This match underlined the gulf in depth and execution between the sides, but also offered Spain moments of promise and resilience. Ireland were clinical but discipline could have really hampered them more. 3 yellow cards on the night but the Ireland backline were lightning fast.

This match underlined the gulf in depth and execution between the sides, but also offered Spain moments of promise and resilience. Ireland were clinical but discipline could have really hampered them more. 3 yellow cards on the night but the Ireland backline were lightning fast.
From the outset Ireland set the tone. Within the opening 40 minutes they had built a 42-10 lead.
Highlights of the first half included:
Ireland struck early with tries to establish control and momentum.
Spain responded with a couple of bright phases and managed to score twice, showing fight despite being out-muscled in many areas.
Discipline proved costly for Ireland even in this period — they were reduced to 14 men at times, which gave Spain brief windows of opportunity.
Spain’s set-piece tries (lineout/maul) did illustrate they had structure and intent.
However, Ireland’s combination of front-foot physicality, back-line speed and clinical goal-kicking set the game firmly in their hands.
Ireland continued their dominance after the break, extending the lead and rotating the squad while still maintaining the intensity.
Spain did not capitulate. They pushed in patches, grabbed tries of their own (including from Iñaki Imaz) and showed that when given space they could exploit it.
But the consistency, physical dominance and execution from Ireland proved decisive. Spain’s challenge wasn’t sustained for long enough to truly threaten a comeback.
The officiating on the night was not the greatest too, and really killed momentum at times in the game. Was a shame to see, what could have been a even more exciting second half stiffled by key decisions.
Ireland XV
Depth and execution: With a squad containing many full internationals they showed excellent cohesion despite limited preparation time.
Clinical finishing: Nine tries scored, eight conversions — efficient.
Resilience under pressure: Even when down to 14 men, they kept the scoreboard moving.
Spain
Structures and fight: Their set-piece and maul tries show they’ve got some tools to build on.
Gap remains: The physicality, continuity and volume of execution still lag behind a side like Ireland.
Growth phase: The result is painful but offers clear markers for what to improve – discipline, ruck speed, defensive cohesion.
Great to see Nico Infer make his debut, on a night that Tani Bay was shutdown swiftly by the Irish defence and the officiating. Infer added another level when he came on.
For Ireland, this victory is a strong statement of depth and readiness. It shows they can bring a high level of performance even in non-senior test format and will bolster confidence moving ahead.
For Spain, this will serve as a benchmark. They will look at this match as a “what we must become” kind of fixture. To progress in the Tier 2/3 landscape they’ll need to close the gap in execution and consistency rather than organisation or intent alone.
Ben Murphy (Ireland) — Playing at scrum half, he controlled the game and managed to get that backline firing at will. His passing and vision were phenomenal.
An emphatic win for Ireland, a tough lesson for Spain — yet one with silver linings for the hosts. This match offers plenty for both teams: Ireland to build belief and momentum; Spain to digest and develop. For fans of grass-roots and emerging rugby nations, this is exactly the kind of fixture that matters — showing the gap, but also showing the potential.