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Champions Cup

Leinster vs Toulouse: A clash of the titans in the 2024 Investec Champions Cup Final

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On May 25th, 2024, two of Europe’s most successful rugby clubs will collide in a highly anticipated Investec Champions Cup final at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London. Leinster Rugby, four-time competition winners, will face off against Stade Toulousain, the only club to have lifted the trophy five times. This epic clash promises to be a thrilling encounter between two rugby giants.

Form

Both teams have been in scintillating form leading up to the final. Leinster topped their Champions Cup pool with four wins out of four, including impressive victories over La Rochelle and Sale Sharks. They carried this momentum into the knockout stages, comfortably dispatching Leicester Tigers and La Rochelle before edging past Northampton Saints in a tense semi-final. However, their form in the United Rugby Championship (URC) has been less dominant than expected. Leinster currently trail Munster and the Bulls on the table with a 12-0-5 record through 17 weeks, a position that falls short of their usual high standards. The challenge of balancing their Champions Cup campaign and having 19 players involved in the Six Nations may have taken its toll.

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Toulouse, on the other hand, have been a try-scoring machine throughout the Champions Cup. They racked up a staggering 311 points in their campaign, showcasing their attacking prowess. Decisive wins over Racing 92, Exeter Chiefs, and Harlequins in the knockout rounds have set the stage for a mouth-watering final. Toulouse’s form in the Top 14 has been equally impressive, as they currently lead the competition with a 16-0-8 record with two matches remaining before the knockout stage. The French giants are aiming for a historic double, having won the Top 14 last season.

Head-to-head history

Leinster and Toulouse are no strangers to each other, having met 14 times in European competitions. Leinster holds a slight edge with eight wins to Toulouse’s six. Notably, Leinster has emerged victorious in their last four knockout encounters, including semi-final triumphs in 2019, 2022, and 2023. However, Toulouse’s pedigree in finals is unquestionable, as they have never lost a Champions Cup final since 2008.

Previous meetings

Leinster 41-22 Stade Toulousain, Aviva Stadium (2022/23 semi-final)
Leinster 40-17 Stade Toulousain, Aviva Stadium (2021/22 semi-final)
Leinster 30-12 Stade Toulousain, Aviva Stadium (2018/19 semi-final)
Leinster 29-13 Stade Toulousain, RDS (2018/19 pool stage)
Stade Toulousain 28-27 Leinster, Stade Ernest Wallon (2018/19 pool stage)

Key players to watch

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This final will feature some of the world’s best players going head-to-head. For Leinster, scrum-half Jamison Gibson-Park has been in sensational form, leading the tournament in passes and matching Toulouse’s star Antoine Dupont in tries scored. The battle between these two world-class scrum-halves could prove pivotal.

Other key battles

Ross Byrne vs Romain Ntamack: The clash between the two fly-halves could be pivotal. Byrne’s game management and kicking accuracy will be tested against Ntamack’s flair and running threat. Both players have the ability to control the game and unleash their dangerous backlines, making this a compelling head-to-head battle.

Tadhg Furlong vs Cyril Baille: The scrum will be a key battleground, and the clash between Furlong and Baille, two of the world’s best props, will be fascinating. Both are powerful scrummagers and effective ball carriers, making their individual duel a potential game-changer.

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James Lowe vs Matthis Lebel: The aerial battle between these two wingers will be crucial, given their prowess under the high ball and ability to create something out of nothing. Lowe’s physicality and eye for the try line will be matched by Lebel’s electric pace and elusive running.

Baird, Connors, and Doris vs Cros, Willis, and Roumat: The clash of the back rows could be immense. Leinster’s combination of the dynamic Ryan Baird, the tenacious Will Connors, and the powerful Caelan Doris will go head-to-head with Toulouse’s formidable trio of the relentless François Cros, the turnover threat Jack Willis, and the athletic Alexandre Roumat. This battle for dominance at the breakdown and in the loose could have a significant bearing on the outcome.

Team news

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Leinster has made three changes to their starting XV from the semi-final. Will Connors comes into the back row, with Josh van der Flier named on the bench. Hugo Keenan returns at full-back, providing a significant boost, while Jason Jenkins starts in the second row. James Ryan’s inclusion on the bench adds valuable experience.

Toulouse, meanwhile, has named an unchanged starting lineup from their semi-final win over Harlequins. The only alteration sees Joshua Brennan, son of former Ireland international Trevor Brennan, replace Mathis Castro-Ferreira on the bench. The continuity in selection highlights the confidence Toulouse has in their star-studded team.

