LONDON — The rumors of Ireland's demise have been exaggerated.
Ireland revived its Six Nations title hopes and killed off England's after a shocking 42-21 blowout win at Twickenham on Saturday.
The script was expected to go the other way. England had not lost at home since autumn 2024, and a fiery retort after losing to Scotland at Murrayfield last weekend was expected to celebrate captain Maro Itoje's 100th England cap.
But England was flat and sloppy while Ireland harked back to the No. 1-ranked team from 2023; energetic, efficient and fearless. Having slipped to No. 5, the Irish beat a team ranked higher than themselves for the first time since July 2024.
And it was historic: Ireland's greatest win by score and margin at Twickenham with a bonus point from scoring five tries to three. All-time, England conceded its second most points at home.
''It was a very enjoyable game to be a part of,'' Ireland captain Caelan Doris told ITV. "The fast start definitely helped but there was a ferociousness about us, there was some mistakes but we were always on the forward. It came together for us.
''Internally, there has always been belief at the core of what we are doing. We feel we have the right coaches and right group of players.''
Ireland shot to 22-0, led 22-7 at halftime, scored straight after the break and piled on. Jack Crowley booted seven from 10 for a personal 17 points in his second Six Nations start in two tournaments.