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JUST WHEN HE thought he was in, they pulled Tommy Bowe back out.
54:17 on the clock and Ireland trailing Wales 15-9. They’d gone through 32 phases of attack in the home side’s defensive territory, drawing Liam Williams into a breakdown penalty and then kicking into the corner.
The maul rumbled, before Conor Murray peeled away on an arcing run as Robbie Henshaw and Johnny Sexton ran the decoy lines to his left. Between the midfield pair, Bowe came galloping onto Murray’s pass and the space in front of him seemed to open ideally.
Source: RBS Six Nations
It took a supreme defensive re-adjustment from Jamie Roberts to save the try, as the Wales inside centre shifted his feet back in after being initially drawn to Sexton.
The story of the day in some ways; Ireland so close to cutting the Welsh, halted by a magnificent read and tackle.
“I was close alright,” said Bowe post-match. “I think if I had have maybe went for it, it would have been pulled up for a double movement, which is frustrating. I thought the gap was there for me to go straight through, but unfortunately I just got taken down.
“We were so close on so many occasions and I suppose it’s credit to the Welsh defence, they put their bodies on the line and made it very, very difficult for us.”
Fast forward to the 61:38 mark and Wales are diving over Ireland’s tryline through Scott Williams, giving Joe Schmidt’s side something of a lesson in clinical attack inside the opposition 22.
Source: RBS 6 Nations/YouTube
Bowe was close to this one again, drifting off Williams and onto Jonathan Davies as he appeared to expect Jamie Heaslip inside to do the same out onto Williams. Instead, the number eight shot up hard off the defensive line in towards Dan Biggar.
“I think it was just maybe a bit of a mix-up between us in there,” said Bowe. “Looking back at it, I’m not too sure. I’ll need to go back and look at it to see how it unfolded. I suppose it was a soft try in the end.”