Leinster: Hugo Keenan; Jordan Larmour, Robbie Henshaw, Jamie Osborne, James Lowe; Ross Byrne, Jamison Gibson-Park; Andrew Porter, Dan Sheehan, Tadhg Furlong; Joe McCarthy, Jason Jenkins; Ryan Baird, Will Connors, Caelan Doris (capt).

Replacements: Rónan Kelleher, Cian Healy, Michael Ala’alatoa, James Ryan, Jack Conan, Luke McGrath, Ciarán Frawley, Josh van der Flier.

Toulouse: Blair Kinghorn; Juan Cruz Mallia, Paul Costes, Pita Ahki, Matthis Lebel; Romain Ntamack, Antoine Dupont (capt); Cyril Baille, Peato Mauvaka, Dorian Aldegheri; Thibaud Flament, Emmanuel Meafou; Jack Willis, Francois Cros, Alexandre Roumat

Replacements: Julien Marchand, Rodrigue Neti, Joel Merkler, Richie Arnold, Joshua Brennan, Paul Graou, Santiago Chocobares, Thomas Ramos

Impact of the bench

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In a closely fought final, the impact of the bench could be decisive. Leinster’s 6-2 split, with six forwards and two backs, suggests a clear intent to maintain forward dominance and close out the game in the latter stages. The presence of experienced campaigners like James Ryan, Jack Conan, and Josh van der Flier among the replacements gives Leinster a wealth of quality to call upon.

Toulouse, on the other hand, have opted for a 5-3 split on their bench. The inclusion of the dynamic Thomas Ramos, capable of covering multiple positions across the backline, offers them flexibility and a potential game-breaking option. The presence of seasoned internationals like Julien Marchand and Richie Arnold in the forward reserves ensures Toulouse have the ability to make an impact upfront when called upon.

The timing and effectiveness of the bench deployments could swing the momentum in a tight contest. Both coaches, Leo Cullen and Ugo Mola, will need to judge their substitutions wisely to ensure their teams have the right personnel on the pitch to navigate the crucial final quarter.

The mental factor

The psychological aspect adds an intriguing layer to this final. Leinster carries the baggage of recent final losses, having been defeated by La Rochelle in the last two Champions Cup deciders. Coupled with Ireland’s World Cup quarter-final exit at the hands of France, there is a growing narrative questioning Leinster’s ability to deliver on the biggest stage.

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On the flip side, Toulouse has their own demons to conquer. Leinster has been their nemesis in recent knockout encounters, and the memory of those semi-final defeats will undoubtedly linger. However, Toulouse’s pedigree in finals and their more recent Champions Cup triumph in 2021 could provide a psychological edge.

Attack vs defense

One of the fascinating subplots of this final is the contrasting styles of the two teams. Leinster’s attack, while still potent, hasn’t been as consistently incisive this season. The arrival of Jacques Nienaber as senior coach has brought a heightened focus on defence, which some suggest may have come at the expense of their attacking fluidity.

In contrast, Toulouse’s attack has been nothing short of sublime. With Antoine Dupont orchestrating proceedings and a backline packed with game-breakers, they have the ability to score from anywhere on the pitch. The question is whether Leinster’s defensive structure, honed under Nienaber’s guidance, can contain Toulouse’s multi-faceted attack.

Conclusion

The 2024 Investec Champions Cup final promises to be a spectacle of the highest order. Both Leinster and Toulouse possess the quality, experience, and hunger to lift the coveted trophy. While Leinster may have the psychological advantage given their recent knockout successes against Toulouse, the French side’s attacking flair and big-game pedigree cannot be underestimated.

As these two titans of European rugby collide, fans can expect a closely-fought battle filled with intensity, skill, and drama. Will Leinster’s well-oiled machine prevail, or will Toulouse’s individual brilliance shine through? Only time will tell, but one thing is for sure: the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium will bear witness to a final for the ages.

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Champions Cup

Bordeaux destroy Leinster to retain Champions Cup crown

Bordeaux Begles scored five first-half tries to demolish Leinster 41-19 in the Champions Cup final in Bilbao and claim back-to-back European titles.

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Bordeaux destroy Leinster to retain Champions Cup crown
RUGBY : Leinster vs UBB - Final of the Investec Champion Cup -Bilbao - 23 05 2026 The players of UBB celebrate with the Investec Champions Cup Bilbao Copyright: Thierry Breton (IMAGO / PsnewZ)

Union Bordeaux Begles retained the Investec Champions Cup with a ruthless 41-19 demolition of Leinster at San Mames Stadium in Bilbao, producing a devastating first-half performance that effectively ended the final as a contest before the interval. Five converted tries in 28 minutes of first-half rugby left Leinster trailing 35-7 at the break in front of a sold-out crowd of 52,327, and while Leo Cullen’s side showed resolve in the second half with two further tries, the damage had long since been done on a sweltering afternoon where temperatures hit 30C at half-time.

