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A Marcus Smith drop goal in the final play of the game secured England a 23-22 win over Guinness Six Nations leaders Ireland, ending the visitors’ hopes of back-to-back Grand Slams.
It was a significant improvement from Steve Borthwick’s side from the first three rounds of the Championship, or indeed any match of his tenure.
Ireland started the match like a team chasing a Grand Slam, and were able to notch three points on the board after only two minutes following a series of sniping runs around the breakdown.
But England bounced back from the early penalty to score the first and only try of the first half through Ollie Lawrence.
A George Ford penalty ten minutes later extended England’s lead to 8-3, but Ireland were able to capitalise on the hosts’ increasing ill-discipline, and built a 12-8 half-time lead through the boot of Jack Crowley.
Ireland looked as though they were going to pull away early in the second half following a James Lowe try, but England were able to respond within minutes through George Furbank. With both tries unconverted, a four-point gap was restored.
England had regained the momentum, and a yellow card to Ireland captain Peter O’Mahony after a Ben Earl break gifted England a chance to kick for the corner and go for the try. The hosts were able to deliver, with player of the match Earl scoring and Ford converting to give England a 20-17 lead with 20 minutes remaining.
With a full squad back on the field, Ireland fired back in the final ten minutes, with Lowe scoring his second of the match to leave Ireland with a 22-20 lead heading into the final minutes.
After a long range penalty from Elliot Daly went wayward, it appeared Ireland would hold on for the win before England launched a late surge on Ireland’s line. With a penalty advantage, Smith avoided the tension of a last-play penalty by kicking a drop goal from in front of the posts to send a raucous Twickenham crowd wild.
Ireland remain at the top of the Six Nations table ahead of a home fixture against Scotland in round five, but their hopes of making history with back-to-back Grand Slams were dashed by an England team that were vastly improved from the one that lost the Calcutta Cup in round three.
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