Munster 33 Edinburgh 0

Munster 33 Edinburgh 0: Late flurry of tries earns Irish side bonus-point win

|

UPDATED:

14:36 GMT, 21 October 2012

Munster steamrollered Edinburgh with three tries in the final 10 minutes of this Heineken Cup tie as they returned to winning ways at Thomond Park.

A late forwards-led flurry saw Peter O'Mahony, Sean Dougall and Damien Varley all touch down as the hosts seized upon an unlikely bonus point.

With the injured Ronan O'Gara watching on from the stands, his deputy Ian Keatley landed two penalties from four attempts to give the hosts a 6-0 interval lead.

Party time: Munster celebrate on their way to victory over Edinburgh

Party time: Munster celebrate on their way to victory over Edinburgh

There was more for the home crowd to get their teeth into in the second half, with Conor Murray's 51st-minute try giving Rob Penney's side some breathing space.

Hammered 45-0 at home by Saracens in the opening round, Edinburgh allowed their heads to drop and Munster took advantage late on as they ended a run of three straight defeats.

Keatley, making his first Heineken Cup start at outside-half, slotted a fourth-minute penalty to settle the early nerves.

Casey Laulala's bone-crunching hit on Lee Jones stemmed Edinburgh's attempts to respond, although Stuart McInally and David Denton carried well in a rare energetic spurt from the Scots.

An unfavourable bounce thwarted Donncha O'Callaghan as he tried to gather a cross-field kick from Keatley and from the resulting scrum, Netani Talei was smashed back over the try-line by a red wave.

Munster kept their foot on the gas, however Keatley slid a kickable penalty wide and Greig Tonks was rock-solid in his positioning and high fielding.

A second three-pointer from Keatley doubled Munster's lead as the penalty count and an erratic line-out began to hurt Edinburgh.

Under the cosh and starved of possession, Michael Bradley's men dug their heels in and remained within a converted try as Keatley sent a long-range penalty wide.

Munster's frustration was obvious as half-time loomed, with their lack of cutting edge, coupled with Edinburgh's scramble, making for plenty of midfield gridlock.

A couple of handling errors ruined promising Munster moves, early in the second period, but their persistence paid off when man-of-the-match Murray broke through under the posts.

The tall scrum-half spotted his opportunity, surging around the side of a ruck and he got enough downward pressure as he grounded the ball with three Edinburgh players in tow.

Keatley converted the try which television match official Geoff Warren rubber-stamped, and followed up with a neatly-taken third penalty into the swirling wind.

Edinburgh were toothless in attack and never looked like scoring for the second week running. Their cause was not helped by the loss of Gregor Hunter who came off worse when attempting to tackle James Downey.

A bad run of injuries, including Tim Visser's enforced withdrawal yesterday, left Edinburgh looking a shell of the side that reached last season's semi-finals.

Having struggled to score when taking the ball out wide, Munster went back to basics for the closing stages and it worked a treat against their tiring opponents.

A muscular line-out drive, a tactic so profitable in the past in Limerick, sent the Scots backwards and number eight O'Mahony wrestled over from a metre out. Keatley converted for a 23-0 scoreline.

Soon after, Dougall grabbed his second try of the tournament when finishing off in the right corner after replacement Paddy Butler had blazed over halfway.

Munster kept plugging away for the fourth try and it arrived in the first minute of injury-time – Keatley kicked a penalty to the right corner and the last-gasp line-out drive sent Varley charging in, despite calls for obstruction from the visitors.

Ulster flyer Andrew Trimble set to upset Leinster

Our turn for success! Ulster flyer Trimble set to upset Leinster

|

UPDATED:

22:58 GMT, 18 May 2012

Ulster go into Saturday's seismic, all-Irish Heineken Cup Final against Leinster at Twickenham ready to unleash all the 'jealousy' built up over several years of watching their rival provinces rule the roost.

While the reigning champions from Dublin are the nailed-on favourites to retain their title – 2-7, according to Ladbrokes – what Joe Schmidt's magnificent side must contend with is the sheer weight of motivation propelling their northern opponents to upset the odds.

Focused: Ulster and Ireland winger Andrew Trimble

Focused: Ulster and Ireland winger Andrew Trimble

So much angst and pent-up frustration will be poured into Ulster's last big push to emulate their predecessors from 1999 who won Europe's top prize.

They relish the underdog status too, having embraced it and made a mockery of it in the historic quarter-final triumph over Munster at Thomond Park.

Andrew Trimble, the Ireland wing who grew up supporting Ulster, gave a vivid indication of exactly what this occasion means.

'We are motivated by jealousy, to be honest,' he said. 'We were getting fed up of being seen as the third-choice province, hanging on behind Leinster and Munster.

'Playing Leinster in this final adds intensity and passion. We want to leapfrog them and become the No 1 province. We have become genuine contenders for the trophy and this is an opportunity we don't want to let slip.'

For the likes of Trimble, Rory Best and Stephen Ferris, the home-grown players who have been at the vanguard of Ulster's revival under the coaching guidance of Brian McLaughlin, this is a personal and passionate odyssey. 'I'd always been an Ulster supporter,' said Trimble, 'I was there at Lansdowne Road in 1999 when we won it.

Since then, I've played for Ulster for seven years.

'This is not just my career, it's been my entire life and the climax is on Saturday. It means the world. We've come so far, now we have to finish it off.'

