Ireland were crowned Grand Slam champions on Irish soil for the first time since 1948 after victory over England.
Dan Sheehan's two tries and further scores from Robbie Henshaw and Rob Herring ultimately elevated Andy Farrell's class of 2023 alongside the heroes of 1948, 2009 and 2018 on a historic occasion at a rowdy Aviva Stadium.
It is Ireland's fourth Grand Slam, and the first time it has been clinched at Lansdowne Road. Their first was won in Belfast 75 years ago, with the 2009 and 2018 Slams sealed in Cardiff and Twickenham respectively.
Here is how Farrell’s side were crowned champions...
Wales 10-34 Ireland

A statement victory for Ireland in the opening game of the tournament as two early tries quashed any hopes of Warren Gatland making a winning return to the Wales coaches' box.
Caelan Doris and James Ryan both touched down within nine minutes of the kick-off to quieten the Cardiff crowd, while James Lowe’s intercept try put the result to bed before half-time.
Ireland’s performance levels dropped after the interval but Josh van der Flier’s late try ensured they took maximum points from the Principality Stadium.
Ireland 32-19 France
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No 1 faced No 2 in the world for the first time in Six Nations history and it was Ireland who emerged victorious after one of the championship’s greatest games.
Ireland outscored the defending champions by four tries to one, with three of them coming in the opening 26 minutes as Hugo Keenan, James Lowe and Andrew Porter all crossed.
Ireland left a number of other try-scoring opportunities behind them, however, and France remained in the contest thanks to the boot of Thomas Ramos and a stunning Damian Penaud try.
It wasn’t until Garry Ringrose danced down the wing with nine minutes remaining that Irish fans could breathe a sigh of relief. A three-game losing streak against Les Bleus had been snapped in style.
Italy 20-34 Ireland

Ireland found the going tough for large spells in Rome, where Italy exposed defensive cracks in the visitors’ new-look midfield.
The try bonus was secured inside 34 minutes, James Ryan, Hugo Keenan, Bundee Aki and Mack Hansen all touching down, but Italy responded with two tries of their own as just seven points separated the sides at the break.
Italy 0-5 Ireland: James Ryan opens the scoring for the visitors with a well-taken try after a lightening start for the visitors.
— RTÉ Rugby (@RTErugby) February 25, 2023
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Hansen’s second try on 70 minutes finally put the game to bed, with Ross Byrne kicking nine points on his first Six Nations start, but the patchy performance left plenty of room for improvement.
Scotland 7-22 Ireland
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Ireland showcased their incredible resilience as not even a spate of injuries could derail their title push at Murrayfield.
Caelan Doris, Dan Sheehan and Iain Henderson were all forced off inside the opening 23 minutes but despite that disruption, and Scotland dominating large swathes of an attritional first half, Ireland led 8-7 at the break courtesy of Mack Hansen’s try.
The injury list kept on growing, with Josh van der Flier taking over lineout throwing and Cian Healy packing down at hooker when Rónan Kelleher departed, but Ireland never flinched.
They kept their hosts scoreless from the 16th minute until the final whistle, with tries from James Lowe and Jack Conan either side of the hour mark securing an eighth successive victory over Scotland.
Ireland 29-16 England

Ireland were overwhelming favourites to complete a clean sweep against a struggling England side at the Aviva Stadium but they were made to work extremely hard for their victory.
There was a nervousness to Ireland's game as England moved into a 6-0 lead, and even Dan Sheehan's 34th-minute try and the controversial dismissal of Freddie Steward before the interval failed to settle them.
Just one point separated the sides at the hour mark but Robbie Henshaw alleviated the mounting tension by crossing in the 62nd minute on his first start of this year's competition, before further tries from hookers Sheehan and Rob Herring sandwiched a Jamie George score and ensured a winning finale for Johnny Sexton.
The Ireland captain moved clear of Ronan O'Gara as the competition’s all-time record points scorer with a penalty and three conversions to take his overall tally to 566 on his Six Nations swansong.
🎧 ''Welcome to the home of the Grand Slam champions'
— RTÉ Rugby (@RTErugby) March 18, 2023
Listen to @MichaelC_RTE and @LenihanDonal react to Ireland's Grand Slam triumph on @SatSportRTE @RTERadio1 #rterugby pic.twitter.com/BYZduaxfTA