Berliner Boersenzeitung - Farrell keeps the faith in Irish still being at rugby's top table

EUR -
AED 4.189014
AFN 72.431472
ALL 93.956358
AMD 419.587061
ANG 2.042211
AOA 1046.537188
ARS 1692.722503
AUD 1.654862
AWG 2.056009
AZN 1.954528
BAM 1.955282
BBD 2.295932
BDT 140.442813
BGN 1.928691
BHD 0.429792
BIF 3392.346377
BMD 1.140643
BND 1.475629
BOB 7.89391
BRL 5.885689
BSD 1.139913
BTN 107.845972
BWP 15.448842
BYN 3.341701
BYR 22356.602362
BZD 2.292533
CAD 1.621078
CDF 2583.556657
CHF 0.922952
CLF 0.026723
CLP 1051.752471
CNY 7.749471
CNH 7.754884
COP 3913.785591
CRC 519.769209
CUC 1.140643
CUP 30.227039
CVE 110.235328
CZK 24.267196
DJF 202.988032
DKK 7.474067
DOP 67.952901
DZD 151.914408
EGP 56.154878
ERN 17.109645
ETB 182.454989
FJD 2.561599
FKP 0.860404
GBP 0.861243
GEL 3.011512
GGP 0.860404
GHS 12.903583
GIP 0.860404
GMD 83.832783
GNF 9992.48557
GTQ 8.696659
GYD 238.436866
HKD 8.94669
HNL 30.50179
HRK 7.533488
HTG 149.042496
HUF 356.076847
IDR 20469.750748
ILS 3.400827
IMP 0.860404
INR 108.036686
IQD 1493.330776
IRR 1569524.737008
ISK 143.789575
JEP 0.860404
JMD 179.601657
JOD 0.808731
JPY 185.632826
KES 147.655742
KGS 99.748808
KHR 4587.845551
KMF 492.75784
KPW 1026.579079
KRW 1770.996664
KWD 0.353188
KYD 0.949965
KZT 546.247336
LAK 25566.790719
LBP 102076.32452
LKR 383.015226
LRD 206.884314
LSL 18.655269
LTL 3.368022
LVL 0.689964
LYD 7.323157
MAD 10.712963
MDL 20.142108
MGA 4835.698394
MKD 61.635434
MMK 2394.907224
MNT 4086.905405
MOP 9.207923
MRU 45.550538
MUR 53.792431
MVR 17.634306
MWK 1976.567975
MXN 19.98817
MYR 4.667538
MZN 72.830569
NAD 18.655269
NGN 1574.281378
NIO 41.949444
NOK 11.327554
NPR 172.556579
NZD 2.010321
OMR 0.438575
PAB 1.139893
PEN 3.89592
PGK 5.00674
PHP 70.270407
PKR 316.977838
PLN 4.298964
PYG 6932.225242
QAR 4.166678
RON 5.243761
RSD 117.324291
RUB 89.936956
RWF 1670.850264
SAR 4.279123
SBD 9.199332
SCR 16.874381
SDG 684.980032
SEK 11.091362
SGD 1.478125
SHP 0.851605
SLE 28.290454
SLL 23918.7171
SOS 651.424659
SRD 42.779245
STD 23609.006688
STN 24.493837
SVC 9.974534
SYP 126.077661
SZL 18.652306
THB 38.045572
TJS 10.532465
TMT 4.003657
TND 3.378291
TOP 2.746395
TRY 53.239603
TTD 7.737121
TWD 36.354574
TZS 2999.888714
UAH 51.08425
UGX 4177.893767
USD 1.140643
UYU 45.757684
UZS 13684.556527
VES 709.757701
VND 30018.301243
VUV 136.989364
WST 3.171996
XAF 655.780486
XAG 0.019877
XAU 0.000288
XCD 3.082645
XCG 2.054392
XDR 0.81558
XOF 655.791982
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.162817
ZAR 18.738198
ZMK 10267.163288
ZMW 20.54692
ZWL 367.286573
  • CMSC

