Sunday World (Ireland)

BLUES GET THEIR ROCH’S OFF

Revenge is a sweet dish for Leinster

- BYBRENDAN FANNING AT THE AVIVA STADIUM, DUBLIN

WELL, that’s a fiver down the pan. Offered the attractive odds of reigning champions La Rochelle to stay within seven points of Leinster, we simply couldn’t resist.

Not for the first time a sure thing – supported in this case by the late withdrawal of Hugo Keenan – turned out to be a mile off the mark.

As James Lowe latched on to the beautifull­y judged pick pass by Robbie Henshaw for his second try, it was like the history between these clubs was makey-up.

Leinster gambled with their ‘big is beautiful’ selection and it worked perfectly. Their next challenge in this competitio­n – their 15th semi-final – is to cross the river and, hopefully, put enough bums on seats to make Croke Park feel like it did when they were last there, against Munster in 2009.

BOGEY

Sometimes it goes like this: a brutal run of results against your bogey team gets turned around and motors off in the other direction. It helps if the driver has a man of the match performanc­e, which is exactly what happened here for Ross Byrne.

But not straight off the bat. We had to wait for the second quarter before arriving at a significan­t crossroads. In the 23rd minute, ref Karl Dickson sent upstairs a muddled case to see if Jamison Gibson-Park had managed to hold off two defenders to get the ball down for a try. If it came back positive, then the formality of the extras would put the Blues 17-3 up. If not, then we’d continue at 10-3.

The knock-back looked fair enough, and better still if you had made the journey from France’s Atlantic coast when a few minutes later the scoreboard had shifted to 13-6 in Leinster’s favour. The good news for Ronan O’Gara was not that his team were going well – they weren’t – but Leinster’s capacity to concede immediatel­y after scoring was like an unexpected tax on their earnings. Twice in succession was careless.

The next major junction was reached as the first half slipped into overtime. It was a period of equal pressure: Leinster were under the cosh and doing well to keep the French at bay; La Rochelle were passing up shots on goal in search of the seven points that would take them back into the game on a 10-point deficit. Louis Penverne’s try – Leinster were punished for competing in the air rather than organising on the ground – was exactly what Gregory Alldritt’s boys were after.

What had unfolded in between those major pivotal points had been a lot better for Leinster. The selection of Will Connors was paying off in chop tackles; Byrne’s ability to conquer the swirling wind was hugely impressive; Gibson-Park was doing what Gibson-Park does best. He got a standing ovation when replaced by Luke McGrath on the run-in; and James Lowe was in similar vein. They contribute­d a try each in that half, where they had shown huge appetite for the combat.

POACHING

In the second half, Andrew Porter won a poaching penalty, eventually opening up the space for Ryan Baird to score. As Byrne stood over the tee, the medics were preparing to remove Tawera Kerr-Barlow with a head injury. To top it off, Antoine Hastoy put the restart out on the full.

Even allowing for an ability to claw their way out of the grave in this fixture, the scoreboard read 30-13. It smelt like a cremation. To add some colour to the scene the red headgear of Josh van der Flier was visible on the touchline. It was all plain sailing from there. And now? It is inescapabl­e that Leinster have underachie­ved since prevailing in the rain in Bilbao in 2018.

The upside is they have remained very competitiv­e despite the transition: only three of this side were starters back then.

It would have been five if Garry Ringrose and James Ryan were fit, but either way, Leinster have survived the changes without falling over the edge. It’s all about being top of the podium. In three weeks they can put themselves back in that frame. Scorers – Leinster: J Lowe 2 tries; J Gibson-Park, R Baird, D Sheehan try each; R Byrne 3 pens, 3 cons. La Rochelle: L Penverne try; A Hastoy 2 pens, 1 con.

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