Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)
TALKING BULLS’ GRIT
Leinster left stunned as South Africans storm the RDS
Leinster 26 Bulls 27
BY MIRROR REPORTER
LEINSTER ended a season trophy-less for the first time since 2017 as the Bulls won at the RDS to reach the United Rugby Championship grand final.
The Bulls’ maiden victory on Irish soil, sealed by a late Morne Steyn penalty, made it a fortnight to forget for Leo Cullen’s (inset) men on the back of their European heartbreak.
A Bulls purple patch delivered tries from Johan Grobbelaar and captain Marcell Coetzee and a 17-14 half-time lead.
Robbie Henshaw replied, adding to an early Dan Sheehan score, but a 52nd-minute penalty try, which landed James Ryan in the sin-bin, had the Bulls 10 points clear.
Although Rory O’loughlin added the hosts’ third try and replacement Cian Healy crossed right at the death, the defiant Bulls deservedly march on to face either the DHL Stormers or Ulster next week.
Jake White’s charges stood up well to Leinster’s initial attacks, but Sheehan turned a
Ross Byrne kick through into an opportunist ninth-minute try.
The Bulls, who got on the board with a Chris Smith penalty, ramped up their physicality to touch down in the 19th and 24th minutes.
Canan Moodie’s knock-on over the try-line was forgiven when hooker Grobbelaar barged over from a tap penalty. Smith converted with the aid of the post. Elrigh Louw’s powerful carrying soon got them back into scoring range, Coetzee the beneficiary of Zak Burger’s short pass to go in under the posts to make it 17-7.
Leinster’s backs brilliantly got on the outside in the 32nd minute before Henshaw stretched out to score. Byrne’s conversion restored the three-point gap.
Louw again led the charge for the Pretoriabased side on the restart. Grobbelaar controlled an advancing maul and Leinster coughed up a penalty try, with Ryan binned for the collapse.
Not ever the springing of Johnny Sexton could inspire an error-strewn Leinster. A sharp attack gave them a lifeline with 11 minutes to go as O’loughlin was released for the left corner.
However, replacement Steyn’s 76th-minute penalty had the Bulls out of reach before Healy burrowed over past the 80minute mark.
Afterwards, Bulls coach White admitted Ronan O’gara’s La Rochelle and their European win over the Blues was at the heart of his planning.
“We did study it,” he said. “What gave us belief, what La Rochelle showed was once you stay in the game you can win it.
“You get belief from seeing them lose, if they’d won they’d probably have been harder to beat.
“You have to make sure you don’t give them set-piece, we didn’t kick the ball out, and keep the ball in-field.”