Italy of old, but a confident, chest-puffed Azzurri side fresh from a landmark victory. Captain Caelan Doris’s rallying cry—”no passengers”—isn’t just a motto; it’s a necessary manifesto for a team aiming to exorcise Parisian ghosts and reassert its championship credentials.

Contents
  • The Aftermath: Honesty Sessions and Teething Issues
  • The Italian Revolution: No Longer the Calm Before the Storm
  • Keys to the Kingdom: How Ireland Reclaims Its Throne
  • Prediction: A Battle of Wills, Not a Cakewalk
  • Conclusion: A Defining Weekend for Farrell’s New Cycle

The Aftermath: Honesty Sessions and Teething Issues

The review of the 38-17 defeat to France was undoubtedly brutal. Words like “honesty” and “nobody holding back” from the camp paint a picture of a stark post-mortem. Andy Farrell acknowledged “teething issues” with a new-look side, but the scale of the performance dip was alarming. The lineout misfired, the defensive system, so imperious for two years, was punctured with surprising regularity, and the attacking rhythm was stifled by French ferocity.

This was more than a loss; it was Ireland’s heaviest Six Nations defeat since 2008. The questions it raised are profound. Was it a one-off, driven by French emotion in Marseille, or a sign of deeper transition pains following the retirements of Johnny Sexton and others? The response this Saturday will provide the first real answer. The leadership group, led by Doris and Peter O’Mahony, faces its first major test in adversity. How they steer this ship through choppy waters will define their tenure.

The Italian Revolution: No Longer the Calm Before the Storm

For years, Ireland’s home fixture against Italy was pencilled in as an opportunity for rotation and bonus-point accumulation. The statistics are daunting: Ireland have won their past five Dublin Six Nations meetings with Italy by at least 30 points, including a 36-0 shutout just last year. But to view this weekend through that historical lens would be a catastrophic error.

Under new coach Gonzalo Quesada, Italy have discovered a potent new identity: pragmatic, tough, and incredibly savvy. Their 18-15 victory over Scotland was a masterpiece of wet-weather rugby and mental strength. They didn’t just beat Scotland; they dominated them at the set-piece, bullied them at the breakdown, and held nerve in the crushing final moments. This is a team that believes, and that belief is their most dangerous weapon.

  • Set-Piece Power: The Italian scrum and maul dismantled Scotland. Against an Irish pack that struggled in Paris, this is a clear battleground.
  • Half-Back Genius: The combination of the mercurial Paolo Garbisi and the livewire Martin Page-Relo offers both tactical control and sparks of individual brilliance.
  • Defensive Resilience: Quesada has instilled a hardened, connected defensive system that refuses to buckle easily.

They travel to Dublin not in hope, but in genuine expectation of being competitive. This newfound stature changes everything.

Keys to the Kingdom: How Ireland Reclaims Its Throne

For Ireland, this match is less about the opposition and more about themselves. It’s a test of character, systems, and leadership. Doris’s “no passengers” edict must be visible from the first whistle. The performance needs to be a statement performance, one that silences doubt and re-establishes their core principles.

Set-Piece Reset: The lineout, a cornerstone of Ireland’s game, must function with ruthless efficiency. Paul O’Connell will have drilled this relentlessly. Winning their own ball is non-negotiable; disrupting Italy’s potent maul is crucial.

Defensive Line Speed: Ireland’s defence under Farrell has been built on aggressive, unified line speed. In Paris, it was passive and disconnected. Simon Easterby will demand a return to the system’s fundamentals, shutting down the time and space of Garbisi and his centres.

Attack with Purpose: With Jamison Gibson-Park likely returning at scrum-half, the tempo should quicken. Ireland must find ways to break down Italy’s organised defence through variety—smart kicking, direct carrying, and exploiting width when it’s on. The midfield combination of Bundee Aki and Robbie Henshaw will be central to punching holes.

Prediction: A Battle of Wills, Not a Cakewalk

Expect a tense, physical, and emotionally charged affair at a sold-out Aviva Stadium. Italy will bring fight and structure, aiming to stay in the arm-wrestle deep into the second half. They have the tools to frustrate and punish any Irish lethargy.

However, the context overwhelmingly favours an Irish response. The shock of Paris, the pride of a champion team, and the fierce desire to protect their formidable home record are powerful motivators. While Italy are improved, the gap, especially in Dublin, remains significant when Ireland are close to their best.

The prediction is for Ireland to win, but not in the runaway fashion of recent years. It will be a match defined by grit before flair. Look for Ireland’s leaders—Doris, O’Mahony, and the returning Gibson-Park—to set the tone early. The scoreboard may not reflect a 30-point demolition, but a hard-fought, statement-making victory built on the very “honesty” they’ve preached all week. A win by 18-22 points, where the performance matters more than the margin, seems the most likely outcome.

Conclusion: A Defining Weekend for Farrell’s New Cycle

This Six Nations was always going to be a new chapter for Irish rugby. Chapters, however, often begin with conflict. The defeat in France was a stark opening scene. The visit of a resurgent Italy is the immediate plot twist, demanding a decisive response.

For Ireland, the 2024 championship is still alive, but its complexion has changed. It is no longer a procession but a proving ground. To bury the pain of Paris, they must produce a performance of unified force and clear-headed execution. They must prove that the standards of the last three years were not dependent on a single generation, but are now embedded in the jersey itself. Against a confident, capable Italy, there is truly no room for passengers. The journey to rediscover their identity starts now.


Source: Based on news from BBC Sport.

TAGGED:Andy FarrellAviva StadiumEngland Six Nations squadIreland RugbyParis defeat
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