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Ireland U-18 Schools Side Run Out Six-Try Winners Against Italy

The Ireland Under-18 Schools team, sponsored by PwC, closed out the U-18 Men’s Six Nations Festival with a well-judged 40-14 win over Italy in Marcoussis.

UNDER-18 MEN’S SIX NATIONS FESTIVAL: Sunday, April 17

ITALY UNDER-18s 14 IRELAND U-18 SCHOOLS 40, Stade Pierre Camou, Marcoussis
Scorers: Italy: Tries: Nicola Bozzo, Cesare Zucconi; Cons: Giovanni Cinquegrani 2
Ireland: Tries: Ben O’Connor, Hugo McLaughlin 2, Sam Berman, Harry Long, Danny Sheahan; Cons: Jack Murphy 3, Sean Naughton 2
HT: Italy 0 Ireland 26

Match Photo Gallery: Italy U-18s 14 Ireland U-18 Schools 40

Paul Barr’s side built on their 46-26 midweek victory over Wales, racking up six tries with winger Hugo McLaughlin taking his tally for the Easter tournament to three.

It is the first time Ireland have won two games at an U-18 Six Nations Festival and bodes well for these players, who will chase further representative honours in the coming years.

Ireland’s backs shared out four first half tries, Ben O’Connor, Gonzaga College’s McLaughlin (2) and captain Sam Berman all dotting down with Jack Murphy adding three conversions for a 26-0 half-time lead.

Italy, who had lost flanker Vittorio Padoan to a yellow card, revived their fortunes with converted scores from Nicola Bozzo and Cesare Zucconi in quick succession.

The pressure was back on Ireland, but they rose to it with two tries in the final 10 minutes from Harry Long and Danny Sheahan, both converted by fellow replacement Sean Naughton.

The bright morning sunshine and well-manicured pitch invited both teams to play attacking rugby, with lineout steals by excellent lock Evan O’Connell and Andrew Sparrow, and a ground-gaining maul, giving Ireland some early encouragement.

Tom Stewart was held up in the 10th minute after strong carrying from his front row colleagues Zac Solomon and Sparrow, but the opening try arrived from some sharp footballing skills just a couple of minutes later.

Playing an advantage for an Italian knock-on, Brian Gleeson got the ball back to Jake O’Riordan whose clever cross-field kick put Leonardo Sodo Migliori under pressure. The inrushing O’Connor got his right boot to the ball, nudging it through for a smart finish.

Murphy’s conversion bounced over off both posts, and Ireland did not have long to wait for their second try. A pacy attack spread out to the left where full-back O’Connor’s overhead pass took out two defenders and put McLaughlin over to make it 12-0.

Turnover penalties won by O’Connell and Stephen Smyth broke up Italian attacks, and Ireland’s well-drilled maul continued to make metres with successive collapses by Italy leading to Padoan’s sin-binning.

Prop Sparrow drove up close from the penalty before O’Riordan’s speedy pass sent Berman over wide on the left with 25 minutes on the clock. Out-half Murphy drew over the conversion with aplomb.

A brilliant run from the restart by O’Connell quickly brought Ireland back into the Italian half, but the Azzurrini defended well with seven forwards, blindside Valerio Siciliano earning a turnover penalty close to his own line.

Lorenzo Elettri threatened with a break out to the left, but Smyth was quickest to the breakdown a few phases later. Italy were duly stung with a try past the 35-minute mark, McLaughlin darting clear from deep and Murphy’s perfectly-timed return pass put the winger in behind the posts.

Murphy converted to put 26 points between the sides, but two overcooked kicks from the Pres Bray youngster, coupled with an Italian scrum penalty, saw Roberto Santamaria’s charges grow into the game on the resumption.

Although O’Connell thwarted them at the breakdown again, Italy got back into scoring range with strong running from Sodo Migliori and Padoan. They worked the ball out to the right where centre Bozzo evaded a couple of tackles for a well-taken 47th-minute try.

With 17 minutes remaining, Italy had cut the gap back to 12 points thanks to Zucconi’s try, set up by fellow replacement Lorenzo Nanni and converted by Giovanni Cinquegrani.

