Ireland put 33 points on a Wales side sitting bottom of the table and the margin reflects both the gulf in standings and the efficiency with which the home side converted territorial control. This was not a contest decided by a moment of individual brilliance or a refereeing call. It was won in repeated gainline success, in Wafer's 112-metre afternoon from number eight, and in Ireland's ability to score five tries while holding the ball for 62% of the match. Wales made 230 tackles and still conceded 552 metres; that is the arithmetic of a side without the ball and without the scoreboard leverage to force Ireland into risk. The result moves Ireland clear in third with 15 points; Wales remain winless at the foot of the table with three points and a points difference of minus 114. Wafer's twin-try performance from the base of the scrum is the kind of ballcarrying output that wins player-of-the-match honours and changes how opposing sides have to defend the Irish pack.
Ireland won three quarters of their carries over the gainline and Wales could not live with the physics of that pressure.
The home side posted 108 successful carries from 142 attempts, a 76% return that turned possession into advancing metreage with relentless consistency. Wales, by contrast, managed 54 successful carries from 83 attempts and a 65% strike rate that left them chasing the game from the 43rd minute onward. Ireland ran 174 times for 552 metres; Wales ran 92 times for 313 metres. The volume gap is possession; the efficiency gap is execution.
Eve Higgins made 73 metres and beat five defenders from outside centre, offering the kind of direct running threat that forced Wales to commit numbers and opened space elsewhere. Beibhinn Parsons added 63 metres and five defenders beaten from the wing, scoring once in the 29th minute. Dannah O'Brien contributed 50 metres from fly-half, orchestrating the tempo without needing to dominate the carry count herself.
Wales' best carrier was Courtney Keight, who made 36 metres and beat four defenders from inside centre but could not convert individual moments into sustained pressure. The visitors offloaded five times to Ireland's nine, a symptom of the contact area dominance Ireland enjoyed throughout. Ireland's 2.45 carry efficiency rating sits comfortably ahead of Wales' 2.05, and that gap played out in phase after phase of Irish forward momentum that Wales could slow but not stop.
Ireland won all six scrums and 13 of 16 lineouts; Wales matched the scrum return but could not turn parity into platform.
Both sides posted 100% scrum success, Ireland winning six from six and Wales five from five. The scrum was not a source of penalty advantage for either side, but it was not a source of disruption either. Ireland's lineout return of 13 won from 16 attempts produced an 81% success rate, with three losses and two steals credited to the home side. Wales won 13 from 15 for an 87% return, losing two and recording no steals. The lineout battle was cleaner than the possession split might suggest, but Ireland converted their platform into gainline carries more effectively.
Ireland's maul struggled by comparison. The home side won four from six maul contests, losing two and scoring no tries from the set piece drive. Wales won all four mauls they contested, losing none, and while neither side scored maul tries, the defensive work from Wales in that specific channel was the cleanest part of their afternoon.
Ireland's ruck efficiency of 98% — 139 won from 142 — meant they retained possession through phase play without conceding turnovers at the contact point. Wales posted 95% efficiency, winning 69 from 73, but when you make 230 tackles and spend 62% of the match without the ball, ruck efficiency becomes a defensive metric rather than an attacking one.
Lineouts (success) 13/16 (81%) 13/15 (87%) Scrums 6/6 5/5 Rucks (efficiency) 139/142 (98%) 69/73 (95%)
KICKING Kicks from hand 26 23 Kick/pass ratio 0.12 0.19
Ireland won six turnovers and conceded nine; Wales won four and conceded ten, and the difference mattered in a match decided by possession retention.
The home side turned the ball over nine times across 62% possession, a return that kept Wales in defensive mode for long stretches without rewarding them with the kind of turnover volume that changes momentum. Wales conceded ten turnovers from 38% possession, a rate that left them unable to build the multi-phase attacks needed to trouble Ireland's defensive line.
