Showing posts with label UlsterRugby. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UlsterRugby. Show all posts

Sunday, 24 January 2016

Stade End Ulster Championship Hope


Ulster are out of the Champions Cup despite Saturday’s hammering of Oyonnax after Leicester Tigers were beaten 36-21 away at Stade Francais.

Leicester had already secured top spot in Pool 4 after winning their opening five matches but were unable to make it six from six as Stade Francais claimed a bonus-point triumph in Paris which sealed the French side’s quarter-final berth as well.

England centre Tuilagi, in his third game since returning from his lengthy lay-off with a groin injury, lasted 50 minutes before being replaced as he continued his comeback and never looked out of place.

And it was the 24-year-old who opened the scoring in the 19th minute with a 35-metre dash to the posts for a try that was converted by Freddie Burns.

However, Stade Francais’ response was emphatic with the French champions running in three tries in the space of 10 minutes through Jules Plisson, Waisea Vuidarvuwalu and Rabah Slimani to establish a 19-7 lead at half-time.

The home side’s bonus point try, from their rampaging flanker Raphael Lakafia, came in the 53rd minute shortly after Leicester had lost their skipper and hooker Tom Youngs to the sin-bin for a midfield fracas with Slimani.

That try more or less ensured Stade — who had scored 26 unanswered points at that stage — would go into the quarter-final draw and meant Ulster were pushed out, resulting in no Irish province being in the last eight in the top tier of European rugby for the first time since 1998.

Leicester had no such concerns, as they were already assured of a home quarter-final before kick-off.

And the Tigers were good value for the lead given to them by Tuilagi’s score having totally dominated the opening 20 minutes.

But then the momentum shifted as Stade tightened their discipline as well as getting their off-loading game going.

Plisson, who finished the match with 16 points, got the home side on the scoreboard following good work by Jonathan Danty, and the fly-half converted his own try to make it 7-7.

Vuidarvuwalu then went over in the left corner on the overlap before prop Slimani powered over for another score soon after, Plisson adding the extras on that occasion having missed his previous conversion attempt to put Stade 12 points clear.

Plisson also converted the Lakafia score that brought up the crucial bonus point, but the Tigers then regrouped and hit back.

Dom Barrow used all of his 6ft 7in frame to touch down at full stretch for a try at the posts and there could have been another had the TMO not called up Sam Harrison’s inside pass as forward.

There was a third Leicester try from replacement hooker Harry Thacker to close the gap to eight points heading into the final four minutes, but an interception score from replacement centre Geoffrey Doumayrou gave the French side a final flourish as they progressed to the last eight as one of the best runners-up.

Sunday, 10 January 2016

Ulster Save Best to Last


Ulster recovered from being 23-0 down at half-time to get a vital victory over Oyonnax in Pool One of the European Champions Cup.

Key men Ruan Pienaar, Paddy Jackson and Nick Williams all came off the bench for the second half to help the Irish side scrape a remarkable one-point win.

Ulster were in big trouble when Jeremie Maurouard and Uwa Tawalo scored tries.

But backs Rory Scholes and Craig Gilroy, and young prop Kyle McCall, saved them from a damaging defeat.

Ulster, who revived their European prospects with back-to-back wins over Toulouse, are second in Pool One with 13 points - six behind Saracens.

Those December victories over Toulouse would have meant little had they lost to the Pool outsiders at the Stade Charles-Mathon.

The visitors were soon under pressure as hooker Maurouard drove over for a seventh-minute try from a line-out.

Former Wales outside-half Nicky Robinson added the conversion and then three successive penalties to put Ulster in deeper trouble.

Ulster suffered another blow just before half-time when a loose pass gave Fijian wing Tawalo the chance to sprint from his own half and score under the posts.
Kiss makes key changes

Director of rugby Les Kiss responded to Ulster's plight by introducing the experience of Pienaar and Jackson at half-back, and the power of Williams to the pack, at the break.

It led to a completely transformed Ulster performance and, from the moment Scholes raced 30 metres to the line, the comeback was on.

Jackson added the simple conversion, and then two tries in four minutes from Gilroy and loose-head prop McCall, both converted by Jackson, made it 23-21.

Out of media player. Press enter to return or tab to continue.Rory Best's Ulster came from 23-0 down to win

When Oyonnax prop Horace Pungea conceded a penalty a metre inside the Ulster half, there was a chance to complete the comeback.

Jackson landed the long-range kick to put the visitors into the lead for the first time with two minutes left.

