United Rugby Championship
Clinical Leinster outclass Munster to secure bonus point
Published
1 year agoon
Leinster maintained their perfect start to the BKT United Rugby Championship season with a commanding 28-7 victory over arch-rivals Munster at Thomond Park, claiming their 11th consecutive win across all competitions with a ruthlessly efficient four-try performance.
This historical derby concludes in a sea of blue π΅#BKTURC #URC | #MUNvLEI pic.twitter.com/kZ8fE8GldT
— BKT United Rugby Championship (URC) (@URCOfficial) December 27, 2024
In front of a sold-out crowd of 26,267, Leo Cullen’s men demonstrated exactly why they sit atop the table, weathering early Munster pressure before striking through scrum-half Luke McGrath after nine minutes. The opening try came from a clever lineout play after a scrum penalty, with Ryan Baird making strong carries before McGrath expertly exploited Munster’s absent pillar defence to dart over on the blindside. Prendergast’s conversion gave the visitors an early 7-0 lead.
Sam Prendergast, making his first senior appearance at Thomond Park, delivered a man-of-the-match performance that highlighted his growing credentials. The 21-year-old orchestrated proceedings masterfully and grabbed Leinster’s second try on 32 minutes. After several phases of forward carries from Kelleher, Van der Flier and Porter, McGrath found Prendergast who showed impressive pace to skip between two defenders and touch down under the posts, adding the conversion himself for a 14-0 lead.
Munster’s set-piece struggles were evident throughout, with their lineout particularly problematic. Even when Tommy O’Brien was sin-binned midway through the first half, the hosts couldn’t capitalise, with Garry Ringrose epitomising Leinster’s defensive resolve by holding up Tadhg Beirne over the line.
The home side briefly threatened a comeback when Tom Ahern powered over shortly after the break. The try came after a series of penalties against Leinster, with Munster finally moving away from one-out runners as John Hodnett found Ahern with a well-timed pass, the towering forward stretching through Tommy O’Brien’s tackle to score. Burns’ conversion reduced the deficit to 14-7.
However, Leinster’s response was emphatic. Josh van der Flier, marking his 150th appearance for the province, crossed for their third try after 53 minutes, the World Cup winner identifying another gap at the fringe of a ruck following strong carries from Baird, Ryan and McCarthy. Prendergast’s third conversion extended the lead to 21-7.
Captain Caelan Doris then sealed the bonus point in the 73rd minute, the number eight showing his power to drive over the top of Gavin Coombes from close range following sustained pressure. Ross Byrne, on for Prendergast, added the extras to complete the scoring at 28-7.
For a depleted Munster side, missing key players including Peter O’Mahony, Craig Casey and Conor Murray, this defeat highlighted the gulf between the sides. Jacques Nienaber’s blitz defence repeatedly stifled Munster’s attack, while Andrew Porter’s early introduction only amplified Leinster’s set-piece dominance.
Prendergast, who added three conversions before Ross Byrne tagged on the fourth, credited his forwards for laying the foundation for victory. “Our forwards are doing a great job of sucking their defenders in all day, through the scrum and stuff like that. I felt like we got such good platform off the forwards that it made it a bit easier for us backs.”
Speaking to TG4 in Ireland after the match, Doris highlighted the significance of winning at Thomond Park. “It’s an occasion we relish down here, a hard place to come and get a win and get a performance,” the captain reflected. “It’s a bit of a cauldron, Munster supporters get in nice and early, you can hear them from the very start, so we spoke about trying to get a fast start, wanting to get ourselves into the game nice and early. I think it was our set piece that gave us the platform in the first half, our lineout and our scrum were very good, discipline not so good, but I’m pleased overall.”
The result sees Leinster stretch their lead at the summit of the URC table to 11 points, while extending their unbeaten run in Limerick to six years. For Munster, who remain in sixth place, the focus now shifts to their remaining Champions Cup pool matches as they look to regroup from a chastening evening against their oldest rivals.
