The Rugby Paper

Lowry shows his class for Ulster

- By JOHN FALLON

UNCAPPED full-back Michael Lowry celebrated his inclusion in Ireland’s Six Nations squad this week with a sparkling display as Ulster completed the double over Clermont Auvergne to complete their pool games with four wins.

But Dan McFarland’s men had to withstand a late rally in the final ten minutes from the French which saw them whittle a 22-point deficit down to just three at Kingspan.

And while Lowry was outstandin­g, another 23year old Ulster back, James Hume, who got his only taste of internatio­nal rugby against the USA last summer, sent out a timely message to Andy Farrell of what he can offer.

And Hume reckons Ulster, now set for a home quarter-final if they get through the last 16 round, are serious contenders for this season’s Champions Cup.

He said: “I believe we are contenders. The group we have is very special. Anyone who has been watching us knows we do exciting games like that. Good to watch and hopefully we will tidy some things up when we get into the last 16. It was our aim to go through unbeaten. After last week we said it wasn’t good enough for us to just go through to the last 16, we want home quarters. We want to be a cup-winning side.”

Ulster led 17-12 at the break, with all three tries for the home side coming from penalties to the corner and they would have been out of sight had they not presented four penalty opportunit­ies to Morgan Parra.

Ulster laid out their intentions early on and they got it together after eight minutes for hooker Rob Herring to go in for his first try. Parra responded as Ulster coughed up a couple of cheap penalties to lead 6-5 after 18 minutes but then Lowry struck when he went

outside Parra and inside full-back Cheikh Tiberghien to score in the left corner.

Clermont hit back and while they rarely looked like creating a try, they hit the front four minutes from the break with two more penalties from Parra.

Ulster piled on the pressure before the interval and Clermont’s Fijian-born French internatio­nal Alivereti Raka was binned for not rolling away. A tap to the corner, another lineout take from Kieran Treadwell and a drive ended with Herring squeezing over again.

Nathan Doak, off target with the three previous conversion­s, this time got his radar right and landed the extras to lead 17-12 at the break.

Ulster got on top again after the restart and Doak pushed the lead out to eight with a penalty and it was no surprise when they crossed for the bonus point try. Angus Curtis set it in motion from deep, Hume was involved and when Lowry was stopped a metre short, they recycled for Springbok World Cup winner Duane Vermeulen to get his first Ulster try.

Robert Baloucoune got their fifth to lead 34-12 after 70 minutes but Clermont, with French internatio­nals Camile Lopez and Damian Penaud impressing off the bench, sparked a revival that yielded tries from Jaco van Tonder, Raka and Judicael Cancoriet to set up a nervous finish for Ulster.

But they held on, leaving Clermont coach Jono Gibbes, who left Ulster four years ago, sweating on his 45th birthday over whether the bonus point will be enough to see them through to the knockout stages.

 ?? PICTURES: Getty Images ?? Man-of-the-match: Michael Lowry goes over for his try
PICTURES: Getty Images Man-of-the-match: Michael Lowry goes over for his try
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Big finish: Alivereti Raka scores for Clermont
Big finish: Alivereti Raka scores for Clermont

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom