logo
Leinster class shines through in bruising URC semi-final that proved familiarity breeds contempt

Leinster class shines through in bruising URC semi-final that proved familiarity breeds contempt

Irish Times09-06-2025
URC semi-final: Leinster 37 Glasgow Warriors 19
There were reminders aplenty of the dominance exerted by
Ireland
and
Leinster
over their Scottish counterparts for much of the professional era. This
United Rugby Championship
semi-final had echoes of Ireland dismantling and
eliminating Scotland in the World Cup
at the Stade de France, both in the scale of the victory and the undercurrent of hostility bubbling between the two sides.
Watching Adam Hastings grappling with, and sneering at James Lowe toward the end of the first half – by which point Leinster were almost out of sight – brought to mind some of the scuffles that day in
Paris
as well. Once again, it made you wonder why some Scottish players seem so intent on riling their Irish opposition.
Two late converted tries were of modest consolation to the Warriors and merely distorted the scoreline. Such was Leinster's command of the physical exchanges that this was much closer to the 52-0 rout in the Champions Cup quarter-final two months ago than the hard-earned 13-5 win in a dead-rubber three weeks ago.
After all, Leinster had two tries ruled out in the first half for crossing and a forward pass, and Jordie Barrett also couldn't ground the ball over the line. Furthermore, Sam Prendergast left behind 11 points off the tee by missing four conversions and a penalty.
READ MORE
They say familiarity breeds contempt and it's evident that this ultra-focused and ruthless upgrade on Leinster's previous two displays was a backhanded compliment to Glasgow in dethroning the champions.
It was evident, right from the start, that Leinster were in the mood
'When you play a team you play quite frequently, and that gives it back to you in spades, there is that motivation to do your best,' admitted Jack Conan afterwards. 'We spoke just about being physical and dominant and we were for the majority and that is really pleasing. We'll use this as another stepping stone for next week.'
Equally as revealing was Jamison Gibson-Park when he told an array of ex-players-turned-pundits on Premier Sports: 'I suppose it was the ideal opponent for us in the semi-finals. We've a bit of history with Glasgow. We've had some ding-dong battles with them over the years.'
Dan Sheehan celebrates with Jamison Gibson-Park after scoring Leinster's first try against Glasgow Warriors. Photograph: Ben Brady/Inpho
It was evident, right from the start, that Leinster were in the mood. Prendergast's hanging kick-off led to Tommy O'Brien leading the charge as Henco Venter was engulfed. He conceded a penalty for not releasing.
Cue a kick to the corner, a lineout maul and a patient power play which culminated in the first of another brace by Dan Sheehan, thus taking his tally to 14 for the season.
When Leinster are 'on it' like they were here, to quote Conan, it serves to demonstrate how under-par their display was a week beforehand against the Scarlets. It also makes the performance against
Northampton in the Champions Cup semi-final
harder to understand, particularly the lack of urgency and intensity in defence.
As well as dominating on the ground, rarely has a team so reigned supreme in the air as Leinster did here. Franco Smith must regret restoring Hastings's kicking game to outhalf and seeking to target a fired-up Lowe in the air. Even so, the gulf in class was so pronounced that it probably didn't make a huge difference to the outcome.
Tacit admittance of this came at half-time when Hastings was withdrawn and the departing Tom Jordan shifted back to outhalf, from where he had orchestrated the commanding quarter-final win over the Stormers.
