Assistant coach Mike Catt believes Ireland are "going in the right direction" towards emulating his "life-changing" achievement of winning the Rugby World Cup.Former England international Catt lifted the Webb Ellis Cup following a dramatic victory over hosts Australia in 2003.An in-form Ireland complete a standout 12 months in which they have risen to the top of the global rankings by hosting the Wallabies on Saturday night in Dublin.Catt believes Andy Farrell's men must continue to work on adaptability and consistency but feels preparations for next year’s showpiece tournament in France are going well."Times have changed considerably since 20 years ago, the whole game has changed, but I think the pathway we’re on, we’re going in the right direction," he said."The team has to be able to adapt.
There are three, four, five teams that are capable of adapting and winning anything."Where we’re at at the moment, I think everybody is enjoying the environment we’re in, enjoying what we’re trying to achieve."But we’ve got to be a lot more consistent in certain areas of our game and that needs to start tomorrow night."Next year will mark two decades since Jonny Wilkinson's extra-time drop-goal stunned the Wallabies in Sydney to secure glory for Sir Clive Woodward’s men.Catt was standing just behind fly-half Wilkinson as the ball sailed between the posts.
The 51-year-old has many fond memories of meetings with Australia."It was great, it was life-changing really," he said of winning the World Cup."Every time I played against Australia or was involved in coaching against Australia, they’ve always been great games."Very, very few games you play against Australia are dull.