Online Store
RBS 6 Nations Apps
RBS 6 Nations Video
RBS RugbyForce
No ALT tag specified

RBS 6 Nations match video highlights

Watch the latest Video highlights
Official Championship App

The Official Championship App

Keep on top of all the action through the official app. Includes video, news, history, stats and more...
No ALT tag specified

RBS 6 Nations Live Challenge App 2013

Click here to learn more!
No ALT tag specified

Official Online Store

RBS 6 Nations full kit range now available online
Official Magazine 2013

Official Magazine 2013

Click here to Download
Rob Kearney
Rob Kearney pictured in RBS 6 Nations action against Italy
Getty Images
Kearney claims it won't take something special to beat France
29 February 2012, 12:29 pm
By Sportsbeat
Rob Kearney believes it won't take a coup d'etat to overturn France in Paris on Sunday, claiming Ireland have been trying too hard to down Les Bleus in their own back yard in recent years.
Ireland head to the Stade de France for their rearranged RBS 6 Nations clash with the World Cup finalists safe in the knowledge they have won in Paris just twice in the last 40 years.

Indeed the last time Ireland won in the City of Lights a fresh-faced 20-year-old Brian O’Driscoll ran in a hat-trick in a 27-25 thriller during the inaugural Six Nations, but Declan Kidney will be without the Emerald Isle’s talisman on Sunday.

Ireland will however, according to Kearney, benefit from the postponement of the original fixture, having now put their opening defeat to Wales behind them with a thumping five-try victory over Italy last Saturday – a first win in four at Lansdowne Road.

And full-back Kearney has called on his teammates to avoid going for broke against France, claiming a strong start can build the platform for success.

“I don't think we need to do something special,” said Kearney. “That's where we fall down sometimes when we play in France. We look at our record and it doesn't fill us with confidence, so maybe we feel as though we have to try something different there.

“Where we have always fallen down in France is that we've had a very poor start, giving up a big lead 20-30 minutes into the game. When you're playing a team of the calibre of France you can't do that and expect to win. We have to start strongly on Sunday.”

Kearney didn’t get on the scoresheet against Italy but Andrew Trimble, Tom Court, Tommy Bowe (2) and Keith Earls all crossed the try-line – and the Leinster flyer believes that will stand Ireland in good stead in Paris.

"We're in a much better place than maybe we were two or three weeks ago,” added Kearney.

"Tries win games and to score five of them against Italy was really pleasing.

“We're starting to get more clinical in the green zone area of play, and while we were too guilty of playing too much in our own half, it was pleasing that when we did get into the right areas we took our opportunities.”
 



RBS Six Nations Store

 
ADD TO DEL.ICIO.USDel.icio.usShare this page
ADD TO DIGGDiggShare this page
ADD TO FACEBOOKFacebookShare this page
ADD TO GOOGLEGoogleShare this page
ADD TO NEWSVINENewsvineShare this page
ADD TO REDDITRedditShare this page
ADD TO STUMBLEUPONStumbleUponShare this page
ADD TO YAHOO MYWEBYahooShare this page
ADD TO TWITTERTwitterShare this page
Previews & Reports
England Latest
France Latest
Ireland Latest
Italy Latest
Scotland Latest
Wales Latest
Team Statistics onlyinclude Five & Six Nations games from 1992 to the present day
Player Statistics onlyinclude Five & Six Nations appearances since 1992
© 2013 delivered by Sotic powered by OpenText WSM