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United Rugby Championship
Former Ireland centre Jared Payne joins Munster as attack coach
Published
11 hours agoon
10th June 2026
Munster Rugby have confirmed the appointment of former Ireland international Jared Payne as assistant coach on a two-year deal, completing Clayton McMillan’s backroom team ahead of the 2026/27 season. Alongside the announcement, the province revealed that Mossy Lawler has signed a contract extension keeping him at Munster until 2028, with the pair set to share attack and backline coaching responsibilities.
The appointment brings to a close a protracted search for an attack coach that has dominated the off-season at Thomond Park. Mike Prendergast’s departure in February left a significant void, and the initial appointment of Roger Randle was subsequently reversed after a historical allegation resurfaced and drew opposition. Payne, who had been linked with the role from the outset alongside Randle and former Munster man Jason Holland, now steps into a position that carries considerable expectation.
The 40-year-old New Zealander brings a wealth of experience on both sides of the Irish Sea. After a distinguished playing career that took him from the Chiefs, Crusaders and Blues in Super Rugby to Ulster in 2011, Payne became a mainstay of Joe Schmidt’s Ireland squad. He earned 20 caps between 2014 and 2017, was part of the 2015 Six Nations-winning squad, and toured his native New Zealand with the British & Irish Lions in 2017 before injury forced his retirement at 32.
Payne transitioned seamlessly into coaching, spending four years as defence coach at Ulster under Dan McFarland. During that spell, he helped steer the province to a Pro14 final in 2020 and a United Rugby Championship semi-final in 2022. A season at Clermont Auvergne in the Top 14 followed, where he assumed the interim head coach role after Jonno Gibbes’ departure. He then spent three seasons with the Scarlets, initially overseeing the backs and attack before shifting to run the defence programme. He confirmed his departure from Llanelli in March.
Payne said: “I’m incredibly grateful for the opportunity to be joining Munster Rugby. Munster is a club with a proud history, strong values and a special connection with its supporters and community. As a family, we’re excited to become part of that.
“There is a huge amount of ambition across the club and I’m looking forward to working alongside the players and staff to help move the club forward. There is a lot to be excited about and I can’t wait to get started.”
Head coach McMillan said: “Jared brings wide-ranging skills, having played and coached extensively in Ireland for 11 years as well as experiences in New Zealand, France and Wales. Over this time, he has coached both sides of the ball and developed an excellent reputation for empowering players and assisting them to fulfil their potential. I look forward to Jared and his family joining the club.”
McMillan added: “I’m equally delighted that Mossy has extended his contract. The attack portfolio is vast, and I have always had the view that it is a two-person job. There is accountability to bring a higher level of detail to their respective areas of responsibility within our attack framework, and I believe that in Mossy and Jared, we have two innovative and detailed coaches who will work outstandingly well together.”
Lawler, a Limerick native who joined Munster from Connacht in 2023, has worked as skills coach and later as assistant attack coach under Prendergast.
General manager Ian Costello said: “Jared is a highly respected coach that we believe will be an excellent fit to work closely with Mossy and completes a very exciting and ambitious coaching team for next season.” Payne’s arrival follows last week’s appointment of Jimmy Duffy as forwards coach from Ulster.
Munster’s 2025/26 campaign ended with a BKT United Rugby Championship quarter-final defeat to the Bulls on 30 May, and the reshaping of the coaching ticket signals a clear intent to push further next term. With McMillan now supported by Payne, Lawler and Duffy, the province will hope that stability in the backroom can translate into a sustained challenge at the business end of the season.
United Rugby Championship
Leinster survive Stormers scare to set up Bulls final rematch
Published
4 days agoon
6th June 2026
Leinster will defend their BKT United Rugby Championship title against the Vodacom Bulls at Croke Park on Friday, 19 June after grinding out a hard-fought 20β11 victory over the DHL Stormers at the Aviva Stadium, in a semi-final that hinged on the visitorsβ indiscipline in the final quarter.
