Ireland emerge as frontrunners with title theirs to lose
The Guardian|February 05, 2024
Opening night tour de force suggests Andy Farrell's green machine are stronger after World Cup disappointment
Robert Kitson
Ireland emerge as frontrunners with title theirs to lose

The Six Nations championship is supposed to be a marathon not a sprint. That is not currently how it feels, however, after an opening weekend which has produced a runaway title favourite. If this was the Cheltenham Gold Cup many would already be putting down their binoculars and preparing to roar home a classic Irish winner with the rest of the field still way out in the country.

Nothing can ever be entirely certain on sport’s fast-spinning wheel of fate but no one present in Rome or Cardiffwill be rushing to back any of the supposed rivals to Andy Farrell’s team. France were way off the pace in the first half in Marseille and the two other contests did little to suggest the remaining four nations are yet at the required level. Whichever way you shake it, it now looks distinctly like Ireland’s year.

It has also underlined the danger of staging the biggest match of the tournament on the opening night. There is no “conference ” system to deliver a guaranteed showpiece end game; just three Irish home games against Italy, Wales and Scotland in Dublin – where they lose about as often as it snows in Riyadh – and a trip to Twickenham to face an England side in rebuilding mode. Place your bets, ladies and gentlemen.

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