While four of the six tries were down to the pack's dominance and power plays, a couple were a product of the highly-skilled, high-tempo rugby they are capable of producing when also in the mood.
The counterattack to set up an overload on the blindside of the recycle was nicely worked. The crowd witnessed quick hands by Prendergast, Barrett and Jimmy O'Brien before Lowe's one-handed offload sent Jamie Osborne through to finish along the touchline. That made it 15-5 and was vintage Leinster. So too was the bout of continuity initiated by Lowe's high take and carry, and support play by Ryan Baird which culminated in Tommy O'Brien keeping the ball alive for Ciarán Frawley to finish.
'We always want to play at pace,' said Conan, although there seemed to be a much more concerted effort to do so in this match than in that pedestrian quarter-final against the Scarlets.
Leinster's Ryan Baird, who was outstanding throughout, offloads the ball. Photograph: Dan Sheridan/Inpho
'If you look at our athletes, the players, we have pace across the board. We want to stretch teams, we want to put them under pressure, we want to play quick from rucks.'
Nor was this a pre-ordained tactic, as such. 'It was just the way the game developed. It started fast, we had the ball a lot. Sometimes you can get sucked into kick-battles and stuff like that and you are trying to play territory or whatever.
'But that wasn't the case today. We rolled up our sleeves and got to work and got the bit of pace which suits us.'
The energy brought by the less exposed players this season, such as Tom Clarkson, Baird, Osborne and the O'Briens, underlined that going deep into a season requires going deep into a squad.
In his fifth successive 80-minute outing, the outstanding Baird never let up, invariably leading Leinster's hungry kick-chase, even when first to a long restart in the 79th minute.
Watched by Andy Farrell, the thought occurred that such a rare talent should really be a Lion.
SCORING SEQUENCE – 3 mins:
Sheehan try, Prendergast con, 7-0;
5:
Horne try, 7-5;
23:
Prendergast pen, 10-5;
28:
Osborne try, 15-5;
33:
Clarkson try, 20-5; (
half-time 20-5
);
41:
Sheehan try, 25-5;
54:
Osborne try, Prendergast con, 32-5;
58:
Frawley try, 37-5;
72:
Dobie try, Jordan con, 37-12;
79:
Tuipulotu try, Jordan con, 37-19.
LEINSTER:
Jimmy O'Brien; Tommy O'Brien, Jamie Osborne, Jordie Barrett, James Lowe; Sam Prendergast, Jamison Gibson-Park; Andrew Porter, Dan Sheehan, Thomas Clarkson; Joe McCarthy, James Ryan; Ryan Baird, Scott Penny, Jack Conan (capt).
Replacements:
Rónan Kelleher for Sheehan, RG Snyman for Ryan (both 55 mins); Rabah Slimani for Clarkson, Ciarán Frawley for Barrett (both 56); Jack Boyle for Porter (59); Ross Byrne for Prendergast (61); Max Deegan for Conan (64); Luke McGrath for Gibson-Park (70 mins).
GLASGOW WARRIORS:
Josh McKay; Kyle Steyn (capt), Sione Tuipulotu, Tom Jordan, Kyle Rowe; Adam Hastings, George Horne; Jamie Bhatti, Gregor Hiddleston, Fin Richardson; Alex Samuel, Scott Cummings; Euan Ferrie, Rory Darge, Henco Venter.
Replacements:
Stafford McDowall for Hastings (h-t); Johnny Matthews for Hiddleston, Rory Sutherland for Bhatti, Sam Talakai for Richardson, Max Williamson for Samuel (all 45 mins); Jamie Dobie for Horne (52); Macenzzie Duncan for Venter (59), Jack Mann for Ferrie (73).
Referee:
Andrea Piardi (FIR).
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'There was nobody talking about winning All-Irelands' - Class of 2016 revel in Tipperary's rags to riches transformation
'There was nobody talking about winning All-Irelands' - Class of 2016 revel in Tipperary's rags to riches transformation

