Irish Sunday Mirror

REDS CLING TO THEIR EX

Depleted Munster keep tie alive with Thomond to come

- Munster

Exeter 13 8 BY ANDREW BALDOCK EXETER will take a narrow lead to Limerick next week after edging out a badly depleted Munster in a tense Champions Cup round-of-16 clash at Sandy Park.

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

But injury-hit Munster rallied after Exeter were reduced to 13 men for a quarter of the second period when wing Olly Woodburn and replacemen­t prop Patrick Schickerli­ng received yellow cards in rapid succession.

Wing Shane Daly touched down for Munster, 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.

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

Munster’s injury troubles saw skipper Peter O’mahony and flyhalf Joey Carbery sidelined, with Simon Zebo, Tadhg Beirne and Gavin Coombes also out, testing resources ahead of the team’s first European Cup meeting since 2019.

Ireland head coach Andy Farrell was among the crowd, and he saw Munster immediatel­y on the back-foot as Exeter hit them with a brilliant sixth-minute try.

Henry Slade was prominent, but it was wing Tom O’flaherty’s decisive angle of attack that unlocked Munster’s defence, and Hogg sprinted over.

Exeter continued to dominate and they almost claimed a second try midway through the half when skipper Jack Yeandle almost burrowed his way over.

The home side continued pressing, yet they had no further reward as a combinatio­n of poor handling and vigorous Munster tackling denied them a healthier advantage. But Exeter were finally rewarded two minutes before the interval as they made a temporary oneman advantage count.

Munster replacemen­t Jack O’sullivan, who replaced number eight Alex Kendellen, was yellow-carded following a technical infringeme­nt, and Vermeulen crashed over from close range for the Chiefs’ second try.

Simmonds missed the conversion, yet the 2020 European champions were full value for their lead.

With Munster’s Ireland scrum-half Conor Murray a growing influence, the visitors opened their account through a Healy penalty after 57 minutes.

They were the only points of a tight third quarter, with Exeter then losing Woodburn, who was yellow-carded following an arm to the head of a Munster player, and Schickerli­ng following foul play near his own line.

Exeter responded to that double setback superbly, though, when Hogg dropped a goal – the first of his career – from just inside Munster’s half and restored a 10-point gap.

But it did not last long, as Munster broke upfield and Daly made the most of Exeter’s numerical disadvanta­ge to touch down with 12 minutes left.

Exeter defended superbly and they almost added a third try in the dying seconds, but Woodburn knocked on.

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