Brittany Hogan recorded 15 tackles with three missed, adding two tries and 26 metres in a performance that blended defensive work rate with attacking finishing. Aoife Wafer made 13 tackles with one missed, contributing the kind of all-phase output that made her twin-try afternoon more than just a highlights reel. Georgia Evans led Wales with 29 tackles and one missed, scoring once in the 22nd minute and defending with the kind of volume that reflects how much tackling Wales had to do.
Ireland's offload count of nine to Wales' five gave the home side an additional layer of phase continuity that bypassed the ruck contest entirely. Dannah O'Brien and Hogan each conceded two turnovers, the highest individual counts for Ireland, but neither total derailed the home side's possession control. Jasmine Joyce conceded three turnovers for Wales, the most costly individual return in a performance that included a 76th-minute try but also a 47th-minute yellow card that came at the worst possible moment.
Wales made 230 tackles to Ireland's 115 and still conceded 552 metres; that is the arithmetic of a side defending without the ball for two thirds of the match.
Ireland missed 16 tackles across the afternoon, a 12% miss rate that did not prevent them from controlling territory or scoreboard. Wales missed 25 tackles from 230 attempts, a similar percentage but a higher absolute count that reflects the sheer volume of defensive work required. The visitors defended phase after phase without forcing Ireland into the kind of handling errors that might have shifted momentum.
Higgins beat five defenders and made two clean breaks from outside centre, offering the kind of evasive running that stretched Wales laterally and opened gaps in close. Parsons beat five defenders and made one clean break, scoring in the 29th minute and contributing to Ireland's total of four clean breaks. Wales managed one clean break across the entire match, a stark indicator of how rarely they threatened Ireland's defensive line with space in hand.
Cliodhna Moloney-MacDonald conceded a yellow card in the 41st minute, forcing Ireland to play the opening of the second half with 14 players. Hogan scored immediately at the restart in the 43rd minute, a try that stretched the lead to 19-7 and effectively ended the contest. Wales' own yellow card to Joyce in the 47th minute came with the scoreboard already out of reach, and the visitors could not capitalise on Ireland's earlier sin-bin period.
Ireland scored five tries from five different build-ups and Wales could not find an answer to the variety of threat.
Wafer scored twice, in the 11th and 55th minutes, finishing with 112 metres, eight defenders beaten, one clean break and two tries in a performance that turned the number eight position into a primary attacking weapon. Hogan scored twice as well, in the 43rd and 80th minutes, adding 26 metres and closing out the match with Ireland's final try after the contest was already decided. Parsons' 29th-minute try came from 63 metres of running and five defenders beaten, the kind of wide finish that Ireland created by drawing Wales narrow and then releasing the ball to space.
Dannah O'Brien converted four of her five attempts, adding eight points to Ireland's total and managing the game without needing to take repeated penalty shots. Wales scored through Georgia Evans in the 22nd minute and Jasmine Joyce in the 76th minute, both tries arriving at moments when Ireland's defensive focus appeared to ease. Keira Bevan converted one of two attempts, adding two points to Wales' total.
Ireland's kick-to-pass ratio of 0.12 shows a side willing to keep the ball in hand and trust their gainline success to deliver territory. Wales posted a 0.19 ratio, kicking 23 times from hand to Ireland's 26 despite holding the ball for just 38% of the match. The visitors could not sustain possession long enough to build the kind of attacking patterns that might have tested Ireland's defensive structure.
Both sides conceded 12 penalties and one yellow card; the difference was when the cards arrived and what Ireland did with the moments that followed.
Moloney-MacDonald's 41st-minute yellow forced Ireland to start the second half a player down, but Hogan's immediate 43rd-minute try stretched the lead rather than inviting Wales back into the contest. Joyce's 47th-minute yellow came with Wales already trailing 19-7, and the visitors could not mount a comeback during Ireland's own period of numerical disadvantage.
