Key events
TRY! Ireland 7-7 Scotland (Graham)
Scotland are definitely not rattled – they’re up and running! A wonderful, 19-phase passing move spreads the pitch, it eventually finds Darcy Graham in the corner and he goes over. Class! Russell converts from out side. What a start.
6 min: Scotland have the ball and they spray it around, they don’t appear rattled as they probe for space – going through the phases. A lovely Russell pass finds Turner.
TRY! Ireland 7-0 Scotland (Osborne)
What a start for Ireland! They win the lineout, nice passing, some power and they find Osborne in space and he seals his red-hot start with a sprint and a simple try. Crowley’s kick is good, right in front of the posts. My oh my.
2 min: Fagerson goes up in the scrum and it’s a penalty, advantage Ireland – they kick to the corner and have the lineout.
1 min: Osborne makes an early run at the Scotland defence, eliciting a roar from the crowd. He’s rebuffed. A knock-on is called and we have our first scrum.
Kick-off!
Scotland receive as we get started – we are under way.
Flower of Scotland is sung by some focused-looking, blue-shirted players. It gets a generous round of applause in the stands. Amhrán na bhFiann is followed by Ireland’s Call – belted out by the lads in green. Applause again. Nicely done. Kick-off is next!
Simon McMahon has emailed. “Hi Alex. You’re dead right,” he says. “For both these teams, the permutations are irrelevant unless/until they win.
“I’m reminded of the great Brian Clough’s rallying cry to his Nottingham Forest team ahead of their first European Cup final – I don’t care how you do it, just win.”
Wise words, Simon/Brian.
Fireworks, full house and, erm, Fatboy Slim blaring – the teams are on the field.
The anthems will follow shortly. Oh, after the two teams meet the Irish president, Catherine Connolly, who gets ready to make 30 handshakes. She’s a pro at this.
Who are the key players for both sides today? I’m going to be Captain Obvious and say Scotland’s magician Finn Russell and Ireland’s majestic Jamison Gibson-Park.
Now, a No 10 and a scrum-half, so not exactly an on-pitch head-to-head. But if Russell is getting plenty of ball in hand, Scotland’s attack will likely be flowing; if Gibson-Park is the name you keep hearing, it’s probably Ireland’s style of match.
The teams are in the tunnel, about to come on to the pitch!
It looks a gorgeous day in Dublin. Blue skies, no sign of rain. Perfect. The players are on the pitch, warming up – zipping the ball around. We’re 20 minutes from the start.
Permutations time – yes, it’s why we’re all here! Three teams can win the Six Nations today. Here’s the top three:
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1. France W 3, L 1, BP 4, PD +79, Pts 16
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2. Scotland W 3, L 1, BP 4, PD +21, Pts 16
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3. Ireland W 3, L 1, BP 2, PD +16, Pts 14
Now, I’m not really going to do a permutations deep dive (you can read the full variables here). The bonus-point situation makes it complex.
The only calculation Ireland and Scotland need today: win. Then, if you do that and claim the Triple Crown, hope England do you a favour against France. The extent of that favour depends on whether Ireland and Scotland win; if they get a bonus point, etc. But clarity of thought is vital. Just. Win.

Luke McLaughlin
A first Six Nations title is tantalisingly within reach – but Scotland are likely to face a familiar problem in Dublin. It doesn’t matter how good your backline is, or how well rehearsed your strike moves are if possession is cut off at source.
France were curiously lacklustre in defence at Murrayfield but Andy Farrell, the Ireland head coach, has reverted to the same selection as for England at Twickenham. We know how that turned out, and no team has suffered more in the face of Ireland’s considerable power than Scotland.
Ireland’s back row – particularly the captain Caelan Doris – were at their destructive best against England. If they can raise their collective intensity to similar levels, it will be a very difficult day for the visitors.
But Scotland’s captain, Sione Tuipulotu, explained on Friday why he believes this could be different. “I’ve come to the Aviva in the past where maybe it seemed a little bit more like hope [than expectation],” he said.
“Where our strength comes from as a team is the hard stuff we’ve been through. To be resilient in those times is what gives me the most confidence that we’ll be the best version of ourselves.”
So it’s three Scotland changes in Gregor Townsend’s starting XV. Zander Fagerson comes in at tighthead prop but, as mentioned, it’s the enforced all-new second row that Ireland may look to target – a lot of pressure on the shoulders of Williamson and Gilchrist.
For Ireland, Andy Farrell has made four swaps to his XV with hooker Dan Sheehan, lock Joe McCarthy and openside flanker Josh van der Flier returning to the forward pack. Tommy O’Brien is picked ahead of Jacob Stockdale on the left wing.
Next, I’m going to give you time to read Luke McLaughlin’s richly written preview before kick-off.
The teams
Ireland: Jamie Osborne; Rob Baloucoune, Garry Ringrose, Stuart McCloskey, Tommy O’Brien; Jack Crowley, Jamison Gibson-Park; Tom O’Toole, Dan Sheehan, Tadhg Furlong; Joe McCarthy, Tadhg Beirne; Jack Conan, Josh van der Flier, Caelan Doris (capt).
Replacements: Rónan Kelleher, Michael Milne, Finlay Bealham, Darragh Murray, Nick Timoney, Craig Casey, Ciarán Frawley, Bundee Aki
Scotland: Blair Kinghorn; Darcy Graham, Huw Jones, Sione Tuipulotu (capt), Kyle Steyn; Finn Russell, Ben White; Pierre Schoeman, George Turner, Zander Fagerson; Max Williamson, Grant Gilchrist; Matt Fagerson, Rory Darge, Jack Dempsey.
Replacements: Ewan Ashman, Rory Sutherland, D’Arcy Rae, Alex Craig, Magnus Bradbury, George Horne, Kyle Rowe, Tom Jordan.
Referee: Luke Pearce (Eng)
Preamble
Welcome to the start of Super Saturday! And a mouthwatering match between two teams with a chance of claiming the Six Nations title and both riding three-game winning streaks. Scotland are the talk of the tournament after putting seven tries on France, coming out on top of a 90-point thriller at Murrayfield. But this is Ireland, Scotland’s jinx side, in Dublin.
Scotland have lost their past 11 games against Ireland and last won away from home in 2010 (at Croke Park, rather than the Aviva Stadium). Yet Gregor Townsend’s side are reinvigorated and playing without fear. Who’d have thought a team that lost to Italy in round one would now be second in the table – level on points with leaders France – and playing for the Triple Crown and possibly the Six Nations championship this afternoon?
To counter soaring Scots’ optimism: the cold, hard reality of Ireland. While the Scottish side excelled in a wide-open game against Les Bleus, Irish physicality is something they have struggled with. And this is not the same side that dismantled the French, it’s an all-new second row with the injured duo Gregor Brown and Scott Cummings replaced by Max Williamson and Grant Gilchrist. That is a tough break for the visitors.
Andy Farrell might be low-key happy (is he any other kind of happy?) that the focus was all on Scotland’s brilliance after round four. He is a master at motivating his players and can remind them that, for all that it’s been so-so Six Nations by Ireland’s high standards – aside from routing England at Twickenham – they stand just one win away from potentially lifting the trophy.
On that score, to add to today’s fun, we’ll have the unique experience of the winner of this game – providing there is one – fervently cheering on England as they look to stun France in Paris. But that’s for later. First up, it’s Ireland v Scotland – kick-off is at 2.10pm GMT.
Source: https://www.theguardian.com/sport/live/2026/mar/14/ireland-v-scotland-six-nations-2026-rugby-union-live