Conor Murray acknowledges Ireland's record-breaking winning run and impressive achievements under Andy Farrell will count for very little at the Rugby World Cup.Ireland travel to France as Six Nations Grand Slam champions and having topped the world rankings for more than a year on the back of their historic tour triumph in New Zealand.Farrell’s men made it 13 consecutive victories with Saturday evening's 17-13 success over Samoa in Bayonne – bettering the 12-game winning streak enjoyed under Joe Schmidt across 2017 and 2018.Defeat in the first Test against the All Blacks in July 2022 was Ireland’s last loss and just one of two suffered in their previous 27 outings.Scrum-half Murray is preparing for his fourth World Cup and knows the tournament is a "different animal"."We’re in a pretty good place, given where we have been over the last two years and what we have achieved," he said."We never get carried away with ourselves.
We know going into every game that we have to respect the opposition."It (form) going into a World Cup doesn’t count for much.
You have to bring your best rugby when you get to the tournament, when the competition kicks off for real."But we know how good the team can be.
We also know how hard we have to work to get to that level and be there every week."The summer series was good and people got hit outs and we feel match fit now, but it’s a different animal by the time the World Cup comes around."We know where we can go as a group, the confidence is really high."Ireland 12-13 Samoa Conor Murray races onto Jacob Stockdale's chip ahead to score a badly needed try for Ireland, the conversion is missed and they remain one point behind