O'Brien conceded two bad passes and two turnovers, the highest individual handling error count for Ireland, but neither total cost her side scoreboard momentum. Hogan matched that return with two bad passes and two turnovers of her own, a reminder that even dominant performances carry moments of imprecision. Moloney-MacDonald added two bad passes and one turnover before her 60th-minute substitution.
Wales' handling was similarly untidy. Joyce conceded three turnovers without recording a bad pass, the most costly individual return for the visitors. Bevan conceded two bad passes and one turnover before her 56th-minute substitution. Keight conceded one bad pass and one turnover, a cleaner return than her teammates but insufficient to shift the contest.
Penalties conceded 12 12 Yellow cards 1 1
Aoife Wafer delivered the performance of the match, scoring twice, running 112 metres, beating eight defenders and making one clean break from number eight. That is a backrow performance measured in ballcarrier output more often associated with outside backs. Her 13 tackles and one missed tackle completed an all-phase afternoon that earned player-of-the-match recognition and gave Ireland the kind of forward dynamism that Wales could not contain.
Brittany Hogan scored twice and made 15 tackles with three missed, blending defensive work rate with attacking finishing in a performance that closed out the match and added scoreboard pressure at the restart. Her 26 metres came in short bursts rather than long breaks, but her two tries mattered more than her metreage. Beibhinn Parsons ran 63 metres, beat five defenders, made one clean break and scored once, offering the kind of wide threat that stretched Wales and created space for Ireland's inside runners.
Eve Higgins made 73 metres, beat five defenders and recorded two clean breaks from outside centre, the kind of direct running that forced Wales to commit numbers and opened gaps elsewhere. Dannah O'Brien kicked four from five conversions, made 50 metres and managed the game without needing to dominate possession herself. Her two bad passes and two turnovers were the untidy edges of an otherwise composed performance.
Georgia Evans scored once for Wales, made 29 tackles with one missed, and defended with the kind of volume that reflects how much work the visitors had to do without the ball. Jasmine Joyce scored in the 76th minute, made 17 metres and beat two defenders, but her 47th-minute yellow card and three turnovers conceded made this a difficult afternoon. Courtney Keight ran 36 metres and beat four defenders, offering individual moments without sustained pressure. Keira Bevan converted once and conceded two bad passes and one turnover before her 56th-minute substitution, a mixed return in a match Wales could not control.
Ireland finish the Women's Six Nations in third place with 15 points, three wins from five matches and a points difference of plus 67. Wales finish sixth and winless with three points, five losses and a points difference of minus 114. The gap between the sides — 12 league points and 21 points on the day — reflects both the quality difference and the efficiency with which Ireland converted possession into scoreboard distance.
Wafer's twin-try performance from number eight gives Ireland a ballcarrying threat from the base of the scrum that changes how opposing sides have to defend the pack. Hogan's two tries and 15 tackles show a backrow willing to work both sides of the ball, and Parsons' 63-metre afternoon offers the kind of wide finishing that makes Ireland dangerous when they release the ball to space.
Wales defended for 230 tackles and still conceded 552 metres, a return that suggests systemic issues in both possession retention and gainline defence. Evans' 29 tackles and one try show individual effort; the scoreboard shows a side that could not turn that effort into points or territory. Joyce's yellow card in the 47th minute came with the match already beyond reach, but the three turnovers she conceded across the afternoon were symptomatic of a wider handling and retention problem.
Ireland held the ball for 62% of the match and scored five tries; Wales held it for 38% and scored two. That is not a complexity problem. That is a possession and efficiency problem, and Wales will need to solve both if they are to climb off the foot of the table.
STATS TABLE
Ireland Women Wales Women ATTACK Possession 62% 38% Territory — — Carries · Metres 142 · 552 m 83 · 313 m Gain line % 76% 65% Clean breaks · Defenders beaten 4 · 25 1 · 16 CER 2.45 2.05
DEFENCE Tackles (missed) 115 (16) 230 (25) Turnovers (won / conceded) 6 / 9 4 / 10
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