Tadhg Furlong during the Six Nations win over Wales.

Tadhg Furlong during the Six Nations win over Wales.

WALES HAVE SLAMMED Ireland and France’s illegal scrum technique and picked out Tadhg Furlong for special criticism ahead of round three of the Guinness Six Nations.

Andy Farrell’s Ireland were 24-14 winners over Wales and they remain on course for a Grand Slam, but the Welsh believe their Dublin game saw the men in green step the wrong side of the law.

Ireland won a crucial 63rd-minute scrum penalty at the Aviva Stadium – one Furlong celebrated wildly – as they withheld Wales pressure to come out on top.

After analysing that game in detail, Wales forwards coach Jonathan Humphreys said: “We want to scrummage a certain way and paint really good pictures. The consistency of that has been good, but when you’re dealing with tightheads like Furlong who is going to come right across the scrum from left to right, it creates problems and instability.

“We have to make sure we’re diligent in that area and there is a little inconsistency.”

When asked for his view on the key second-half penalty in his team’s defeat by Ireland, Humphreys added: “It’s clearly obvious that Furlong has hammered across the scrum. It’s created instability from left to right, but we’ve got to deal with that.

“We dealt with it for most of the game, but the one scrum we had to deal with it – we didn’t. That’s our fault. It’s a massive learning curve, but I believe our young tightheads could go on and be phenomenal. There are no excuses for us.”

Humphreys’ criticism is unlikely to bother Ireland ahead of their crucial meeting with England at Twickenham on Sunday.

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Wales, meanwhile, must beat France in Cardiff on Saturday if last season’s Grand Slam champions are to stay in the hunt for the Championship title.

Furlong scores Ireland's second try against Wales. Source: Bryan Keane/INPHO

Maintaining their scrum attack, Wales loosehead prop Wyn Jones said of France: “They’ll be a big pack, but a little bit ill-disciplined – especially at scrum time. We know they’ll hit and chase and cheat. That’s something we’re fully aware of and something we’ve got to combat on the day.

“They’ll look to push early and look to mess about at scrum time. It’s something we’ve looked at, but we’ll just concentrate on ourselves.”

Wales head coach Wayne Pivac has fly-half Dan Biggar and wing Josh Adams fit to face France after they suffered head and hip knocks against Ireland.

Hooker Elliot Dee, lock Cory Hill and full-back Liam Williams are all out injured.