Key moments

8 mins – TRY LEINSTER: Patient build-up through 19 phases sees Leinster grind into the Bordeaux 22 with carries from Henshaw, Doris and van der Flier. Quick hands from Garry Ringrose release Tommy O’Brien to dive over in the right corner. Harry Byrne converts from the touchline. (Leinster 7-0 Bordeaux)

11 mins – DISALLOWED TRY BORDEAUX: Cameron Woki dives for the right corner after a flowing move sparked by Bielle-Biarrey and Uberti. On-field decision is a try, but TMO Marius van der Westhuizen rules Woki’s left arm brushed the touchline. Penalty advantage to Bordeaux.

14 mins – TRY BORDEAUX: From the penalty advantage, Bordeaux kick to the corner. Carlu Sadie takes a tap and go from five metres and captain Maxime Lucu spots a gap and snipes under the posts from close range. Lucu converts his own try. (Leinster 7-7 Bordeaux)

18 mins – TRY BORDEAUX: Byrne kicks the restart dead. From the scrum, Bielle-Biarrey’s chip brushes Hugo Keenan’s fingertips and rolls dead, giving Bordeaux a five-metre scrum. Playing on penalty advantage, Matthieu Jalibert finds Salesi Rayasi who feeds Pablo Uberti to score untouched on the right. Lucu converts. (Leinster 7-14 Bordeaux)

25 mins – TRY BORDEAUX: Sweeping move from right to left. Louis Bielle-Biarrey receives on the left wing and steps inside Thomas Clarkson and Jamison Gibson-Park to score. Lucu converts. (Leinster 7-21 Bordeaux)

29 mins – KNOCK-ON LEINSTER: Jack Conan drops the ball with Leinster camped on the Bordeaux five-metre line after a sustained attacking sequence. A crucial missed opportunity.

36 mins – TRY BORDEAUX: Jalibert’s kick is blocked down and Damian Penaud reacts quickest to the loose ball, grubbering through. The bounce defeats Gibson-Park and sits up perfectly for Bielle-Biarrey, who swerves past Keenan to score his second. Lucu converts. (Leinster 7-28 Bordeaux)

40+2 mins – TRY BORDEAUX: With Leinster chasing a lifeline before the break, Harry Byrne’s pass is intercepted by Yoram Moefana just outside his own 22. The centre sprints 60 metres to score under the posts unopposed. Lucu converts for a fifth time. (Leinster 7-35 Bordeaux)

Half-time: Leinster 7-35 Bordeaux. A devastating 28 minutes from Bordeaux after O’Brien’s opening try. Five converted tries, all from Lucu’s boot, leave Leinster needing the greatest comeback in Champions Cup final history. Bielle-Biarrey’s double and Moefana’s intercept the highlights. Leinster made five handling errors to Bordeaux’s one.

42 mins – YELLOW CARD BORDEAUX: Maxime Lucu sin-binned for a horse-collar grab on Joe McCarthy, pulling the Ireland lock by his hair. Frawley and Furlong on for Byrne and Clarkson.

46 mins – TRY LEINSTER: Leinster capitalise on Lucu’s absence with sustained pressure inside the Bordeaux 22. Joe McCarthy drives over from close range from a ruck. Ciaran Frawley’s conversion strikes the post. (Leinster 12-35 Bordeaux)

50 mins – INJURY: Cameron Woki is helped off the field in tears with what appears to be a serious injury. Standing ovation from the Bordeaux supporters. Temo Matiu replaces him.

51 mins – INTERCEPTION: Tommy O’Brien works a two-on-one overlap but his pass to Rieko Ioane is intercepted by Salesi Rayasi. A golden chance to close the gap goes begging.

59 mins – PENALTY BORDEAUX: Lucu, back from the sin bin, kicks a straightforward penalty after James Ryan is penalised for a high tackle on Jalibert. (Leinster 12-38 Bordeaux)

64 mins – PENALTY BORDEAUX: Lucu lands a remarkable penalty from just inside his own half. Seven from seven off the tee. (Leinster 12-41 Bordeaux)

71 mins – TRY LEINSTER: Garry Ringrose forces his way over after Robbie Henshaw’s neat short pass from a quickly taken penalty. Frawley converts. (Leinster 19-41 Bordeaux)

73 mins – YELLOW CARD BORDEAUX: Ugo Boniface shown yellow for a needless clearout on James Ryan at a ruck.

