It may be something of a dead rubber in terms of the tournament but this Saturday's clash with Italy in Rome is still of high importance for Andy Farrell and Ireland. It's the classic lose-lose situation in that a win is expected and won't raise much excitement but a loss, particularly at this stage, could start to raise serious questions. This morning Gerry Thornley writes in his column that Ireland must not underestimate their hosts who have shown "nough evidence in the two rounds so far to suggest that in some aspects of their attacking game Italy have been more inventive and ambitious than Ireland." In the losses to France and Wales, Ireland's seeming lack of attacking gameplan has come under fire and yesterday attack coach Mike Catt attempted to explain what the squad has been working on. Outside of the professional game, the schools' cups should be in full flow at this time of the year but, much like everything else, they are on ice for the moment. In his column this morning Owen Doyle writes that for many, parents in particular, the schools' cup of nightmares is not missed for one year given some of the unsavouriness around it as well as the spectre of concussion which is dominating all of rugby at the moment.
Moving to soccer and England is set for a packed summer of sport if Boris Johnson's new Covid-19 roadmap goes to plan with all restrictions set to potentially be lifted on June 21st, paving the way for a mass return of crowds. Spectators are due to return to limited attendances from May 17th – including for the final day of the Premier League season – but sources indicate that the hope is for full stadiums as the summer progresses. Tonight, Chelsea meet Atlético Madrid in the Champions League last-16. Atlético have been in impressive form this season and the acquisition of Luis Suárez has proved to be extremely lucrative. Tonight Diego Simeone hopes he can maintain that form and find the net in Bucharest where the match will be played due to Covid-19 travel restrictions. In domestic matters, Vera Pauw yesterday signed a two-year contract extension as manager of the Ireland women's team and the Dutch national is quietly confident that she can guide the team to a first ever World Cup in 2023.
On to racing and, with Cheltenham looming, Willie Mullins is fully in the throes of planning his latest assault on Prestbury Park but even he – the man with more festival winners that anyone else – describes as "astounding" the range of talents available to him for National Hunt racing's greatest show it's obvious even by his exalted standards this is something different.
In GAA this morning Seán Moran writes that there is a growing consensus in favour of extending counties' four-week training period after director general Tom Ryan raised the issue at a media conference last week. His concerns were illustrated by the cost of the GAA's injury fund claims for 2020 which, despite the abbreviated nature of the year, were at €7.8 million only slightly lower than the annual average of €8 million to €8.5 million.
Finally to golf and Rory McIlroy's missed cut at last week's Genesis Invitational was his first since the British Open in 2019 and the four-time Major winner particularly struggled on the greens. So far this year he has ranked 183rd in total putting and 114th in strokes gained putting with the first WGC of the year starting on Thursday at The Concession.