Scott Robertson Joe Schmidt Ian Foster Italy Scotland Namibia Japan Ireland New Zealand Uruguay Rugby World Cup Sport Rugby win cup Scott Robertson Joe Schmidt Ian Foster Italy Scotland Namibia Japan Ireland New Zealand Uruguay

Ian Foster: If Ireland are ever going to win a World Cup, they will feel like it's now

rte.ie

New Zealand head coach Ian Foster sought to increase the pressure on Ireland ahead of next weekend's quarter-final, suggesting it was a case of 'now or never' for their opponents' World Cup ambitions.Ireland's emphatic 36-14 win over Scotland on Saturday night teed up another knockout meeting with the All Blacks, who themselves have slotted into a comfortable groove, dispatching Italy, Namibia and Uruguay with brutal ease.It's the second World Cup in a row that the teams have collided at this phase.

In Japan four years ago, a weary and battered Irish side were put out of their misery by New Zealand, losing 46-14.The defeat marked a dismal end to Joe Schmidt's otherwise successful six-year stint as Ireland coach.

This Saturday, Schmidt will be in the opposing coaching booth, having been installed as attack coach by Foster last year."His mindset is, as is mine, about what we do well and making sure we nail that," says Foster. "It's not so much a matter of micro-analysing them to the nth degree that we get hung up and dampen our own game a little bit."He knows the Irish well but that's information that we've been tapping in to the last 12 months, and getting his nous in and refining how we play."They've definitely evolved their game too.

I won't go into too many details but they haven't achieved what they've achieved by standing still."Foster, who shipped a mountain of criticism following New Zealand's poor 2022, is due to be replaced by Crusaders' coach Scott Robertson after the World Cup.

Related News
New Zealand Prime Minister Chris Hipkins praised the All Blacks for their resilience and determination despite seeing Ian Foster's side slip to a narrow defeat against South Africa in the final of the Rugby World Cup in Paris on Saturday.
Rugby’s two heavyweight powers New Zealand and South Africa compete in Saturday’s final at the Stade de France, in what should be a dramatic finale to a tournament that has offered seven weeks of thrills and spills.
PARIS : Rugby’s two heavyweight powers New Zealand and South Africa compete in Saturday’s final at the Stade de France, in what should be a dramatic finale to a tournament that has offered seven weeks of thrills and spills.
PARIS : The outcome the Rugby World Cup final could come down to five key aspects of the game when New Zealand take on South Africa at the Stade de France on Saturday.
RUEIL-MALMAISON, France : New Zealand tweaked their team for Saturday’s Rugby World Cup final against South Africa with a single change but resisted any temptation to power up their bench to offset the forward-heavy list of replacements the Springboks named earlier on Thursday.

Latest News

Change privacy settings
This page might use cookies if your analytics vendor requires them.