Full-time: Leinster 19-41 Bordeaux


For Leinster, it is a fifth defeat in a Champions Cup final since their last triumph at this very stadium in 2018, and by far the most painful. Their previous final losses to Saracens, La Rochelle (twice) and Toulouse were competitive matches decided on fine margins. This was nothing of the sort. Bordeaux, who had to beat the champions of France, England and the URC in consecutive knockout rounds to reach the final, became the first side in EPCR history to win back-to-back titles with an unbeaten record across two seasons, winning all 16 of their knockout and pool matches in that span. It was also France’s sixth consecutive Champions Cup title.

The opening exchanges gave little indication of what was to come. Hugo Keenan spilled Maxime Lucu’s first kick of the day within 25 seconds, hinting at early Leinster nerves, but the four-time champions recovered and started with intent. Jamison Gibson-Park’s intelligent kicking pinned Bordeaux inside their own territory and a maul turnover gave Leinster the platform to attack. Big carries from Robbie Henshaw, Caelan Doris and Josh van der Flier got them moving into the 22, and after 19 hard phases under the Bilbao heat it was quick hands from Garry Ringrose that sent Tommy O’Brien diving over in the right corner in the eighth minute. Harry Byrne landed an impressive touchline conversion from five metres in from the sideline and Leinster led 7-0.

It was the last time they would lead. Bordeaux’s response was immediate. Pablo Uberti made a surging break before the ball was swept wide to Cameron Woki, who dived for the right corner and appeared to ground the ball. However, TMO Marius van der Westhuizen overturned referee Karl Dickson’s on-field decision, ruling that Woki’s left arm had brushed the touchline. Bordeaux settled for the penalty advantage, kicked to the corner, and after Carlu Sadie’s five-metre tap and go set the tone, captain Lucu spotted a gap and sniped beautifully under the posts from close range in the 14th minute. He converted his own try to level the scores at 7-7.

What followed was a collapse that few could have predicted. Byrne kicked the restart dead, handing Bordeaux a scrum on halfway. Then came another contentious moment. Bielle-Biarrey’s chip over the Leinster defensive line ran over the dead ball line, but the TMO determined that Keenan had got the slightest of fingertip touches to the ball, giving Bordeaux a five-metre scrum rather than a goal-line dropout. Playing on penalty advantage from the resulting set piece, Bordeaux shifted the ball wide through Matthieu Jalibert, who found Salesi Rayasi with a perfectly weighted pass before the full-back fed Uberti, who ran in untouched. Lucu’s conversion made it 14-7 in the 18th minute. Two tries in four minutes and Leinster were suddenly chasing the game.

A water break at the end of the first quarter could not settle Leinster down. The tournament’s outstanding wing then took centre stage. Louis Bielle-Biarrey, who would later be named Player of the Tournament, scored twice in 11 minutes to put the result beyond doubt. His first, in the 25th minute, came at the end of a sweeping move. Bordeaux moved the ball wide to the right touchline before coming straight back to the left, and Bielle-Biarrey stepped inside Thomas Clarkson and Gibson-Park to finish with the devastating footwork that has made him the most feared attacking player in European rugby. Lucu’s third conversion made it 21-7 with barely 25 minutes played.

Leinster came back down the pitch to earn a five-metre scrum in prime attacking position, but after a sustained block of phases Jack Conan knocked on, to an eruption of noise from the Bordeaux supporters. It was the province’s fifth handling error of the half, compared to just one for their opponents.

With five minutes left in the half, Bordeaux went for the knockout. Damian Penaud was quickest to react to a loose ball after Jalibert’s kick was blocked down, and his grubber bounced perfectly away from Gibson-Park and into the path of Bielle-Biarrey, who swerved past Keenan to score his second try and his 34th of the season in 30 games for club and country. Lucu’s fourth conversion made it 28-7.

The final blow before the break was self-inflicted. With Leinster pushing for a try that might have offered a lifeline, Byrne’s pass was intercepted by Yoram Moefana just outside his own 22. The centre had made a perfect defensive read and sprinted 60 metres to score under the posts unopposed, and Lucu’s fifth conversion from five attempts made it 35-7 at the interval. As Moefana touched down, Lucu turned to face the bank of Bordeaux supporters behind the goal, arms raised. The game was over. Bordeaux had equalled the record of five tries in a Champions Cup final, and they had done it inside 40 minutes.

“We’ve given away things just a little bit cheaply,” Cullen said of the first-half collapse. “On one hand, it’s an amazing thing to be part of, but on the disappointing side, I think there’s frustration there that we’ve created lots of opportunities in the game and haven’t been anywhere near as clinical as we would have liked to have been.”