It was a tricky spell for Ireland to negotiate, with Italy’s tails up as they forced a couple of penalties in defence. In response, an opportunist score settled the issue on the hour mark as the Irish bench provided impact.

Oliver Coffey’s box kick was misjudged by Cinquegrani, Inigo Cruise O’Brien swooped on the bouncing ball and charged up to the Italian 22 where he offloaded for Long to finish off. Naughton added the extras.

Ireland’s forwards finally got in on the act right at the death. O’Connell won another penalty at the breakdown and set up a lineout drive which saw Sheahan break off to power over for his second try of the festival. Naughton made it a 26-point winning margin.

UNDER-18 MEN’S SIX NATIONS FESTIVAL RESULTS:

Day 1 –

Italy 17 Scotland 31
Wales 14 England 33
France 28 Ireland 23

Day 2 –

France 32 Scotland 10
Ireland 46 Wales 26
Italy 21 England 28

Day 3 –

Italy 14 Ireland 40
England 18 Scotland 15
France 66 Wales 21

ITALY U-18: Francesco Imberti (Cus Torino); Marco Scalabrin (Benetton Rugby), Lorenzo Elettri (Verona Rugby), Nicola Bozzo (Sedbergh School), Leonardo Sodo Migliori (Lazio Rugby 1927); Giovanni Cinquegrani (Benetton Rugby), Lorenzo Casilio (Wasps Academy); Sam Luciano Ferrari (Northampton Saints Academy), Andrea Frattolillo (Petrarca Rugby), Marco Francesco Gallorini (Vasari Junior Arezzo), Samuele Mirenzi (VII Rugby Torino), Tommaso Ferrari (Unione Rugby Capitolina), Valerio Siciliano (Unione Rugby Capitolina), Vittorio Padoan (Benetton Rugby), Jacopo Botturi (Transvecta Calvisano) (capt).

Replacements: Nicholas Gasperini (Rugby Perugia), Francesco Gandossi (Rugby Rovato), Valerio Cordi’ (Lazio Rugby 1927), Andrea Toninelli (Rugby Rovato), Giovanni Telandro (Petrarca Rugby), Mattia Jimenez (Petrarca Rugby), Matteo Bianco (Lazio Rugby 1927), Lorenzo Nanni (Livorno Rugby), Cesare Zucconi (Cavalieri UR Prato-Sesto), Giacomo Valzella (Benetton Rugby), Simone Brisighella (Rugby Viadana 1970).

IRELAND U-18 SCHOOLS: Ben O’Connor (Presentation Brothers College Cork/Munster); Stephen Kiely (Castletroy College/Munster), Sam Berman (St. Michael’s College/Leinster) (capt), Luke Kritzinger (Blackrock College/Leinster), Hugo McLaughlin (Gonzaga College/Leinster); Jack Murphy (Presentation College Bray/Leinster), Jake O’Riordan (St. Munchin’s College/Munster); Tom Stewart (St. Michael’s College/Leinster), Zac Solomon (Campbell College/Ulster), Andrew Sparrow (St. Mary’s College/Leinster), Evan O’Connell (Castletroy College/Munster), Joe Hopes (Campbell College/Ulster), Stephen Smyth (Kilkenny College/Leinster), Tom Brigg (Blackrock College/Leinster), Brian Gleeson (Rockwell College/Munster).

Replacements: Danny Sheahan (Presentation Brothers College Cork/Munster), Emmet Calvey (Ardscoil Ris/Munster), Jacob Boyd (Royal Belfast Academical Institute/Ulster), Jacob Sheahan (Presentation Brothers College Cork/Munster), Inigo Cruise O’Brien (Blackrock College/Leinster), Oliver Coffey (Blackrock College/Leinster), Sean Naughton (Kilkenny College/Leinster), Ruben Moloney (Blackrock College/Leinster), Josh Stevens (Methodist College/Ulster), Finn Treacy (Presentation College Bray/Leinster), Harry Long (Ardscoil Ris/Munster).

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Dave Mervyn

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