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18th October 2023
01:51pm BST

"Irish fans get behind the team like no other, it's incredible and it's not wasted on us," he remarked. "That's why it is so hard to take really, that we didn't give them another couple of weekends."The first of those weekends is fast approaching, with the All Blacks facing Argentina in one semi-final and South Africa taking on England in the other. Ahead of those games, the New Zealand media is hoping their team does not repeat 2019 when they beat Ireland in the last eight only to falter in the semis, against England. A couple of Kiwi pundits have also taken issue with the hype around Ireland and an optimistic pre-match comment from Sexton. [caption id="attachment_290475" align="aligncenter" width="640"]
Johnny Sexton of Ireland speaks to media. (Photo by Phil Walter/Getty Images)[/caption]
"It’s not something that puts pressure on me. It’s something you dream of – probably not as a kid, because when we were kids we didn’t dream of Ireland winning a World Cup. I supposed we have put ourselves in a position to do that now. "But it’s not something I’ve thought about in terms of my own career. I will think about it more when I finish. It’s all geared up to Saturday and it’s another massive challenge for this team, the biggest we have faced and we are looking forward to it."All pretty standard, we would say. As a 38-year-old, Sexton would have grown up in the 1990s when Ireland would have been doing well to win more than one game in the Five Nations. From when he was born [1985] until 1999, Sexton was alive for five Irish 'Wooden Spoons'. Winning a World Cup would never have been in the picture. Times have changed now, off the back of the first generation of full-time Irish professionals and the latest crops coached by Joe Schmidt and Andy Farrell. Targeting a Webb Ellis trophy is something that does not feel far-fetched any more, despite the quarter final hoodoo that refuses to go away. For James Parsons, on the Aotearoa Rugby Pod, though, Sexton got ahead of himself with those comments. He declared:
"If you use Johnny Sexton, for example, during the week he was talking about when he was growing up, and you couldn't dream of Ireland winning a World Cup. And he was like, 'Now we're making it a reality'. "And it's like, 'Mate, you're at the quarter finals!'."The former Auckland Blues and New Zealand hooker insisted that many people claimed Ireland against the ABs would be 'a walkover'. We could not find too many of those claims, but it is fair to say most pundits in this hemisphere of the world, and a fair few down south, backed Andy Farrell's side to win. [caption id="attachment_294286" align="aligncenter" width="640"]
Johnny Sexton pictured after his side's defeat to New Zealand in the 2023 Rugby World Cup quarter-final. (Photo by Ramsey Cardy/Sportsfile)[/caption]
"Ireland weren't allowed to do what they have done, on the effort and work of the All Blacks. What they did wasn't good enough on that given night. "They knew what was coming. They should have understood this wasn't the same All Black team they beat in New Zealand. In the end, they weren't good enough. I believe New Zealand wanted it, that little bit more."Ardie Savea had apparently been keeping track of all the pre-match talk, too, as Ireland were built up and the All Blacks doubted. Man of the Match in that 28-24 victory, he later told reporters, "I held receipts and I let that fuel me and let that fuel the fire for this weekend. I think a lot of the boys did tonight." The lesson here? Don't doubt the All Blacks, even when logic, results and form suggest otherwise.
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