Leinster at least came out with purpose after the break. Within two minutes of the restart, Lucu was sin-binned for a horse-collar grab on Joe McCarthy, the Bordeaux captain pulling the Ireland lock by his hair to drag him to the ground. Frawley replaced Byrne at fly-half and Tadhg Furlong came on for Thomas Clarkson as Cullen looked to inject new energy. Rieko Ioane sparked to life with a powerful break through the midfield and Leinster camped inside the Bordeaux 22. McCarthy dived over from close range from a ruck in the 46th minute for Leinster’s second try, though Frawley’s conversion struck the post. At 35-12, the deficit remained 23 points.

Leinster had a golden opportunity to score again moments later when O’Brien worked his way into a two-on-one overlap, but his pass to Ioane was intercepted by Rayasi to deny what would have been a crucial try before Lucu’s return from the sin bin. The Bordeaux captain re-emerged to a hero’s reception and promptly went back to work, kicking a penalty after James Ryan was penalised for a high tackle on Jalibert. A second penalty soon followed, a remarkable effort from just inside his own half, to extend the lead to 41-12 and extinguish any remaining hope.

Ben Tameifuna, introduced at tighthead after the break, was making his considerable presence felt, winning two turnovers to break up Leinster’s attacking momentum at critical moments. “Today, we played a perfect match,” Tameifuna said afterwards. “We wanted to play fast when we wanted to, and then we wanted to slow it down. So that was huge for the team.”

Cameron Woki’s departure in tears on the 50th minute was a sour note for the champions. The back-rower, who had been immense throughout the tournament, received a standing ovation from the Bordeaux supporters as he was helped from the field by physios. Temo Matiu, who had earlier replaced Pierre Bochaton for a brief stint, came back on permanently in Woki’s place.

Ringrose scored a consolation try in the 71st minute, forcing his way over after Henshaw’s neat short pass from a quickly taken penalty, and Frawley converted to make it 19-41. Replacement loosehead Ugo Boniface was then shown yellow for a needless clearout on Ryan at a ruck, but it did little to dampen the celebrations. Max Deegan made a strong carry evading Lucu’s tackle in the closing stages and Luke McGrath tried to generate pace, but Moefana timed another interception to perfection near the Bordeaux line, and the final minutes drifted away to a chorus of French celebration.

Lucu finished with a try, five conversions and two penalties for a personal haul of 19 points and was named Player of the Match for a second consecutive Champions Cup final. His kicking was faultless – seven from seven – and his control of the game from scrum-half allowed Bordeaux’s attack, coached by Clare native Noel McNamara, to operate at full throttle. The Leinster stats told their own story: 162 carries to Bordeaux’s 104 and the edge in both possession and territory, yet they lost 24 turnovers and could not convert pressure into points when it mattered.

“You have to credit them. Some of their attack in the first half was incredibly hard to deal with,” Leinster captain Doris said. “We left ourselves too tall a mountain to climb. Proud of the effort of our boys in the second half, trying to climb back. But we left ourselves a little too much to do.”

Cullen insisted his side were not a million miles away despite the scoreline. “It’s not like we’re a million miles away. I know there’s a decent gap in the scoreline today but I think if you reflect upon what’s gone on in the game, the stats in the game, that would maybe be a bit of a reflection in terms of how clinical Bordeaux were. The speed with the way they do things is very impressive. That’s the bit we need to get after.”

Asked whether reaching another final only to lose constituted failure, Cullen was philosophical. “If you lose a final, is that failure? Listen, you can have that argument. It’s failure for us today because we had strong ambitions to try to win the game. We weren’t good enough today. But nothing stays the same forever in sport, does it?”

McNamara, who once headed the Leinster academy and guided the Ireland Under-20s, revealed the squad had drawn inspiration from Rory McIlroy’s Masters victory in their pursuit of consecutive titles. “We spoke of not being a fleeting star, of making our star shine,” McNamara said. “One thing the players are very proud of is the route we took to do that – Leicester Tigers in the round of 16, Toulouse, Bath and today a fantastic URC champion in Leinster.”

Bielle-Biarrey, accepting his Player of the Tournament award, was characteristically humble. “It’s really special, but I’m a winger – if the forwards don’t do a great job, the backs don’t do a good job too. I don’t get good ball. It’s because of them I can be player of the year this year,” the 22-year-old said. His 10 tries across the tournament capped a remarkable campaign that also saw him named Player of the Six Nations, with 34 tries in 30 games for club and country this season.