Ready for action: Leinster's Eoin Reddan (2nd left) catches the ball during training with captain Leo Cullen

Ready for action: Leinster's Eoin Reddan (2nd left) catches the ball during training with captain Leo Cullen

Having fought back from the brink of oblivion to beat Northampton in last year's final, Leinster are aiming for a third title with the belief that they have the big-game experience and temperament. They are awash with match-winners, from Brian O'Driscoll to fly-half Jonathan Sexton, Jamie Heaslip at No 8 and Lions full back Rob Kearney, who will start after recovering from injury.

Meanwhile, Ulster welcome back Chris Henry and prop John Afoa, who returns from a four-week suspension. Paddy Jackson has retained his starting place at fly-half, with the experienced Ian Humphreys on the bench.

Leinster will be also wary of the goal-kicking threat posed by Ulster's Ruan Pienaar and flanker Ferris, both on the ERC Player of the Year shortlist.

'I think I'm playing really well this season,' said Ferris.

'Coming back from injury, I got myself really fit for the World Cup, then I had a good tournament, came home and have just carried on bouncing along. I've been part of every Heineken Cup game and I've had a few man-of-the-match performances.'

His individual clash with Ireland team-mate and room-mate Sean O'Brien will be one of the pivotal factors in this game. They have played against each other only once, so the two colliding will be a rare and fascinating spectacle.

'Sean is one of the best back-rowers in the world and as good a ball carrier as anyone in Europe,' said Ferris. 'We roomed together during the World Cup. He's a good mate of mine and it will be a good match-up. Hopefully we will clash a few times but at the end we'll shake hands and be friends again.'

When they shake hands, Ferris may have to congratulate his friend reluctantly. For all Ulster's drive and determination, Leinster are favourites for a reason.

Northampton 36 Munster 51: Simon Zebo lands hat-trick as Saints suffer record defeat

Northampton 36 Munster 51: Zebo lands hat-trick as Saints suffer record defeat

Munster clinched a home Heineken Cup quarter-final spot as they hit last season's runners-up for a record 51 points.

Simon Zebo raced over for a hat-trick of tries to provide the perfect ending to a week in which he was invited to train with the Irish Six Nations squad, and Ronan O'Gara kicked 24 points as the two-times champions saved their best for last.

Having clinched the pool the previous weekend, this game at stadium:mk was all about securing a home draw. They did that and more as they overtook reigning champions Leinster to take the top seed position.

Hat-trick: Simon Zebo celebrates scoring his third try at stadium:mk

Hat-trick: Simon Zebo celebrates scoring his third try at stadium:mk

Saints knew they had to win with a bonus point to stand any chance of reaching the Heineken Cup quarter-finals and also had to be aware that if the Scarlets won in Castres, they could pinch a potential Amlin Challenge Cup place.

As for Munster, the only unbeaten team in the tournament after five rounds of pool matches, they needed to grab at least a losing bonus point to ensure they played their quarter-final at their beloved Thomond Park.

So there was all to play for, although Saints went into the game without their England trio of Chris Ashton (not selected), Tom Wood and Courtney Lawes (injured).

Can't catch me: Zebo sprints away from the tackle of Saints' Ryan Lamb

Can't catch me: Zebo sprints away from the tackle of Saints' Ryan Lamb

The home side came into the game on the back of five successive wins in all competitions and were seeking revenge for having victory snatched from their grasp by an 84th-minute Ronan O'Gara drop goal on matchday one.

They started well and Ryan Lamb rewarded their dominance with two early penalties. O'Gara was quick to respond, but a penalty try awarded when the Munster pack disintegrated at a scrum in the shadow of their posts allowed Saints to move into a 10-point lead.

Munster looked slightly stunned, but their wealth of experience came to the fore and the metronomic boot of O'Gara gave them some impetus.

Sticking the boot in: Ronan O'Gara

Sticking the boot in: Ronan O'Gara

Munster had confirmed themselves as pool winners the previous weekend, but there was the tantalising prize of a record unbeaten march through their pool for the first time in their 17 years in the tournament if they could keep their winning run going.

Things were looking good when BJ Botha burrowed his way over from close range for a try and O'Gara's conversion was followed by a penalty that gave them the lead for the first time in the 37th minute. But Lamb had the last laugh in the first half with another penalty and it was all square at the break.

The capacity 22,000 crowd were gripped by the action and there was no let up in the intensity when the action resumed. With their home draw under threat, Munster flexed their muscles and two tries in a breathtaking burst seemed to have put the result beyond doubt.

Johne Murphy rounded off some great play in the right corner and then Denis Hurley sent Zebo racing clear a few minutes later.

The 12-point lead was cut by a second penalty try awarded for another total destruction of the Munster scrum from five metres out, but the home side could not cut the gap to anything less than four points.

At 26-31 it was still anyone's game but even though Lamb matched two more O'Gara penalties, Zebo's interception try from 60 metres not only sealed the victory but guaranteed a home draw and took Munster ahead of the reigning champions Leinster to the top qualifying spot.

Going nowhere: Munster's James Coughlan is tackled by Mark Sorenson

Going nowhere: Munster's James Coughlan is tackled by Mark Sorenson

It was the first time this season in Europe that Munster had picked up a bonus point and now they have to break the Heineken Cup hoodoo by becoming the only team to win the trophy by winning nine straight games.

Zebo's hat-trick try and Ian Keatley's conversion took the score over 50 points and Scott Armstrong's last-minute try was hardly any consolation for the shattered Saints.