The Scotsman

“I’m not going to make any excuses for myself because it’s my fault, it starts with me”

Coach Richard Cockerill takes the blame for Edinburgh defeat

- Duncan Smith at BT Murrayfiel­d

● Cockerill admits capital team got what they deserved as they fell short on the big occasion again and saw their hopes of reaching the Pro14 showpiece snatched away by a streetwise Ulster side. But the coach will now look to lift his players for their European Challenge Cup quarter-final against BordeauxBe­gles and a chance to end their recent losing record in knockout games

And so a Scottish rugby“season ”, in a“domestic” sense at least, ended in a fittingly sombre and anticlimac­tic manner at an eerie BT Murrayfiel­d on Saturday night.

An Edinburgh side who had seemed destined to make history andrea cha first ever Guinness Pro14 final right up until the last ten minutes choked as they allowed Ulster to snatch away their dream with the last kick of the game despite trailing by 12 points at a stage earlier in the second half.

For the dejected home side it is not yet the end of a campaign which b egan more than a year ago as they have a European Challenge Cup quarter- final against Bordeaux-Beg les, scheduled to take place in France where new coronaviru­s cases are surging, on 19 September and a chance to end a losing record in knockout games under Richard Cockerill which now reads zip from five. European trophies and league titles remain to be handed out but the Covid-19 pandemic has left everyone losers this year. Now “winter is coming” as the slogan goes for one of the screen sagas everybody had been seeking streamed solace in for the past bleak months and the next chapters are unpredicta­ble.

Rugby chiefs are taking a Panglossia­n stance. They have to. What is the alternativ­e? Pilot events with limited fans, of which Murrayfiel­d was a pioneer a week past Friday, have been held and there is optimistic talk of getting back to tens of thousands when internatio­nal rugby is due to resume in a flurry of Tests which will see the culminatio­n of a truncated Six Nations and makeshift eight-team Nations Cup. The next Pro14 season, reduced to 12 for now due to the unavailabi­lity of the South African sides Cheetahs and Kings, is set to begin at the start of next month.

After the enforced six-month break Edinburgh and, to a lesser extent Glasgow, at least got some hit-outs in what is now more like a pre -season than a climax to one that had long since been marked with a glaring asterisk due to tragic and unforeseen external circumstan­ces. Fresh from agreeing a two-year contract extension to 2023, Cockerill will now embark on pushing his charges up another level again after familiar failings re-emerged to wreck what had seemed like another ticked box on an upward journey.

The clearly disappoint­ed Englishman was calm and fair in his analysis of what went wrong as his team “got what they deserved”.

He lamented the fact that Test-level players had been unable to handle the big moments, perhaps kindly neglecting the fact that is too often also the case with the Scotland national team.

A lot went right for Edinburgh on the night. They made an early breakthrou­gh with skipper Stuart Mcinally’s try, led at half-time, then exploded out of the traps after the restart to forge a seemingly decisive 19-7 lead as Darcy Graham and Chris Dean went over.

But the home side at no point seemed comfortabl­e against a streetwise but not overly impressive Ulster. The problem

“I’m not going to make any excuses for myself because it’s my fault, it starts with me, and the players are going to be held accountabl­e next week.

We just have to dust ourselves off”

RICHARD COCKERILL

for Edinburgh seemed to be, as Cockerill alluded to, the failure of the players to recognise that a semifinal, even one played in an empty shell of a stadium, is a different beast for a bog-standard mid-season league had been the latter Ulster might have unconsciou­sly chucked as a lost cause but a team with number of battle-hardened Ireland Test stars refused to let this one slip and mauled their way back into things with tries from Rob Her ring and John Andrew.

To add salt to Edinburgh wounds Ulster boss Dan McFarland, the former Glasgow

and Scotland forwards coach, revealed the maul moves had been mastermind­ed by capital legend Roddy Grant, who is now an assistant for the Belfast-based northern province, who will head south to face the all-conquering and big odds-on favourites Leinster in the Dublin final on Saturday.

Then sub stand-off Ian Madigan nailed the 40- metre last-kick penalty after Mike Willemse’s desperate deliberate knock-on was, in Cockerill’s view, correctly punished by Irish referee Frank Murphy.

“We’ll have a few days off and then come back in the middle of next week,” said Cockerill after the game.

“We just don’t need to be forcing a game that doesn’t need to be chased. Chris Dean spoons the ball down the field and they end up scoring from the next play.

“We have to make good decisions there – let’s have a scrum because we were on top there. That’s just an example and there was lots of examples of poor decision making. It doesn’ t matter if it’s a semi-final or Zebre at home.”

So the champagne stayed on ice and the prospect of a quality glass of claret in a fort night did little to soothe the Edinburgh coach’s frustratio­n.

“That’s no consolatio­n because we should be taking the opportunit­y here,” he said of the upcoming Bordeaux match, before accepting the responsibi­lity for the shattering defeat was as much if not more down to him than his misfiring players.

“I’m not going to make any excuses for myself because it’s my fault, it starts with me, and the players are going to be held accountabl­e next week.

“We’re not going to change 45 players, they’ll only change the coach. We just have to dust ourselves off – we’ve got a couple of weeks prep to go to Bordeaux so we just need to get better with the players we’ve got.”

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 ??  ?? 2 Clockwise from main picture: Mike Willemse, centre, cuts a dejected figure after his deliberate knockon led to the decisive penalty in Saturday’s Pro14 semi-final at BT Murrayfiel­d; Ulster standoff Ian Madigan sends over the 40-metre kick to win the game; Ulster players celebrate after earning a place in the final against Leinster.
2 Clockwise from main picture: Mike Willemse, centre, cuts a dejected figure after his deliberate knockon led to the decisive penalty in Saturday’s Pro14 semi-final at BT Murrayfiel­d; Ulster standoff Ian Madigan sends over the 40-metre kick to win the game; Ulster players celebrate after earning a place in the final against Leinster.
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