Key moments
8 mins β TRY LEINSTER: Patient build-up play from the hosts sees Jimmy OβBrien and Hugo Keenan make inroads centrally before Jamie Osborne releases Rieko Ioane, who powers through the Stormers defence to score left of the posts. Sam Prendergast converts. (Leinster 7β0 DHL Stormers)
18 mins β PENALTY LEINSTER: Jamison Gibson-Parkβs lethal kick-and-chase catches the Stormers napping and wins penalty advantage inside the 22. Prendergast slots from a central position. (Leinster 10β0 DHL Stormers)
22 mins β INJURY: Andrew Porter hobbles off with what appears to be a calf injury. Alex Usanov replaces him.
23 mins β PENALTY LEINSTER: AdrΓ© Smith is penalised for a high tackle on Jimmy OβBrien. Prendergast makes no mistake from in front of the posts. (Leinster 13β0 DHL Stormers)
28 mins β TRY DHL STORMERS: The Stormers win a penalty inside the Leinster 22 and opt for the tap and go. AndrΓ©-Hugo Venter charges for the line before AdrΓ© Smith picks from close range and drives over. Mattheeβs conversion drifts wide. (Leinster 13β5 DHL Stormers)
35 mins β PENALTY DHL STORMERS: Leinsterβs scrum struggles without Porter as Clarkson is penalised. Matthee slots from in front of the posts. (Leinster 13β8 DHL Stormers)
Half-time: Leinster 13β8 DHL Stormers. A clinical opening quarter from Leinster saw them race to 13β0, with Ioaneβs try and Prendergastβs boot doing the damage. But the loss of Porter disrupted their scrum dominance, and the Stormers capitalised with a Smith try and Matthee penalty to close within five at the break.
47 mins β YELLOW CARD DHL STORMERS: Leolin Zas shown yellow for a deliberate knock-on as Leinster had numbers on the overlap.
48 mins: Imad Khan sprints for the Leinster line, but Hugo Keenan produces a crucial try-saving tackle before Max Deegan wins the ball back.
53 mins β PENALTY DHL STORMERS: Even with 14 men, the Stormers win a scrum penalty. Matthee slots to reduce the deficit to two. (Leinster 13β11 DHL Stormers)
58 mins: Zas returns from the sin bin. The Stormers won the 10-minute period 3β0.
69 mins β YELLOW CARD DHL STORMERS (upgraded to RED): Ruan Ackermann makes a dangerous shoulder-to-head clearout on Kelleher. Initially yellow, upgraded to red after off-field review.
70 mins β YELLOW CARD DHL STORMERS: Salmaan Moerat sin-binned for cynically kicking the ball out of Gibson-Parkβs hands. Stormers reduced to 13 men.
70 mins β TRY LEINSTER: Gibson-Park regathers the loose ball and races through to score under the posts. Harry Byrne converts. (Leinster 20β11 DHL Stormers)
Full-time: Leinster 20β11 DHL Stormers
Match report
For 68 minutes, John Dobsonβs side had made this exactly the arm-wrestle they needed it to be. After weathering a dominant Leinster opening quarter that yielded a Rieko Ioane try and two Sam Prendergast penalties, the Stormers fought their way back to within two points through AdrΓ© Smithβs try and Jurie Mattheeβs boot, exploiting Leinsterβs scrum problems after Andrew Porterβs first-half injury departure. When Stormers captain Ruhan Nel hammered a brilliant 50:22 kick with 14 minutes remaining, the 2022 champions were knocking on the door of one of the competitionβs great upsets.
But replacement flanker Ruan Ackermannβs reckless shoulder-to-head clearout on RΓ³nan Kelleher in the 69th minute β initially a yellow card, upgraded to red after off-field review β changed the course of the contest irrevocably. Within a minute, fellow replacement Salmaan Moerat was also sin-binned for cynically kicking the ball from Jamison Gibson-Parkβs hands at the base of a ruck. The scrum-half, the gameβs outstanding performer, regathered the loose ball and raced through to score under the posts, delivering the decisive blow that the Stormersβ own ill-discipline had invited.
The match had begun with a poignant minuteβs silence for Fergus Slattery, one of the greats of Irish rugby, and Leinsterβs early play had a fitting intensity about it. Gibson-Parkβs box-kicking was razor-sharp from the opening exchanges, Kelleher bundling Damian Willemse into touch from the first steepling kick and setting the tone for what would be a confrontational evening. The hosts won a penalty at the first scrum, which Prendergast rifled to touch eight metres out, and although the Stormers defended stoutly in those early exchanges, the pressure eventually told.
The opening try arrived on eight minutes. Jimmy OβBrien and Hugo Keenan combined cleverly to crack the gainline before the ball was worked left through Porter, Prendergast and Jamie Osborne to present Ioane with a run at blindside flanker Ben-Jason Dixon. The All Black showed the Stormers defender a clean pair of heels, stepping inside to finish smartly. Prendergast converted for 7β0.
Gibson-Parkβs influence was growing by the minute. His high-ball pressure forced a knock-on inside the 22, and his break from the fringes set up the position from which Prendergast kicked his first penalty in the 18th minute to make it 10β0. When Matthee kicked the restart out on the full, Leinster were in the ascendancy again, and Prendergast struck his second penalty in the 23rd minute after Smith was penalised for a high tackle on OβBrien. At 13β0 with barely a quarter of the match gone, the Stormers had made 70 tackles to Leinsterβs seven and had enjoyed just 13 per cent of the possession.
But the complexion of the contest shifted when Porter hobbled off in the 22nd minute with what appeared to be a calf injury β the same area that kept the Ireland loosehead out of the Six Nations earlier this year. Leinsterβs scrum, which had been dominant with Porter anchoring it, began to creak almost immediately. Both Thomas Clarkson and replacement Alex Usanov struggled against a Stormers front row that sensed weakness, and the visitorsβ confidence surged.
The Stormersβ try came from a penalty inside the Leinster 22 on 28 minutes. AndrΓ©-Hugo Venter charged off the tap and go before Smith picked from close range and drove over with immense leg drive, fending off Clarkson to finish near the right corner. Matthee missed the conversion from wide, but the Stormers were on the board. Five minutes later, a scrum penalty against Clarkson gave Matthee three straightforward points from in front of the posts, and suddenly it was 13β8.
Leinster threw everything at the Stormersβ line in the closing minutes of the half, James Loweβs powerful carry down the left creating field position and back-to-back penalties drawing a warning from referee Hollie Davidson. But the Stormersβ defence in that period was heroic β there is no other word for it β as they repelled drive after drive, using the counter-ruck to clear through the boot and send the teams to the break with just five points separating them. A tunnel altercation between players from both sides at the interval underlined the simmering tension.
The second half brought a yellow card for Leolin Zas within two minutes of the restart, the winger penalised for a deliberate knock-on as Leinster had numbers on the overlap. But rather than capitalising on their numerical advantage, Leinster made a mess of the sin-bin period. Khan almost scored a breakaway try after a loose ball inside the Stormersβ 22, only for Keenan to produce a remarkable try-saving tackle β one of the moments of the match β before Deegan rescued the loose ball.
The Stormers, with 14 men, were the ones who scored during Zasβs absence. A dominant scrum β set up after Prendergastβs clearance kick cannoned off the back of Gibson-Parkβs head for an unfortunate accidental offside β won the penalty from which Matthee slotted to make it 13β11 in the 53rd minute. It was a staggering statistic: the Stormers had won the sin-bin period 3β0 with a man fewer.
The final quarter was a match of muscle and nerve. Doris made a lung-bursting carry that got Leinster into the 22 on 60 minutes, and Ioane ran a perfect line that threatened to unlock the Stormers, but both attacks were repelled. Nelβs superb 50:22 on 66 minutes put the Stormers on the attack deep in Leinster territory, and for a moment it felt as though the visitors might land the knockout blow. Rabah Slimaniβs crucial jackal turnover β the replacement prop winning the penalty that allowed Leinster to clear their lines β proved every bit as decisive as what followed.
