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Gordon D’Arcy says it could get worse for Ireland; Liverpool steady ship in Europe

The Morning Sports Briefing: Keep ahead of the game with ‘The Irish Times’ sports team

Ireland are licking their wounds entering the first fallow weekend of the 2021 Six Nations, with their next engagement away to Italy in Rome on February 27th. That fixture looks more dangerous than ever for Andy Farrell's side following their opening round defeats to Wales and France - and in his column this morning Gordon D'Arcy suggests the game on Saturday week has "a wooden spoon vibe to it." He writes: "I accepted a few weeks ago that this could become Ireland's worst ever Six Nations. How low we go is now on the coaches. . . Ireland are stuck in the mud, not to mention injury ravaged after losing their opening two Six Nations games for the first time in their history." So how can Ireland turn things around before they get even worse? He believes bulk and brains will be needed at the Stadio Olimpico: "Bring James Ryan and Ronán Kelleher into the team and all of a sudden it is a heavyweight pack. One the forward's coach could put his name to. To ignore form will only open the management to accusations of blind loyalty and no coach will survive for long under that tag, not when they are losing. No contract is that cast iron."

Liverpool put their wretched league form behind them last night as they ran out 2-0 winners against RB Leipzig in the first leg of their Champions League last-16 clash. Mohamed Salah and Sadio Mane were on the scoresheet in the away fixture, which was played in Budapest due to Covid-19 restrictions. In the night's other match Kyllian Mbappe was the star as Paris Saint-Germain eviscerated Barcelona 4-1 in the Nou Camp, the 22-year-old scoring a stunning hat-trick on a night where Lionel Messi was virtually anonymous. Tonight's fixtures see Porto play Juventus and Sevilla host Dortmund, meanwhile in the Premier League Fulham take on Burnley at Turf Moor (6pm) and Manchester City travel to Everton (8.15pm).

Home favourite Ashleigh Barty is out of the Australian Open, after she was stunned in three sets by Czech 24-year-old Karolína Muchová earlier this morning. The world number one Barty was a set and 2-1 up before crumbling in Melbourne, losing 6-1, 3-6, 2-6. Muchová will play Jennifer Brady in the semi-finals, with Serena Williams and Naomi Osaka contesting the other last four clash. In the men's draw, Rafael Nadal is on court against Stefanos Tsitsipas later this morning as he bids for a semi-final berth.

Elsewhere in his column this morning Seán Moran has suggested harsher deterrents may be needed to prevent GAA sides from breaching coronavirus restrictions - like the Cork footballers being seen training as a group on Youghal beach. This comes the day after GAA director general Tom Ryan outlined his annual report for 2020 and the difficulties faced by the association off the back of last year.

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And owner Michael O'Leary has remained quiet over whether or not Tiger Roll will be allowed to try and complete a historic Grand National hat-trick, after the weights for the 2021 race were announced yesterday. The back-to-back winner has been handed a mark of 166, a seven lb rise and his highest to date.

Patrick Madden

Patrick Madden

Patrick Madden is a former sports journalist with The Irish Times