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Ireland v South Africa: Autumn Nations Series rugby union – live | Autumn Nations Series



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22 min: SA don’t maul. Instead they go off the top to set up Kolisi with a crash ball in midfield. A couple of skip passes find Moodie who tries to chip over the top. It’s deflected out. Another line-out for the Boks.

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21 min: SFM takes a mark but doesn’t kick it out. Prendergast kicks himself and does find touch. But he’s outside his 22 so SA will get the throw and a huge territorial win. With an extra man in the tight five now is the time to maul.

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Yellow-card and no try! Ireland (Ryan, 20) Ireland 0-5 South Africa

Oh hang on! They’re going to chalk this off! Ryan came flying off his feet in a build-up ruck and made head to head contact with Marx. He’s rightly shown a yellow card and the try is struck from the record.

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Updated at 13.12 EST

TRY! Ireland 5-5 South Africa (Beirne, 20)

Beirne is over! Prendergast missed the simple penalty but hit the left upright flush. Lowe was quickest to the rebound and Ireland came storming forward. Van der Flier made ground before Beirne, from two metres out, powered over!

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17 min: Ireland go to the front of the line-out but Etzebeth is there, making a mess of the ball. It spills loose and Thomas du Toit gathers it but is bundled out of touch. So Ireland get another throw. Once again the Boks infringe, entering a midfield maul from the side. Pieter-Steph du Toit the guilty party I think. This is kickable and Prendergast takes the option to shoot at goal from the 22, just to the left of the sticks.

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16 min: Ringrose spots a bit of open space and kicks into it. it’s almost perfect but no matter, the Boks were offside at that ruck so Ireland get the chance to set a line-out on the world champions’ 22.

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16 min: Both teams are going berserk at the breakdown, making life so tough for the two nines. Counter rucks and counter, counter rucks aplenty. A bit of kick tennis ends with SA on the ball in their own half. Reinach slows it down a touch before hoisting a high kick that lands on halfway. Hansen does well to secure possession.

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14 min: SA kick off the line-out and their rush defence pins Ireland back in their own half. Ireland then kick themselves, hanging it high. Willemse gets up and spills backwards. Kriel gathers off the deck but knocks forward. Scrum to Ireland just inside from halfway to their right. Phew. It might read and stop-start but this is breathless.

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11 min: Soft penalty for South Africa as Lowe just gets his timing wrong, making contact with Willemse as the SA fullback was still in the air fielding a high kick. SFM skews his kick so doesn’t make a lot of territory, but he finds touch at least. Line-out to the Boks inside their own half.

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10 min: The Boks scrum wins a penalty but they don’t hang about as the backs come flooding forward. They go from right all the way to Moodie on the left who stands up a tackler and gets over halfway. The ball moves towards centre field where SFM tries a grubber that doesn’t come off so Ireland are back on the ball until they kick it away. SA line-out inside their own patch. This is a proper rugby match! Great tempo.

James Lowe gets away from Cheslin Kolbe. Photograph: Niall Carson/PAShare

Updated at 13.08 EST

8 min: South Africa steal the ball metres from their line! Ireland went coast to coast and looked to have made the ground when Lowe passed back inside for O’Brien, but the young winger was isolated for a fraction of a second and Pieter-Steph du Toit stole in and won the ball on the ground. Brilliant defence from the world champs. The clearing kick makes good ground and Ireland throw, but not straight. So South Africa will have the scrum feed on their own 22. What a defensive set!

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7 min: NO CARD! I think SFM got away with that. It is a penalty for Ireland. Not even a yellow. We’ll debate this in the coming week. Anyway, Ireland line-out five out.

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7 min: Could be a card coming. SFM looked to have hit O’Brien on the right wing with his shoulder. It came off the back of brilliance from Lowe on the opposite wing who skinned Kolbe. Then Ireland charged forward with Hansen joining the line. The pass to O’Brien was short which gave the covering defence a chance to make the ground. du Toit made the first hit and SFM came in and never looked like wrapping his arm. I tell you what, this could be a third red card. I hope not. But could be.

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TRY! Ireland 0-5 South Africa (Willemse, 4)

Stunning! Springboks rugby in microcosm. The line-out forms into a formidable maul that won the penalty and powered forward. Then de Allende breaks from midfield and sticthes an off-load for Wiese. They recycle. SFM to Kolbe who sniped through a gap and passed to Willemse on the left wing. The fullback dived to the corner to dot down. A simply brilliant score that silences the crowd. SFM can’t land the conversion.

Damian Willemse takes the flag and the try! Photograph: Charles McQuillan/Getty ImagesShare

Updated at 12.56 EST

3 min: Ireland go over the top at the line-out and van der Flier gets the better of Wiese. But the Boks No 8 regathers himself and soon after gets over the ball and wins a penalty on the floor. Feinberg-Mngomezulu (SFM) hoofs it to touch on halfway.

Ireland’s Ryan Baird on the move. Photograph: Clodagh Kilcoyne/ReutersShare

Updated at 12.52 EST

2 min: Early penalty for Ireland. Twice in two minutes they found Lowe free on the left wing with lovely skip passes. Efficient start from Ireland. Now they’ll get the line-out just beyond the Boks’ 22.

