New Zealand held on to win a nerve-jangling quarter-final over a thoroughly-impressive and ultimately-devastated Ireland 28-24 in Paris and move on the face Argentina in the semi-finals on Friday.
For Ireland captain Sexton this was not the fairytale ending that he, his team and his nation had hoped for."You've got to work hard for fairytale endings, we didn't get it and that's just life," said the 38-year-old Irish legend."We didn't leave a stone unturned, we ticked every box, trained the house down."I'm very proud of the boys, proud of the nation, the country, we couldn't have done any more really."It's fine margins, they sucker-punched us on a couple of tries and we had to work really hard for our tries, that's what champions do
"Fair play to them, they're a cracking team.
"It's been amazing, these last six weeks have been a dream. This group, these fans and I'm just gutted we couldn't do it for them.
"I thought after a slow enough start we played alright.
Sexton retires as Ireland's highest scorer, having contributed 1,108 points over 119 matches.
"First and foremost he's an outstanding human being," said Farrell. "He's probably the best-ever player to play for Ireland.
"That was one hell of a game and somebody had to lose - unfortunately it was us.
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