Rugby · World Cup Ireland

O'Sullivan under no illusions

Eddie O'Sullivan admits Ireland have reached 'crisis' point as they enter the decisive period of their World Cup group campaign.

Ireland face France, who thrashed Namibia 87-10 last night, in a daunting Pool D encounter the hosts must win if they are to qualify for the quarter-finals.

Defeat to Les Bleus would probably leave Brian O'Driscoll's side requiring a bonus-point victory against Argentina to progress further in the competition.

But shambolic victories over minnows Namibia and Georgia have done significant damage to confidence levels and cranked up tension in the camp.

A dramatic improvement will be needed if Ireland are to register their first victory in Paris since 2000 and O'Sullivan knows the pressure is mounting.

'It's a big week that's for sure, although I'm not sure if it's my biggest week,' he said.

'Once France had lost to Argentina, Friday was always going to be a pivotal match in the group.

'The way we have been playing I understand why people are saying that we are in a crisis.

'We know our standard has to go way up. We know what is needed to compete at this level.

'We have competed well at this level in the past. But our first two performances in the tournament were nowhere near that.

'We know that's the benchmark we must reach. There's no hiding from that. We know if we play poorly we'll get well beaten.

'And I know what it's like to play badly in Paris. We know what the challenge is this week.'

 
Ireland coach Eddie O'Sullivan
Ireland coach Eddie O'Sullivan
Related Stories
Sport Headlines

Match Tracker

FT: France 7 - 8 New Zealand

RWC Interview: 'Chasing The Blues'

Brendan Cole meets RWC 2007 documentary 'Chasing The Blues' makers Hector O'hEochagáin and Risteárd Cooper. Read

RWC 10 Questions: Bernard Jackman

Bernard Jackman on the match of the tournament, an interesting law change that might limit tactical kicking and why Ireland should be able to return to form.Read

RWC 10 Questions: Conor O'Shea

Conor O'Shea tells us his player of the tournament, why South Africa deserved to win and how things aren't all that glum for Ireland.Read

RWC 10 Questions: Brent Pope

Brent Pope on whether or not the best team won, what Ireland should do next, and where the game is going.Read

RWC Analysis: Conor O'Shea

Read Conor O'Shea on how South Africa got the mix right between squad and first XV, and why Ireland can take heart from the finalists' journeys. Read

RWC Final Ratings: South Africa

Which prop got nine? Who was the best back? We rate the South Africa RWC final displays, and you can too. Read

RWC Final Ratings: England

England were brave in defeat against the Springboks; we rate the players, and you can too. Read

RWC Top 10: Ireland Solutions

Read Brendan Cole's Top 10 Solutions to the problems that Ireland experienced at RWC 2007, and then rate them yourself. Read

RWC Top 10: Reasons Ireland Flopped

Why did Ireland flop at RWC 2007? Check out our Top 10, and then register your opinion via our user ratings system.Read

RWC Ratings: Forwards And Coach

Out thought and out muscled, Ireland's forwards struggled during RWC 2007. We rate their performances, and that of coach Eddie O'Sullivan. Read

RWC Le Grand Flop: Back Ratings

After a disappointingly brief RWC 2007 for Ireland, we rate the tournament long perfomances of the thirteen backs in the squad, and you can too.Read

 
Inpho.ie