RTÉ News​

time26 minutes ago

  • RTÉ News​

'There was nobody talking about winning All-Irelands' - Class of 2016 revel in Tipperary's rags to riches transformation

This time last year a third All-Ireland medal seemed a far-fetched dream. But that is what Tipperary's Michael Breen, Jason Forde, Seamus Kennedy, captain Ronan Maher and John McGrath have today. Kennedy played the last 20 minutes of yesterday's All-Ireland final victory over Cork, coming on shortly before now four-time winner Noel McGrath, and the others all started, making key contributions to a sensational 15-point win. "The resilience of this man," said manager Liam Cahill of Forde (who scored two points from play) afterwards. "He's like a good wine, he gets better with age. Breen gave an exhibition today and Noel comes on, Seamus Kennedy, John McGrath, they're just different class." How did a team that finished bottom in Munster last year - with just a single point from drawing with Waterford - get back on top so quickly? "It's a number of things," says Forde, 31, who reveals he sat down with Cahill to discuss the future after a rough 2024 in which he lost his role as free-taker. "We were so hurt after last year. Tipp is obviously such a mad hurling county. I remember meeting Jake Morris a couple of weeks after and you're nearly ashamed to show your face around because of the manner in which we went out. "When I met Liam, I just said we couldn't leave things like that, the year that we had. Having played for Tipp for 13 seasons and winning All-Irelands, to leave it on that note, it just wouldn't have felt right. "And you could see the younger players that were coming. This is Liam's third year with this group of players. We are after finding exceptional young players, three players in Darragh [McCarthy], Sam [O'Farrell] and Oisin [O'Donoghue] that we didn't have last year. "We just went back to the grindstone, we trained really, really hard. We've been finishing all the games really strong and I put that down to work our S&Cs have done with us. When it comes down to the last ten minutes, we back that we have the legs, the boys coming off the bench to finish the job as well. "We said as a group all year, there's nobody going to come and save us. We had to go back and put in the work and drag ourselves up out of it and thank God we did." Having performed well to draw with Limerick on the opening day in April, Tipp imploded after McCarthy's early red card against Cork. That meant they went to All-Ireland champions Clare needing a first Munster win in 10 attempts to keep their hopes of progression alive. They got it, McGrath and Andrew Ormond (in his breakthrough performance) scoring two goals each in a 4-18 to 2-21 victory that sparked a run of six to glory. "Munster is so tight and hard to get out of, you are targeting every game," says Forde. "But that Clare game, the Tipp crowd came out that day and cheered us off the bus. We were starting to reconnect with the support. "Ennis is a really tough place to go, the All-Ireland champions. That game was in the melting pot with five minutes to go, a couple of big scores from Eoghan Connolly and Seán Keneally off the bench and a few others got us over the line. But I think after that game we could see that the team was starting to open up, we knew if we got a result against Waterford, that would get us out of Munster." Two-goal hero John McGrath was lost for words in trying to describe the level Tipperary found in the second half as they won the All-Ireland title. — The Sunday Game (@TheSundayGame) July 20, 2025 Tipp have been described as the ultimate confidence county and their results in finals seem to back that up. When they win, they win big. Nine points to spare over Kilkenny in 2016 and 14 in '19. Some 15 over Cork yesterday, outscoring them 3-14 to 0-02 in the second half. John McGrath scored 1-03 and 0-03 in the victories over the Cats and 2-02 yesterday, in addition to winning the penalty converted by McCarthy. Good going for an almost 31-year-old who didn't start a championship game for almost three years after rupturing his Achilles' tendon against Clare in 2022. "There were a few years there it wasn't going for me but you don't just throw in the towel," he told RTÉ Sport. "I love playing this, I love being a part of this. You keep plugging away as long as you can. "I was lucky enough we were still going with the club so I didn't see Clonakenny but by all accounts savage work was done. Even into January, February, training was so intense. "We just really went back to basics. Built a real squad unity, a real belief as the year went on. Everyone was out on their feet there at the end but lads were still throwing everything in the way just to get over the line. "That second half was 'Oh my God'. "It's a long way we have come. We were long gone this time 12 months ago. It's hard to describe what exactly changed. It's not one single magic thing. The talent was always there, it was just about fine-tuning it and we have gone from strength to strength as the year has gone on." "Can we a bit of pride back in the jersey?" They were eliminated 14 months ago, to be precise. "We're never too far away from the summit," insisted Breen. "But if you're off a yard, you can be the bottom in Munster. "Our hurling is never an issue in Tipperary. Maybe the lungs and the legs, when we got them right this year, it did improve our game so much. But you could see it all come together in that second half today. "We spoke about minding the ball, we spoke about running it and working it out well. That's the way we train all year, and last year, these are things we tried to do, but just didn't execute. So to fully execute in an All-Ireland final [is very pleasing]. "I think the goal before half-time really woke us up. We had been playing reasonably well. But that second half, we just attacked everything. And we came up trumps. "This is really sweet. 2016 and '19, they were brilliant, but I'd never seen the colour and the excitement around the county [this week]. And the supporters again today were unbelievable." Did they really believe they could turn things around so dramatically? "When I met Liam you got a really good sense that there was going to be no stone left unturned to get the team back," says Forde. "You need a bit of luck in these situations too. There was nobody talking about winning All-Irelands. Can we get this team [going] and get a bit of pride back in the jersey, get out of Munster and maybe reconnect with the Tipperary supporters?

