Ireland sealed their second victory of this year’s Six Nations with a 57-6 triumph over Italy, but the game was ruined when the visitors were reduced to 13-men following Hame Faiva’s red card.
After an early injury to Gianmarco Lucchesi, Faiva was brought onto the field, but he was then sent off for a dangerous tackle 10 minutes later.
With no other hooker in the squad, it meant the teams had to go to uncontested scrums and for the Azzurri to lose another man.
In what was an already difficult task for the visitors, it effectively ended their chances of upsetting the odds and the Irish duly eased to a comfortable win.
James Lowe and debutant Michael Lowry scored a brace each, while Joey Carbery, Jamison Gibson-Park, Peter O’Mahony, Ryan Baird and Kieran Treadwell also went over.
Penalties from Edoardo Padovani and Paolo Garbisi were scant consolation for the depleted Italians as they slipped to a 100th Six Nations defeat and 35th in succession.
Ireland fly-half Carbery – making a second-successive start in the number 10 jersey – kicked two conversions, with replacement Johnny Sexton adding a further eight points as Andy Farrell’s men bounced back from their 30-24 defeat in France a fortnight ago.
Les Bleus remain in pole position for championship glory as the only team still with Grand Slam aspirations remaining.
But this routine nine-try victory – secured in unusual circumstances – keeps up the pressure on Fabien Galthie’s table-toppers ahead of Ireland’s Twickenham showdown with fellow title hopefuls England in just under two weeks.
An Irish team showing six personnel changes from the pulsating loss in Paris raced ahead inside four minutes.
Hooker Dan Sheehan, on his first Test start, was heavily involved, teeing up Carbery to crawl over the line for only his second international try on the occasion of his 30th cap.
Following the raucous atmosphere of the Stade de France, a sold-out Aviva Stadium was far more subdued.
Padovani’s long-range penalty put Italy on the scoreboard but the match swiftly deviated from the norm when New Zealand-born Faiva ploughed into the head of Sheehan.
That flashpoint came just 10 minutes after the early exit of the stricken Lucchesi.
Ireland quickly took advantage of the numerical advantage, with Gibson-Park diving over.
Fleet-footed Lowry, who excited the crowd all day, was then mobbed by the entire Irish team after crossing on a dream debut, before skipper O’Mahony marked his first Six Nations start since being sent off against Wales last year by diving over in the left corner to secure the bonus point.
Garbisi’s boot doubled Italy’s tally just before the half-time whistle but Kieran Crowley’s men faced a thankless task.
Ireland’s Lowe, back in action after injury saw him miss the opening two rounds, reinforced the difficulty of the Azzurri mission by dotting down unopposed seven minutes into the second period.
Star man Lowry again brought spectators to their feet with his second, before lock Baird celebrated his maiden Six Nations start by charging down Alessandro Fusco’s attempted clearance to gleefully dive over.
Things went from bad to worse for the beleaguered Italians late on.
They finished the encounter with just 12 men as Braam Steyn was sin-binned five minutes from time for deliberately knocking the ball into touch, before Lowry unselfishly passed up the chance of a hat-trick by providing the assist for Lowe’s second.
England and Scotland will provide far sterner tests for Farrell’s men in the coming weeks but a professional job here was completed by replacement Treadwell crashing over in the final moments on his first Test appearance for more than four years.
Wayne Pivac’s men were poor in the first half, conceding a string of penalties and seeing Liam Williams sin-binned for a cynical infringement, and they were punished by Smith.
Les Bleus scored six tries in all against their hosts as they exacted revenge over Scotland for their win in Paris last year, with this another big statement.
Smith scored the opener, set up Elliot Daly’s try with a bullet pass and controlled the game nicely for the opening 50 minutes before the Red Rose lost their intensity and allowed the hosts to gain a foothold.
Off the back of their opening round victory over Italy, Les Bleus flexed their muscles to beat an Ireland side that had demolished Wales one week ago.
In a fixture that did not live up to its billing, entertaining moments were lacking as Wales ground out a victory that derails Scotland’s Grand Slam hopes.
It was not the most auspicious of performances from Les Bleus, especially in the opening half-hour, but they eventually pulled away.
Gregor Townsend’s men were on the back foot for much of the first half but still went into the break 10-6 ahead thanks to Ben White’s try and Finn Russell’s penalty.
As the scoreline suggests, this was a one-sided affair with Ireland dominating for long periods and they eventually outscored their opponents by four tries to none with Andrew Conway leading the way with two five-pointers. Their other points came through tries from Bundee Aki and Garry Ringrose while captain Johnny Sexton succeeded with three conversions and a penalty.