Western Morning News

Baxter tells Chiefs to ‘go for it’ in second leg clash

The 2020 European champions take five-point advantage to second leg at Munster

- ANDREW BALDOCK PA rugby union correspond­ent

EXETER Chiefs’ director of rugby Rob Baxter wants his players to “go for it” in Limerick on Saturday after they claimed a firstleg advantage in their Heineken Champions Cup round-of-16 clash against Munster.

The 2020 European champions triumphed 13-8 at Sandy Park, edging out their opponents despite losing two players to the sin-bin – wing Olly Woodburn, who was yellow-carded following an arm to the head of a Munster player, and Patrick Schickerli­ng following foul play near his own line – in rapid succession midway through the second half.

“We created a lot of opportunit­ies that we didn’t take, but at the same time we probably put together some fantastic play,” Baxter said.

“That 10 minutes when we were down to 13 men was probably one of our best 10 minutes of the season.

“The whole game, the whole situation, could have flipped then. We were under some pressure.

“For us to deal with that 10 minutes like we did, I think it showed a great deal of character and something that could really drive our season from here on in.

“That was a very good performanc­e. All the hard work and the processes were there.

“If you perform like that, nine times out of 10, you win the game, and we’ve won the game. I am actually pretty comfortabl­e with where we are.

“We have just got to go for it next week and be as good as we were today.”

Exeter were without injured England internatio­nals Jack Nowell, Ollie Devoto, Luke Cowan-Dickie and Jonny Hill, but welcomed back centre Henry Slade, prop Harry Williams and number eight Sam Simmonds to the starting line-up.

The Chiefs looked on their way to a sizeable victory after first-half tries from full-back Stuart Hogg and flanker Jacques Vermeulen put them 10 points clear.

But injury-hit Munster rallied after Exeter were reduced to 13 men, with wing Shane Daly touching down, while fly-half Ben Healy kicked a penalty, but it was Hogg’s drop-goal from 45 metres out that could ultimately make a significan­t difference.

Exeter, looking to win the European Cup for a second time in three seasons, will feel they should have put the game away before indiscipli­ne hit them.

Exeter defended magnificen­tly with Woodburn and Schickerli­ng off, and they almost added a third try during the dying seconds, but Woodburn knocked on after making a clean break.

Munster, twice European champions, displayed trademark grit and resilience to set up an intriguing second leg at Thomond Park at the weekend.

Munster head coach Johann Van Graan said: “We stayed in the fight. The guys stood up and were counted.

“A two-leg knockout is fascinatin­g. You can’t win it in the first leg, but you can certainly lose it, and we feel we are still in it for next week at home.

“There were a lot of small margins in the game, and we need to be accurate for 80 minutes. We see Exeter as the very best in the opposition 22, and we knew what was coming.”

Munster’s injury troubles saw skipper Peter O’Mahony and fly-half Joey Carbery sidelined, with Simon Zebo, Tadhg Beirne and Gavin Coombes also absent, testing resources for their trip to Devon.

 ?? Shaun Botterill ?? > Liverpool’s Trent Alexander-Arnold battles for possession with Phil Foden of Manchester City as a flare is thrown onto the pitch during yesterday’s match at Etihad Stadium
Shaun Botterill > Liverpool’s Trent Alexander-Arnold battles for possession with Phil Foden of Manchester City as a flare is thrown onto the pitch during yesterday’s match at Etihad Stadium

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