Tameifuna, meanwhile, paid tribute to his captain. “What a leader. He’s not the biggest player, but he definitely shows up with heart. He puts his body on the line, and I’m grateful to have a player like that on our team,” he said before warning that celebrations would be intense. “It’s going to be a rough couple of days.”

For Leinster, the focus must now shift quickly to a URC quarter-final against the Lions next Saturday. Doris acknowledged some players will be moving on but vowed the province would return. “We’re going to stay together. There’s a special group of boys there. No doubt we’ll be back better again next year.” Bordeaux, meanwhile, can savour their status as the dominant force in European club rugby and will attempt to emulate Toulon’s 2013-15 run with a third successive title next season. At this precise moment, few would bet against them.

Scorers:

Leinster: Tries: O’Brien (8), McCarthy (46), Ringrose (71). Cons: Byrne (9), Frawley (71).

Bordeaux Begles: Tries: Lucu (14), Uberti (18), Bielle-Biarrey (25, 36), Moefana (40+2). Cons: Lucu (5). Pens: Lucu (59, 64).

Yellow cards: Lucu (Bordeaux, 42), Boniface (Bordeaux, 73).

Leinster: Hugo Keenan; Tommy O’Brien, Garry Ringrose, Robbie Henshaw, Rieko Ioane; Harry Byrne, Jamison Gibson-Park; Andrew Porter, Dan Sheehan, Thomas Clarkson; Joe McCarthy, James Ryan; Jack Conan, Josh van der Flier, Caelan Doris (capt).
Replacements: Ronan Kelleher (for Sheehan, 53), Paddy McCarthy (for Porter, 63), Tadhg Furlong (for Clarkson, 44), Diarmuid Mangan (for J McCarthy, 73), Max Deegan (for Conan, 59), Luke McGrath (for Gibson-Park, 74), Ciaran Frawley (for Byrne, 44), Jamie Osborne (for Henshaw, 51).

Bordeaux Begles: Salesi Rayasi; Pablo Uberti, Damian Penaud, Yoram Moefana, Louis Bielle-Biarrey; Matthieu Jalibert, Maxime Lucu (capt); Jefferson Poirot, Maxime Lamothe, Carlu Sadie; Boris Palu, Adam Coleman; Pierre Bochaton, Cameron Woki, Marko Gazzotti.
Replacements: Gaetan Barlot (for Lamothe, 54), Ugo Boniface (for Poirot, 48), Ben Tameifuna (for Sadie, 48), Lachlan Swinton (for Coleman, 41), Temo Matiu (for Bochaton, 10-17, for Woki, 50), Bastien Vergnes-Taillefer (for Gazzotti, 54), Arthur Retiere (for Uberti, 63), Hugo Reus (for Jalibert, 70).

Match details: San Mames Stadium, Bilbao. Attendance: 52,327. Saturday 23 May 2026, 2.45pm (Irish time) / 3.45pm (local time). Referee: Karl Dickson (England). Assistant referees: Christophe Ridley (England), Hollie Davidson (Scotland). TMO: Marius van der Westhuizen (South Africa). Player of the Match: Maxime Lucu (Bordeaux Begles). Player of the Tournament: Louis Bielle-Biarrey (Bordeaux Begles).

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Champions Cup

O’Brien starts as Leinster name unchanged XV for European final

Leinster have named an unchanged starting XV from their semi-final win over Toulon for the Investec Champions Cup final against Bordeaux Bègles in Bilbao.

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O’Brien starts as Leinster name unchanged XV for European final
Leinster v RC Toulonnais European Rugby Champions Cup Tommy O Brien of Leinster during the European Rugby Champions Cup Semi-final match at the Aviva Stadium, Dublin 02 05 2026. (IMAGO / Focus Images)

Leo Cullen has named an unchanged starting XV for tomorrow’s Investec Champions Cup final against Bordeaux Bègles at San Mamés Stadium in Bilbao, backing the same fifteen that secured a 29-25 semi-final victory over Toulon. While the starting line-up remains untouched, there are five changes to the replacements, with Ireland loosehead Paddy McCarthy available for the first time since January following foot surgery.

