
England signed off for the World Cup with a 21-13 victory but Stuart Lancaster's men made heavy weather of beating Ireland after threatening to blow them away earlier in the warm-up contest on Saturday.
Tries from Jonny May and Anthony Watson ensured the Twickenham fans went away with smiles on their faces, even more relishing the start of the World Cup with England's opening pool game with Fiji on September 18.
Ireland were unable to bounce back from their recent loss to Wales, and will have plenty of food for thought over the next couple of weeks before their opening World Cup contest.
England captain Chris Robshaw and his men led 12-3 having taken the game by the scruff of the neck with a stirring first-half display.
May used sheer strength, power and determination to crash his way over for the opening try within three minutes of the start.
Like a man on a special mission to cement his World Cup starting spot, he did his own Jonah Lomu impression on rival wing Tommy Bowe and then full-back Simon Zebo.
Both Irish defenders left sprawled on the ground as Gloucester ace May grabbed Ben Youngs' pass out wide and charged through and over them in the left hand corner with Ford converting.
May turned sinner moments later handed the Irish a penalty and Jonathan Sexton kicked Ireland's first points which bounced on the crossbar and over.
But that provided temporary respite for the Irish as George Ford's high punt to the right wing saw Watson leap like a salmon and out-jump Zebo.
The talented wing plucked the ball out of the air and grounded it over the line as he fell back to earth.
It was another stunning moment of athleticism and skill from the youngster tipped to be a real World Cup sensation.
Ireland lost scrum-half Conor Murray to concussion after his head connected with England prop Joe Marler.
May thought he had a second try in the 26th minute when running over the line unchallenged.
But, after a series of TV replays, it was ruled out for a forward final pass from hooker Tom Youngs.
Ford and Sexton exchanged penalties at the start of the second half but then came an Irish resurgence with captain Paul O'Connell leading the way.
A strong forwards drive from the visitors from a line-out to the veteran lock forcing his way over for a try converted by Sexton.
From the threat of being overrun in the first half, Joe Schmidt's men were suddenly right back in with a chance of upsetting the home side and the odds as England began to show some nerves.
Both sides made wholesale changes as a game which was lively, exciting and full of incident went through a quiet phase with neither managing to create any real pressure on the opponents line.
England threw on ex-rugby league man Sam Burgess in a bid to add some more strength and power to their back line but his first two pieces of action resulted in a forward pass and knock on.
Not the kind of impact Burgess was hoping to make as he attempts to snatch a starting spot against Fiji.
England finally gained some renewed momentum and long series of phases saw them knocking on the Irish line.
Replacement scrum-half Richard Wigglesworth cut in and desperately tried to plant the ball on the line but was tackled by Ireland replacement hooker Richardt Strauss.
However, referee Nigel Owens ruled the England man had come up short but a penalty from replacement No10 Owen Farrell sealed victory.
Source: AFP
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