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- Switched from blindside for the injured Jack Conan.
Hugely effective.
- Ryan Baird 8 for Ryan (39 mins)- Dan Sheehan 7 for Kelleher (51 mins)- Craig Casey 7 for Murray (51 mins)- Harry Byrne for Keenan (51 mins)- Cian Healy 7 for Porter (58 mins)- Tom O’Toole 6 for Furlong (58 mins)- Nick Timoney 7 for vander Flier (60 mins)- Keith Earls 6 for Henshaw (66 mins)- Emiliano Boffelli 5- Mateo Carreras 7- Matias Moroni 6- Jeronimo de la Fuente 5- Lucio Cinti 6- Santiago Carreras 6- Tomas Cubelli 6- Thomas Gallo 6- Julian Montoya 6- Francisco Gomez Kodela 6- Guido Petti 6- Tomas Lavanini 0- Santiago Grondona 6- Marcos Kremer 6- Pablo Matera 6- Facundo Cordero 6 for M Carreras (35 mins)- Ignacio Calles 6 for Gallo (46 mins)- Gonzalo Bertranou for Cubelli 6 (46 mins)- Lucas Paulos 6 for Petti (48 mins)- Eduardo Bello 6 for Kodela (60 mins)- Facundo Isa 6 for Kremer (60 mins)- Nicolas Sanchez 6 for S Carreras (60)- Facundo Bosch 6 for Montoya (74 mins)Ireland decisively completed an Autumn Nations series clean sweep as they dismissed the Argy-bargy by a record seven-try haul at the Aviva Stadium.
A deserved red card on the hour mark for the Pumas' experienced lock Tomas Lavanini put the cap on a desperate afternoon that had started so promisingly for the visitors.
Lavanini recklessly charged into Cian Healy at the ruck, catching him on the cheek and shoulder and prompting Ireland's on-field skipper to call the second row a 'f****** scumbag'.
But it was the final nail in the coffin of, who will kick themselves that they butchered chances to overturn Ireland's lead before half-time, with Emiliano Boffelli the chief offender with missed penalty kicks at goal.
Andy Farrell, however, will be pleased with the overall performance from his side after the four changes he had made from the victory over the All Blacks extended to six before kick-off, and perhaps that excuses the careless start that saw the visitors take an early lead.
The head coach will also be satisfied with the 80-minute runout for, who guided Ireland well in the absence of the injured Johnny Sexton and made a couple of scintillating breaks when switched to full-back for the final quarter.
Tadhg Beirne, who had started the Autumn Series opener against Japan and did well off the bench against the All Blacks, was a straight second row swap for Henderson.
Nick Timoney was promoted to the matchday squad.
Conan's withdrawal forced a back row shuffle.
Caelan Doris switched from blindside flanker to no 8 and O'Mahony, also off the back of a big impact as a sub last week, took the no 6 jersey, with Ryan Baird added to the bench.
The rejigged hosts got off to a very poor start, conceding the game's first try in the third minute.
's box-kick was too strong and gave Pumas full-back Boffelli the chance to see the space to his right.
Two brilliantly-timed off-loads later, the visitors' winger Mateo Carreras cut inside Beirne to score, with Boffelli converting the try.
A high tackle on Murray got the home side on the scoreboard via a comfortable Carbery penalty that was followed by that rarest of sightings - a Hugo Keenan error, as the full-back mis-kicked into touch in his own 22.
But Ireland seized on a badly-timed Pumas lapse - a crooked lineout throw - and a searing counter saw Murray do well to find Henshaw, who released Ronan Kelleher down the right flank.
Doris was there in support and, with Argentina in retreat and offside, Carbery kicked a penalty to the corner.
Beirne did well to win the lineout and Josh van der Flier was the man in possession as the driving maul crashed over for the try.
Carbery made it 10-7 in his side's favour.
Ireland tried to back that up but were sloppy in possession, with the otherwise superb Tadhg Furlong and then Murray knocking on, but a second try followed in the 23rd minute.
A great break involving a number of men in green, including Murray and Garry Ringrose, saw Carbery kick to the corner off another penalty.
Kelleher's break off the lineout maul had the Pumas in disarray and it was Porter in support who was bundled over by the pack.
Carbery's extras pushed Ireland into a 10-point lead.
That advantage should have been reduced to just four - and Argentina will be kicking themselves that they even failed to regain the lead in the period that followed.
But Boffelli somehow missed an easy penalty when Porter failed to release in the tackle, then similarly he shot right and wide from a little further out when Doris was left isolated after making a break.
Another Murray box-kick had his team in trouble in the 34th minute, and Carreras was lightning quick through a gap in Ireland's defence, selling Carbery a dummy.
Carrera's hand-off on Porter put him within range of the try-line, but he stumbled and injured himself, forcing his withdrawal - and providing Ireland with a real let-off.
They quickly recovered their composure.
Having conceded a scrum penalty earlier, Porter won the vital one on his own side's five-metre line and the hosts scrambled upfield.
And their third try three minutes from the interval effectively provided them with a winning cushion.
This time a Murray box-kick was on the money and collected by James Lowe, and Ireland were away - having had barely any involvement, Robert Baloucoune was used twice on the right before Doris muscled his way past forwards Francisco Gomez Kodela and Pablo Matera to score.
Carbery's conversion made it 24-7 at the break, but Ireland lost their skipper Ryan in the attack, with Ryan Baird taking his place.
Argentina needed a fast start to the second half and got it, earning one penalty inside Ireland's 22 and another just outside it - both were kicked to the corner and both lineouts were lost.
In response, Baird took off on a barnstorming run to the visitors' 22, with Furlong following up with another of his own.
Doris' pass would have put Murray into a gap had Matera not deliberately knocked on, and the Pumas no 8 was sin-binned for his efforts as Carbery extended Ireland's lead from the tee.
That was the cue for Farrell to change things up with a different half-back partnership in the 51st minute.
Harry Byrne came in at out-half as Carbery moved to full-back in place of Keenan, and with Craig Casey introduced for Murray.
With the Pumas struggling to cope with the pressure exerted by Ireland, a fourth try followed as van der Flier crashed over for his second try.
Healy thought he had gained the ultimate revenge five minutes later when he dived over, but the TMO ruled he was not in control of the ball as he tried to ground it under intense pressure.
However, the fifth try was put on the board 90 seconds later, with Kelleher's replacement Dan Sheehan wheeling off a ruck to score.
Carbery made it 41-7 with the conversion.
Healy also got his try from close range and, with Ireland firmly in ruthless mode, Beirne got over for a deserved five-pointer as well three minutes from time.
Carbery, who had just been named TV's man of the match, missed his most difficult kick of the afternoon as he was denied by the near post.
Satisfyingly for Ireland, their defence held up the Pumas in the last play of the game to prevent a second try for their opponents.
It's Tadhg Beirne and this is a brilliant performance from Ireland as Carbery misses his first kick of the day.
There's a high tackle on Baloucou and this could be at least a yellow surely? The referee only gives a penalty which seems amazing.
Peter O'Mahony audibly upset at a late tackle in what looks like it could be a red card.
It's a nasty late clearout to a defenceless Cian Healy who is not near the ball.
Argentina win a penalty and kick for the corner but just can't capitalise and