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Alrighty, Matthew Carley blows his whistle and away we go!!

Boks in green, Ireland in white.

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Stirring stuff. Can the players answer Ireland’s call? They clobbered the Wallabies by a record score but this is a different bag of biltong.

I think a win today would count as Farrell’s best in a one-off Test.

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Anthems now. We’re getting close!

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Siya Kolisi is leading Catherine Connolly as he introduces the President of Ireland to his players.

Caelan Doris does likewise.

Big moment for the President. Big moment for Irish rugby. Big game! BIG RUGBY!

Ireland’s President Catherine Connolly meets the South Africa players. Photograph: Clodagh Kilcoyne/ReutersShare

Updated at 12.43 EST

RG Snyman leads the teams out on his 50th Test appearance.

The Leinster lock will be desperate to get one over his club teammates.

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“For us it’s massive.”

Rassie Erasmus isn’t downplaying how badly he wants this. He’s acheived everything in this game but he’s never beaten Ireland in Ireland.

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That last stat will be the one that should concern Irish fans.

The Boks – like England – have targeted the final 20 minutes of the game. It’s not just the Bomb Squad and the firepower from the bench, but a recalibration in how teams set themselves up.

Kwagga Smith and Andre Esterhuizen will look to open up a fragmenting game. Will the Irish be able to match that injection of tempo?

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How about some stats:

– Ireland have won four of their last five Tests against South Africa

– The Springboks have won their last six internationals

– South Africa fly-half Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu’s six international tries have all been scored in 2025

– The second half has produced the most points in nine of South Africa’s last 11 Tests

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South Africa team

Ireland have their young hot-shot 10, South Africa have theirs.

Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu is a future World Rugby Player of the Year (you can hold me to that). Now is his chance to prove that.

He’s got a formidable pack in front of him and a settled midfield of Jesse Kriel and Damian de Allende behind him.

Canan Moodie adds height to the wing and Andre Esterhuizen continues his role as a hybrid off the bench. Is he a flank? Is he a centre? Does it matter?

South Africa: 15 D Willemse; 14 C Moodie, 13 J Kriel, 12 D De Allende, 11 C Kolbe; 10 S Feinberg-Mngomezulu, 9 C Reinach; 1 B Venter, 2 M Marx, 3 T du Toit, 4 E Etzebeth, 5 R Nortje, 6 S Kolisi (capt), 7 PS du Toit, 8 J Wiese.

Replacements: 16 J Grobbelaar, 17 G Steenekamp, 18 W Louw, 19 RG Snyman, 20 K Smith, 21 A Esterhuizen, 22 G Williams, 23 M Libbok.

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Ireland team

Sam Prendergasr gets the nod at fly-half as an otherwise settled side takes aim at the world champions.

Experience duo Garry Ringrose and Josh van der Flier return with gnarled veterans joining them across the park.

In the pack, Andrew Porter, Dan Sheehan and Tadhg Furlong are the starting front row, with James Ryan and Tadhg Beirne in the engine room. There’s no tougher test for a pack in world rugby than a clash with the Boks. All these men will need to stand up.

Ireland: 15 M Hansen; 14 T O’Brien, 13 G Ringrose, 12 B Aki, 11 J Lowe; 10 S Prendergast, 9 J Gibson-Park; 1 A Porter, 2 D Sheehan, 3 T Furlong, 4 J Ryan, 5 T Beirne, 6 R Baird, 7 J van der Flier, 8 C Doris (cap).

Replacements: 16 R Kelleher, 17 P McCarthy, 18 F Bealham, 19 C Prendergast, 20 J Conan, 21 C Casey, 22 J Crowley, 23 T Farrell.

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Settle in!

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Updated at 11.44 EST

Teams and further updates to come.

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Updated at 11.44 EST

Kick-off at 5.40pm GMT.

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Updated at 11.44 EST

This is the one game that both coaches want. If it lives up to the billing, it could be the game of the year.

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Updated at 11.44 EST

But Andy Farrell is a slick operator and would have circled this date in red on his calendar long before Erasmus and his gang touched down at Dublin Airport. He’ll no doubt have a few tricks up his sleeve.

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Updated at 11.44 EST

Ireland, though, have not managed to kick on in quote the same fashion. The loss of Johnny Sexton is still keenly felt and there is an over reliance on some players who are in the autumn of their careers.

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Updated at 11.44 EST

Ireland are not the team they were two years ago and the South Africans will start as favourites. They have retained a core group of gnarled veterans while blooding young talents. They can strike on the counter, break teams down through methodical phase play and crash over opponents with sheer, unrivalled heft. There’s a reason sober rugby minds have wondered if they are the equal to Richie McCaw’s All Blacks.

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Updated at 11.43 EST

He has never won in Dublin. In fact, Ireland is the one team that has had his number wherever he’s played them. A 1-1 drawn series on his own patch came after a defeat in the World Cup. And though the Springboks lifted the Webb Ellis Cup for a second consecutive time, this one itch remains unscratched.

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Updated at 11.43 EST

Here we go …

Daniel Gallan

Rassie Erasmus has ticked every box as South Africa’s all-conquering coach. Except one.

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Updated at 11.43 EST

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