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That was strange: Ireland captain Rory Best bemused with result after draw with Wales

Jonathan Sexton’s boot comes to the rescue in contest featuring dogged defence, pinpoint kicking and dollops of disappointment

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Wales number eight Taulupe Faletau finds a way through the Irish defence to score at Aviva Stadium in Dublin. Photo: AFP

Ireland captain Rory Best admitted he had mixed feelings after drawing 16-16 with Wales at Lansdowne Road in their Six Nations opener on Saturday.

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Joe Schmidt’s side raced into a 13-0 first-half lead, but failed to score between the 27th and 74th minutes – when Johnny Sexton kicked a 40-metre penalty to earn the hosts a share of the spoils.

An injury ravaged Ireland side stormed to the perfect start, with Conor Murray’s converted try and two penalties from Sexton giving them a double-digit lead inside the half hour, but Warren Gatland’s experienced outfit fought back and briefly took the lead through Rhys Priestland’s 72nd minute penalty.

It wasn’t enough to earn victory, nor to put a smile on Best’s face.

“I think it’s a strange result,” he said. “(It’s) a draw nobody is overly happy with, but at 16-13, you look at the Welsh defence and think we’re reasonably happy with the draw.

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“It’s a lot better than a loss. There’s bits we’re reasonably happy with, but parts we can improve on.

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