Powell scare for Wales
Andy Powell has given Wales an injury scare on the eve of their RBS 6 Nations title showdown against Ireland.
The Cardiff Blues number eight pulled out of todayâs final training session due to a sore thigh muscle and head coach Warren Gatland admitted Powellâs injury was âa slight concern.â
Powell has started every Six Nations game this season, although he has so far failed to reproduce the blistering form he showed during the autumn Tests, especially on debut against world champions South Africa.
Gatland said: âAndy has got a bit of a sore quad. He didnât do the whole session so we will see how he pulls up from that.
âIt is a slight concern. He pulled out of the session because his quad was pretty tight.â
If Powell is ruled out, Scarlets forward Dafydd Jones would enter the back-row equation, with Ospreys flanker Jonathan Thomas taking over from Jones among the replacements.
Gatland spent much of his final pre-match press conference fielding questions about comments he made earlier in the week, when he claimed the Welsh players disliked the Irish more than any other Six Nations team.
Three days on Gatland said: âPerhaps my comments should have been a little bit tempered and said out of all the teams in the Six Nations the team the Welsh want to beat the most is the Irish.
âIt is nothing personal against the Irish. I have got some great friends there and my daughter was born in Ireland.
âRather than saying the Irish were the team they most disliked, I should have said they are the team they want to beat the most.â
Shane Williams, meanwhile, is confident Wales can retain the Six Nations title tomorrow.
The reigning champions need a minimum 13-point victory over Grand Slam-chasing Ireland.
Such a result would deny the Irish a first Six Nations crown, while an away defeat of any description means Irelandâs prolonged Grand Slam wait would extend into its 62nd year.
âWe know what we need to do, win by 13 points, and I am confident we can do that to clinch the title,â Williams said.
âIf we are patient and avoid panicking, we have more than enough qualities to open up that sort of lead during the game.
âThis yearâs Six Nations has been, at times, very frustrating, and we obviously havenât played with the same consistency as last year.
âBut we are now utterly focused on this game and the chance to grasp a happy ending.â
Wales have not lost at home in the Six Nations since Ireland beat them 19-9 more than two years ago, but an Irish side has never travelled to Cardiff with such a weight of expectancy to carry.
âWhile we are feeling pretty relaxed, trust me, Ireland will be feeling the squeeze. They are the side under a lot more pressure,â Williams wrote in his latest Powerade blog.
âThey are tantalisingly close to their first Grand Slam for a long, long time, and they will be really feeling it as the tension builds. They have it all to lose.â