Oyonnax: Etienne, Codjo, Taufa, Sheridan, Tawalo, Robinson, Blanc, Delboulbes, Maurouard, Clerc, Robson, Metz, Gunther, Faasavalu, Wannenburg.
Replacements: Clegg for Robinson (55), Aziza for Blanc (58), Wright for Delboulbes (62), Bordes for Maurouard (52), Pungea for Clerc (60), Maafu for Faasavalu (60).
Not used: Fabbri, Ikpefan.

Ulster: Gilroy, Arnold, L. Marshall, McCloskey, Scholes, Humphreys, P. Marshall, McCall, R. Best, Lutton, Stevenson, van der Merwe, Diack, Henry, Wilson.
Replacements: Ludik for Arnold (23), Reidy for L. Marshall (75), Jackson for Humphreys (41), Pienaar for P. Marshall (41), Black for McCall (20), Herring for R. Best (75), B. Ross for Lutton (78), Williams for Stevenson (41).

Ref: Luke Pearce (RFU).

Sunday, 3 January 2016

Keatley Points Munster to Win


Munster ended a run of five straight defeats as Ian Keatley's nine points proved enough to see off in-form Ulster in the Pro12 game at Kingspan Stadium.

A Keatley penalty edged Munster ahead and the visitors defended bravely to stay in touch after a Louis Ludik try had helped Ulster move 7-3 up.

Munster had more possession after the break and a Keatley penalty and drop goal put them ahead by the 61st minute.

Paddy Jackson's two late penalty misses left Munster celebrating a vital win.

Defeat would have represented Munster's worst ever losing run. And the game was also a personal triumph for man-of-the-match Keatley after his recent struggles in the red jersey.

The fly-half was booed by a small group of Munster fans after missing a number of kicks in last month's European defeat by Leicester and the verbal abuse generated a wave of sympathy for the Ireland fly-half.

Keatley kicked Munster into a ninth-minute lead as they turned early possession into points.

Ulster regrouped to take control and Ludik's 24th-minute try helped them move ahead, although the score was controversial with referee Gary Conway appearing to miss offside and knock-on infringements in the build-up.

As Ulster continued to press, Andrew Trimble, making his 200th appearance for the Irish province, was denied a try as the ball bounced off his leg into touch following a clever Stuart McCloskey grubber kick.

But with back row forwards Tommy O'Donnell and Jack O'Donoghue particularly prominent, Munster held out until the break and then summoned up a big effort after half-time.

Despite playing the game in Ulster's half, Munster's attack continued to lack a cutting edge but crucially their pressure was finally rewarded by Keatley's smart 58th-minute drop goal.

A line-out infringement allowed Keatley to kick Munster ahead on 61 minutes as mistakes began to hinder the Ulster effort.

Spurred on by the vocal New Year crowd, Ulster produced late pressure with the first of Jackson's two late penalty chances from near the left touchline falling inches short before he was off target with another difficult kick in the final minute.

Ulster director of rugby Les Kiss: "We gave them enough opportunity to hang in there and our error-rate was too high. It's a disappointed dressing-room.

"Another three or five points would have been ideal before half-time. We probably just weren't clinical enough and probably didn't work hard enough to create pressure."

Munster fly-half Ian Keatley: "That win was huge for us. We were on a bad losing streak.

"A lot of things that we have been talking about, we haven't been doing but we executed tonight.

"It's a fortress to come here and we're delighted to get the ball rolling again."

TEAMS
Ulster: L Ludik; A Trimble, L Marshall, S McCloskey, R Scholes; P Jackson, R Pienaar; K McCall, R Best (capt), W Herbst; L Stevenson, F van der Merwe; R Diack, C Henry, N Williams.
Replacements: R Herring for Williams 71, C Black for McCall 64, R Lutton for Herbst 35, A O'Connor for Stevenson 52, R Wilson for Diack 52, P Marshall for Pienaar 71, S Arnold for L Marshall 54.
Not used: I Humphreys

Munster: L Amorosino; R O'Mahony, Fr Saili, R Scannell, G van der Heever; I Keatley, T O'Leary; D Kilcoyne, M Sherry, BJ Botha; B Holland, M Chisholm; J O'Donoghue, T O'Donnell, CJ Stander (capt).
Replacements: N Scannell for Sherry 54, J Ryan for Botha 71, R Copeland for O'Donnell 56, D Williams for O'Leary 57, Denis Hurley for R Scannell 56.
Not used: M Sagario, S Buckley, T Bleyendaal

Referee: Gary Conway (Ireland).