Key team news:

  • Tommy O’Brien has been passed fit to start on the right wing after withdrawing from last week’s URC win over the Ospreys
  • Paddy McCarthy returns to the bench for his first appearance since injuring his foot against La Rochelle in January
  • Tadhg Furlong is named among the replacements, with Thomas Clarkson retaining the starting tighthead spot
  • Ciarán Frawley replaces Sam Prendergast on the bench, with James Lowe missing out on the matchday 23 entirely
  • Diarmuid Mangan and Max Deegan come in for Alex Soroka and Scott Penny among the forward replacements
  • Unchanged starting XV from the semi-final win over Toulon

The fitness of O’Brien had been a concern this week after the Ireland wing was forced to withdraw from the Ospreys match before kick-off, but he has come through the captain’s run at San Mamés and takes his place on the right wing. All Black Rieko Ioane continues on the left, with Hugo Keenan at full-back. The selection means James Lowe, who returned from injury last week, Jordan Larmour and Jimmy O’Brien all miss the matchday 23, with Jamie Osborne the only outside-back cover on the bench.

Cullen has placed his trust in Clarkson at tighthead after the 22-year-old’s impressive form throughout the season. The Leinster prop has played more minutes than any other tighthead at the province this campaign and was nominated for the supporters’ player of the season award. Furlong, who has dealt with injury issues throughout the year, provides considerable experience from the bench alongside Rónan Kelleher and the returning McCarthy, giving Leinster a formidable front-row reload for the second half.

The back row of Jack Conan, Josh van der Flier and captain Caelan Doris is unchanged, as is the second-row partnership of Joe McCarthy and James Ryan. Jamison Gibson-Park and Harry Byrne continue at half-back, with Sam Prendergast the notable omission. Frawley’s greater versatility across the backline has earned him the nod as the bench playmaker, with Luke McGrath providing scrum-half cover.

The centre partnership of Robbie Henshaw and Garry Ringrose carries a sense of occasion. The pair started together in the 2018 Champions Cup final at this very stadium, when Leinster beat Racing 92 15-12 to claim their fourth European title. Cullen will be hoping for a similarly successful outcome as his side chase a fifth star, having lost their previous three finals to La Rochelle (twice) and Toulouse.

This will be Leinster’s fourth final in five years and their ninth overall. Both sides have won all their matches in this season’s competition, with Leinster seeing off Edinburgh, Sale Sharks and Toulon in the knockout rounds, all at home. They will now face a very different challenge in Bilbao, where temperatures are expected to reach 30°C for the 2.45pm Irish time kick-off. EPCR are monitoring the Heat Stress Index and may introduce three-minute water breaks during the match.

Bordeaux enter as defending champions and tournament favourites, having scored the most tries, most points and made the most clean breaks in this season’s competition. The final promises to be an intriguing tactical battle between Leinster’s renowned blitz defence and the free-scoring backline of the French champions.

Leinster starting XV:
15. Hugo Keenan (82 caps)
14. Tommy O’Brien (60 caps)
13. Garry Ringrose (148 caps)
12. Robbie Henshaw (120 caps)
11. Rieko Ioane (14 caps)
10. Harry Byrne (90 caps)
9. Jamison Gibson-Park (170 caps)
1. Andrew Porter (147 caps)
2. Dan Sheehan (86 caps)
3. Thomas Clarkson (76 caps)
4. Joe McCarthy (62 caps)
5. James Ryan (108 caps)
6. Jack Conan (177 caps)
7. Josh van der Flier (172 caps)
8. Caelan Doris (105 caps) – captain

Replacements:
16. Rónan Kelleher (92 caps)
17. Paddy McCarthy (15 caps)
18. Tadhg Furlong (165 caps)
19. Diarmuid Mangan (27 caps)
20. Max Deegan (157 caps)
21. Luke McGrath (253 caps)
22. Ciarán Frawley (122 caps)
23. Jamie Osborne (73 caps)

Match details: Leinster v Union Bordeaux Bègles, San Mamés Stadium, Bilbao. Saturday 23 May, 2.45pm (Irish time) / 3.45pm (local time). Live on Premier Sports 1 and ITV4. Referee: Karl Dickson (RFU).

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Champions Cup

Veteran Poirot returns as Bordeaux bid to retain Champions Cup

Bordeaux Bègles have made one change to their semi-final starting XV for the Champions Cup final against Leinster, with Jefferson Poirot returning at loosehead prop.

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Veteran Poirot returns as Bordeaux bid to retain Champions Cup
RUGBY : UBB vs Toulouse - Quarter Final of the Investec Champion Cup -Bordeaux - 12 04 2026 Jefferson Poirot (ubb) Bordeaux Copyright: Thierry Breton (IMAGO / PsnewZ)

Yannick Bru has made just one change to his Bordeaux Bègles starting XV from the semi-final demolition of Bath as the defending champions aim to retain the Investec Champions Cup against Leinster at San Mamés Stadium in Bilbao tomorrow. Veteran loosehead Jefferson Poirot returns from suspension to replace Matis Perchaud, who misses out on the matchday 23 entirely after picking up an injury in last weekend’s Top 14 win over Perpignan.

