A battered Ireland bid to rebound in Dublin against an Italy side brimming with confidence after their win over Scotland.
Italy have every reason to believe they can record only their second win over the Irish in the tournament – the previous one dates back to 2013 in Rome – as the hosts were left reeling by a 36-14 hammering by France.
Testing time for Farrell
Andy Farrell has rightly been praised for his achievements with Ireland, as trophies have rewarded the more attractive style of play he instilled after the highly successful, but rather limited, tactics of the Joe Schmidt era.
However, whilst the alarm bells are not quite ringing full blast, the 50-year-old Englishman probably faces his biggest challenge since he took over after the 2019 World Cup.
A second successive heavy defeat at the hands of France signalled what many had feared since last November’s disappointing results: the 2024 Six Nations champions are in decline.
Fatigue may be part of the problem as many of the Irish players have barely had a break in 18 months after touring with the British & Irish Lions squad last year.
They are also without injured stars Hugo Keenan, Mack Hansen and Ryan Baird, who will play no part in the championship.
Although clearly disappointed by the performance in Paris, Farrell insists that he still believes the Irish can compete at the top table – he will hope that is the case with the World Cup looming in October 2027.
“We just happen to have lost a lot of experience and people are coming in, we’ve a lot of new caps, certainly a lot of players under 10 caps,” he said. “They have to go through this.
“You always have to go through a little bit of pain to get to that point. We’ve always done that with every generation.”
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Casey gets a rare day in the sun
Craig Casey is the epitome of patience being a virtue – having played second fiddle both at Munster and in the Ireland set-up for years.
Farrell may have scored the first points in his battle with Italy counterpart Gonzalo Quesada by selecting Casey at scrumhalf and not the established Jamison Gibson-Park.
Quesada admitted that the Azzurri had been planning for an Ireland side with Gibson-Park in it – but the Argentinian should not have been too surprised as Casey, 26, started their last encounter in Dublin two years ago.
Indeed the diminutive Casey (1.65m) is making only his third Six Nations start, with the previous two also against Italy.
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Although Farrell may have decided to partially preserve the benched Gibson-Park ahead of the tough trip to England the following week, he was adamant that Casey deserved his chance.
“I’ve been impressed with him, how he’s handled himself this week. He plays quick, he’s nice and accurate,” said Farrell. “He has one of the best passing games I’ve seen in world rugby actually, so it’s a big opportunity for him.”
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Consistency key to Italy’s hopes
Quesada has achieved much in the two years he has been at the Azzurri helm, not least in adding a vital ingredient of self-belief to the players’ undoubted.
This was reflected last Saturday, in atrocious conditions, when his side held their nerve to beat Scotland 18-15.
The big question, which Quesda has been trying to resolve since he took over, is whether they capable of backing up an excellent performance with another one a week later.
“We have the main goal of trying to achieve a bit more consistency,” the 51-year-old said at the outset of the championship.
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There will be no bigger test of that than Saturday’s game.
Aside from missing key players, they have had two days less to recover from the energy-sapping Scots game than the Irish after their sore French experience.
The boys believe a struggling Ireland team will still be too strong for Italy in Dublin. pic.twitter.com/3OiU7Z2360
— SA Rugby magazine (@SARugbymag) February 12, 2026
Photo: David Rogers/Getty Images
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