Jack O'Connor on Kerry's injury misfortune and a ray of light on a dark day
Jack O'Connor on Kerry's injury misfortune and a ray of light on a dark day

Irish Independent

time27 minutes ago

  • Irish Independent

Jack O'Connor on Kerry's injury misfortune and a ray of light on a dark day

The Kerry manager wondered at times during the season, as the injuries mounted up, if the football gods were conspiring against the Kingdom Kerryman As he heads into his eighth All-Ireland final as manager of the Kerry football team, Jack O'Connor has good reason to feel that the season has turned a positive corner as it enters the home straight. The sick bay is all but empty, the queue for the treatment tables has shortened considerably, and Jack is in his happy place: Fitzgerald Stadium as the evenings are starting to draw in, balls, bibs, cones and the best of the best footballers in the Kingdom preparing for the denouement of the season and the chance to reclaim the Sam Maguire cup.

Five key moments: Tipperary turnaround stuns Cork in All-Ireland decider
Five key moments: Tipperary turnaround stuns Cork in All-Ireland decider

Irish Times

timean hour ago

  • Irish Times

Five key moments: Tipperary turnaround stuns Cork in All-Ireland decider

Yellow card is a telling moment Inside the closing five minutes of the first half, everything was going from end-to-end as both teams still searched for the first real breakthrough. After Shane Barrett scored an excellent point for Cork, their advantage went up to five. It was the first sign of danger that perhaps Tipp might drift behind. Then John McGrath was fouled by Eoin Downey, resulting in a yellow card for the Cork full back. That would later prove telling. When Eoghan Connolly's long-range free was then touched into the net by Jason Forde, it appeared Tipp's fortunes might be about to turn. It was rightly called a s, but offered them some encouragement nonetheless. Cork's Shane Barrett scores a goal despite desperate Tipp defensive work. Photograph: Bryan Keane/Inpho Potentially killer blow for Tipp Two minutes of added time were announced at the end of the first half, and on 36:44, Robert Downey won back possession to set in train Cork's first goal chance of the first half. When the ball was passed out to Mark Coleman, he quickly passed on to Shane Barrett. Approaching just left of the goal, under the Davin Stand, Barrett placed his shot with stunning accuracy into the bottom right corner, and ensured that Tipp goalkeeper Rhys Shelly had no chance of stopping it. A killer blow for Tipp just before the break, it put Cork into a commanding 1-16 to 0-13 lead. READ MORE Tipperary's John McGrath celebrates scoring a vital goal. Photograph: Inpho Cahill works the oracle Whatever was said by Tipp manager Liam Cahill at half-time was soon working a treat as his players started to win possession all over the field. After shooting five unanswered points, and shooting one wide, Jake Morris took another shot from distance, which appeared to be within the safe range of Cork goalkeeper Patrick Collins. But instead, Collins tapped the ball down and out into the path of John McGrath on 46 minutes. He displayed remarkable calmness when he collected the ball and then promptly finished his shot into the Cork net. That made it 1-5 without reply, and the game had turned on its head. Cork's Eoin Downey sees red. Photograph: Inpho Situation goes from bad to worse Cork had finally got their first score of the second half moments after McGrath's first goal, but then conceded another two points without reply. Things were about to get a whole lot worse. After 53 minutes, McGrath made another mesmerising fetch from another long ball in front of the Cork goal, and Eoin Downey had little choice other than to foul him. Downey was shown a second yellow card, and his All-Ireland final was over. When Darragh McCarthy stepped up for the penalty and blasted it into the top left of the Cork goal, Tipp went up 2-20 to 1-17. Tipperary's John McGrath scores his side's third goal. Photograph: Inpho A deft touch into the net finishes Cork The hour-mark proved to be closing time for this most unpredictable of All-Ireland final outcomes. Cork had just conceded another two points without reply, when a third Tipp goal would end all hope of them making a late comeback. Eoghan Connolly attempted another long-range shot, and once that started to fall short, John McGrath read the movement of the ball to absolute perfection, getting to it in advance of Patrick Collins. McGrath finished it off with the deftest of touches into the Cork net. After another move of magic simplicity, Tipp went up 3-22 to 1-17. Game over.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store