Farrell's hails 'powerful' Six Nations for injury-hit Ireland


DUBLIN, March 14 (Reuters) - Ireland's ⁠ability to overcome a pre-Six Nations injury crisis and contend with so many inexperienced players ⁠made for a "powerful" campaign that will stand them in good stead for next year's ‌World Cup, coach Andy Farrell said on Saturday.

Ireland were at their ruthless best in a thrilling 43-21 win over Scotland that secured a Triple Crown and kept them in the hunt for a third Six Nations title in four years if ​England beat France later in Paris.

Missing around a dozen players ⁠for the tournament, Farrell began on Saturday ⁠with four of the team who started in Scotland a year ago. Six Nations debutant Darragh ⁠Murray ‌became the 35th different Irishman to take the field in the last six weeks.

"The story of this Six Nations has been a powerful one for us, certainly internally... How the group ⁠have come together and navigated their way through has been pretty ​special," Farrell told a news ‌conference.

"It's been a hell of an eight weeks but what's happened over that eight ⁠weeks matters more to ​us in a sense that there's been a lot of firsts, with the first caps, first Six Nations and first taking it to the final week, when it matters."

Farrell recalled how he had asked the players with ⁠10 caps or less to stand up during a meeting ​at the squad's pre-tournament camp. He singled out Tommy O'Brien, Rob Baloucoune and Jamie Osborne for having excellent tournaments among the 14 relative novices in the 37-man squad.

Farrell also picked out a couple of standout ⁠stories - Tom O'Toole, who he said should be unbelievably proud of moving across from tighthead prop after Ireland lost their four first-choice looseheads, and centre Stuart McCloskey, who the coach said was a strong candidate for player of the tournament.

While Ireland were inconsistent in parts of the campaign - outclassed in ​Paris and fortunate to win at home to Italy - Saturday's controlled performance ⁠over a buoyant Scotland showed their record win in England last month was no fluke.

"It was so ​pleasing because they played bloody well, they kept banging the door ‌down the whole time. I thought we had ​a ruthless edge to us in how we defended and converted in the 22, that was the story of the game," Farrell said.

(Reporting by Padraic Halpin, editing by Ed Osmond)

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