The Herald (South Africa)

Munster believe they can defeat Stormers

- George Byron

Battle-hardened Munster will arrive in Cape Town with a strong belief they can topple the Stormers in their own backyard in next Saturday’s United Rugby Championsh­ip final, coach Graham Rowntree says.

After beating favourites Leinster in a thrilling semifinal in Dublin, Munster are ready to fight fire with fire in front of a capacity crowd of 50,000 Stormers fans at the Cape Town Stadium.

The Stormers nailed down their second consecutiv­e URC final berth when they overcame Irish side Connacht in Cape Town on Saturday.

“Not perfect, not perfect,” was Rowntree’s assessment of his team’s win over Leinster.

“We’ve got to be more clinical. We spoke about it at halftime, we needed to be more clinical near the opposition try line.

“This is a very good Leinster team, regardless of whoever they have out on the field.

“A very good team. So, we weren’t perfect, but I’m delighted with the fight and the spirit.

“We’re in a final, lads. I said to the group in the week, 25 days ago, we were paranoid about European qualificat­ion.

“Now we are in a semi, now we are in a final.

“Our game is still growing. We are finding out about people.

“Pete O’Mahony spoke really well in the dressingro­om about this not being our final against Leinster.

“We go down to Cape Town with belief.

“This group don’t give in and we have come through some fires in the last few weeks.

“We go to Cape Town and it will be our sixth away game on the bounce, and that’s when we are finding out about people.

“We are tough, battle-hardened, so I was never hopeless.

This team don’t go away.

“I have seen tangible improvemen­ts in our game.

“I saw that when results weren’t going our way back in the autumn.

“I had full belief in what I had seen being done in training and the connection the lads had with the coaches.

“We are here to win, aren’t we, in this sport. And to get this far, and to get to a final, we will be gunning for it.”

Leinster coach Leo Cullen said his team lacked cohesion after they made a further seven changes from the quarterfin­al win over the Sharks.

“It didn’t quite go our way. We were very close to it, very close to closing out the game.

“It’s disappoint­ing we weren’t quite able to do that but again you have to give credit to Munster.

“There are two teams fighting right to the very end, they nail their opportunit­y at the death and we don’t get another chance.

“We were very, very close to winning a semifinal. Unfortunat­ely,

not this time. Again, back to that cohesion part.

“They had a more settled group there today, and that’ sa call we made and we have to accept the consequenc­es of that now.

“Munster look strong but we fight our way back in and repel and repel them on numerous occasions, so the fight among the lads is great.

“You couldn’t fault them for a second and Joe McCarthy comes off the bench and scores a great try.

“We had a couple more opportunit­ies and were very close.

“We got the ball reefed out around the try line or barged off the breakdown near the try line a few times.

“When you’re in semifinals and finals you need to be able to nail your opportunit­ies and we weren’t quite good enough today.

“Munster, you could see what it meant to them at the end. It was always going to be a very tight game and we just weren’t quite good enough.”

 ?? Picture: ASHLEY VL0TMAN/ GALLO IMAGES ?? EXCITEMENT BUILDING: The Stormers’ Damian Willemse on the run in their URC semifinal match against Connacht at the DHL Stadium in Cape Town on Saturday. They face Irish side Munster in the final at home on May 27
Picture: ASHLEY VL0TMAN/ GALLO IMAGES EXCITEMENT BUILDING: The Stormers’ Damian Willemse on the run in their URC semifinal match against Connacht at the DHL Stadium in Cape Town on Saturday. They face Irish side Munster in the final at home on May 27

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