Key team news:

  • Jefferson Poirot returns at loosehead after missing the semi-final through suspension
  • Louis Bielle-Biarrey starts on the left wing despite concerns over an ankle injury
  • Lachlan Swinton replaces Cyril Cazeaux on the bench as the only other change from the semi-final
  • Bordeaux opt for a 6-2 forwards-backs split on the bench, as they have done in every major knockout match this season
  • Jean-Luc Du Preez, Rohan Janse Van Rensburg and Nicolas Depoortere are all unavailable through injury
  • Matis Perchaud misses the matchday 23 after suffering an injury against Perpignan

The biggest boost for Bordeaux is the inclusion of Bielle-Biarrey, who was seen training with strapping on his left leg earlier this week after limping out of last Saturday’s 37-32 win over Perpignan. The France wing, who is one of five players nominated for the tournament’s Player of the Year award, has been the competition’s most devastating attacking force this season with seven tries in the knockout rounds. He came off the bench against Perpignan to score twice and produce a try assist, before making a match-saving interception on his own try line in the 82nd minute.

Bielle-Biarrey forms part of a back three alongside full-back Salesi Rayasi, who scored a hat-trick in the round of 16 win over Leicester Tigers, and the reliable Pablo Uberti on the right wing. The centre partnership of Damian Penaud and Yoram Moefana has been one of the most potent midfield combinations in European rugby this season, with Penaud’s transition from wing to centre under Bru proving a masterstroke.

At half-back, captain Maxime Lucu and fly-half Matthieu Jalibert will orchestrate the Bordeaux attack. Jalibert, who is also nominated for Player of the Tournament, has topped the competition charts for clean breaks, metres made, defenders beaten, carries and offloads. The pair were rested for the first half against Perpignan before being introduced from the bench, a clear indication of where Bru’s priorities lay ahead of the final.

Poirot’s return at loosehead is significant. The 31-year-old, who has more than 200 appearances for the club, was suspended for the semi-final against Bath but returned in the Top 14 last weekend and slots straight back into the starting front row alongside hooker Maxime Lamothe and tighthead Carlü Sadie. Ben Tameifuna, who has been used as a devastating impact replacement throughout the knockout stages, once again takes his place on the bench. The 136kg tighthead has been Bru’s not-so-secret weapon all tournament, and his introduction in the second half will provide a stern test of the Leinster scrum.

The back row of Pierre Bochaton, Cameron Woki and Marko Gazzotti is unchanged from the semi-final, with Temo Matiu available again on the bench after recovering from concussion in time to score a try against Bath. Boris Palu and Adam Coleman continue in the second row.

Bordeaux’s tournament statistics make for imposing reading. They have scored the most points (305), the most tries (45), beaten the most defenders (240), made the most metres (3,762) and registered the most clean breaks (118) in this season’s competition. They topped their pool with maximum points before accounting for Leicester Tigers, Toulouse and Bath in the knockout rounds, winning every match along the way.

The only change on the bench from the semi-final sees Australian Swinton replace Cazeaux as lock cover, with Bru maintaining his preference for a six-two split among the replacements. Bastien Vergnes-Taillefer provides additional back-row cover, while Arthur Retière and Hugo Reus are the only two backs on the bench.

Bordeaux are bidding to become the first French club to win back-to-back Champions Cup titles since Toulouse achieved the feat in 2004-05. They will face a Leinster side that knows San Mamés well, having won their fourth European title at this stadium in 2018. The final kicks off at 3.45pm local time in what is expected to be searing heat, with temperatures forecast to reach 30°C.

Union Bordeaux Bègles starting XV:
15. Salesi Rayasi
14. Pablo Uberti
13. Damian Penaud
12. Yoram Moefana
11. Louis Bielle-Biarrey
10. Matthieu Jalibert
9. Maxime Lucu – captain
1. Jefferson Poirot
2. Maxime Lamothe
3. Carlü Sadie
4. Boris Palu
5. Adam Coleman
6. Pierre Bochaton
7. Cameron Woki
8. Marko Gazzotti

Replacements:
16. Gaétan Barlot
17. Ugo Boniface
18. Ben Tameifuna
19. Lachlan Swinton
20. Temo Matiu
21. Bastien Vergnes-Taillefer
22. Arthur Retière
23. Hugo Reus

Match details: Leinster v Union Bordeaux Bègles, San Mamés Stadium, Bilbao. Saturday 23 May, 2.45pm (Irish time) / 3.45pm (local time). Live on Premier Sports 1 and ITV4. Referee: Karl Dickson (RFU).

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