    -0.0528

    21.64

    -0.24%

  • RBGPF

    0.6100

    65.61

    +0.93%

  • RYCEF

    0.7100

    19.1

    +3.72%

  • VOD

    -0.4650

    13.225

    -3.52%

  • BCE

    -0.7500

    21.51

    -3.49%

  • NGG

    -0.8900

    82.87

    -1.07%

  • BCC

    -1.6300

    77.63

    -2.1%

  • RIO

    0.6400

    94.93

    +0.67%

  • GSK

    -0.3900

    52.42

    -0.74%

  • RELX

    0.3800

    31.67

    +1.2%

  • JRI

    0.1000

    12.96

    +0.77%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    21.9

    0%

  • AZN

    -1.3300

    189.62

    -0.7%

  • BP

    -0.4000

    36.95

    -1.08%

  • BTI

    -0.9800

    61.76

    -1.59%

Farrell keeps the faith in Irish still being at rugby's top table
Farrell keeps the faith in Irish still being at rugby's top table / Photo: Alain JOCARD - AFP

Farrell keeps the faith in Irish still being at rugby's top table

Ireland head coach Andy Farrell said despite the 36-14 hammering by France in their Six Nations opener he believes he has the players "to make sure that we are constantly up there at the top of world rugby".

Text size:

Farrell struck an upbeat tone despite a second successive heavy defeat by the French -- they lost 42-29 in Dublin last year -- illustrating the yawning gap that has grown between the two teams that have dominated the championship in the past four editions.

The manner of Thursday's defeat will only add to the impression the Irish are a team in decline and a shadow of the side that achieved the 2023 Grand Slam and came heartbreakingly close to reaching their first ever Rugby World Cup semi-final later that year.

Farrell, though clearly unhappy with the performance, said he was confident the Irish would be competitive with the leading rugby powers with the next World Cup in Australia in less than two years.

The French defeat comes after disappointing performances against both New Zealand and world champions South Africa last November.

"I am, because I know the people that we've got," he replied when asked was he confident the gap could be closed.

"I know the good people that we've got, the good players that are not just here but who are at home as well.

"I know that there's a determined group to make sure that we are constantly up there at the top of world rugby to be able to compete and that will always be the case."

- 'Better showing' -

Farrell has to not only restore battered morale but also make some tough selection calls with a vastly-improved Italy due in Dublin on February 14. Ireland won last year's encounter 22-17 in Rome.

His room for manoeuvre on changing the starting XV is already limited with several key players injured.

Farrell said the Irish had to move on from Thursday's eye-opening defeat, "otherwise, the disappointment stands for absolutely zero."

"We have to be honest with each other and say it as it is," said the 50-year-old Englishman.

"We're all up to work on it next week and make sure that this stands for something.

"We need to use it, not just individually but collectively, to make sure that we give a better showing of ourselves during the rest of this competition.

"Obviously, starting with Italy next week."

Two things Farrell and his fellow coaches will be working on is tackling, they missed 38, and also winning the 50-50 balls. Often seen as a strength, they won just four of the 19 contested.

Farrell said if there was a positive to take from a depressing night, it was a wake-up call to the players.

"We learned a lot about the team and the individuals and I suppose these type of occasions, these type of events, are a first for quite a few of our group," he said.

"Every game that you play for your country, whether it be a big win or a tough loss, there has to be a learning curve and we have to take those learnings from that.

"As a group and as individuals, we need to use it in the right manner and move on."

However, the former British rugby league great implied that what had taken place on the training ground had not been transferred onto the Stade de France pitch.

"I felt that we had the right intentions with our preparation of how we wanted to play the game," he said.

"You cannot play the game at this level without having the right intention.

"It's an absolute must and it's the first thing that has to be on the list, to make sure that it's delivered every single time that we take a field."

(T.Renner--BBZ)