What followed was Ackermannβs moment of madness. Introduced from the bench just 10 minutes earlier, the flanker launched himself shoulder-first into Kelleher at a ruck, making clear contact with the hookerβs head. Davidson showed yellow immediately, with the off-field bunker upgrading it to red. Dobson was unequivocal in his post-match assessment. βI really apologise for the first one,β he said. βThatβs where you have to get rid of that in rugby. Tucked shoulder to the head.β
Leinster had a lineout inside the 22 and James Ryan claimed it cleanly. Deegan carried through contact before Gibson-Park shaped to pass from the base of a ruck. Moerat, lying prone at the edge of the breakdown, raised a foot and knocked the ball from the scrum-halfβs hands. But Gibson-Park, sensing the opportunity rather than the injustice, regathered the loose ball and accelerated through a suddenly transfixed defence to score under the posts. Moerat was shown yellow for his intervention, reducing the Stormers to 13 men, and Harry Byrneβs conversion made it 20β11 with 10 minutes remaining.
From there, the result was never in doubt. OβBrienβs exquisite left-footed kick turned defence into attack, and Leinster saw out the remaining minutes with the composure of a side that has been in this position many times before. Gibson-Park departed to a standing ovation with five minutes remaining, his afternoonβs work complete.
Leo Cullen acknowledged the scale of the challenge his side had faced. βIt was a serious battle for us out there,β the head coach said. βTheyβre unbelievably physical and the way they defended their line β you see it there on the field, a lot of their guys are very emotional there. So, how much it meant to them, the game. Itβs a proper arm-wrestle at that stage.β
Gibson-Park, named Player of the Match, reflected on a contest that had the feel of knockout rugby at its most attritional. βI think it had a bit of a cup rugby feel to it,β he said. βWe definitely left a few chances out there, particularly in the first half. But I suppose you have to hand a bit of credit to the Stormers. Theyβre a serious team, very good at what they do. Weβve had to grind out a good few wins. And I think they probably stood to us a little today.β
Dobson, meanwhile, was left to rue what might have been. βI thought up until the card we were in it,β he said. βI thought we could see some cracks starting, maybe physically, in Leinster. At 68 minutes we dared to dream. I said to the guys at half-time that we wonβt win this game if we donβt stay with 15 men on the field.β
Captain Caelan Doris spoke of the motivation provided by departing players. βWe have a special group and quite a number of guys moving on at the end of the season,β he said. βIt has been a big motivator for us at the knockout stages to extend the season and enjoy our time together.β
Leinster will now face the Bulls at Croke Park on Friday, 19 June β a repeat of last yearβs final, which the Irish province won. The Aviva Stadium is unavailable due to a Metallica concert, so GAA headquarters will host the showpiece under Friday night lights, with kick-off at 7.30pm. Porterβs fitness will be the primary concern in the 13-day gap between semi-final and final, while Cullen will need to address the scrum issues that allowed the Stormers to dominate that area for much of the second half. The Bulls, who produced a sensational comeback to beat Glasgow Warriors earlier in the day, will arrive in Dublin with their own brand of forward physicality β and a blueprint laid out for them by the Stormers.
Teams
Leinster Rugby: 15 Hugo Keenan, 14 Jimmy OβBrien, 13 Rieko Ioane, 12 Jamie Osborne, 11 James Lowe, 10 Sam Prendergast, 9 Jamison Gibson-Park; 1 Andrew Porter, 2 RΓ³nan Kelleher, 3 Thomas Clarkson, 4 Joe McCarthy, 5 James Ryan, 6 Max Deegan, 7 Josh van der Flier, 8 Caelan Doris (CAPT).
Replacements: 16 Gus McCarthy, 17 Alex Usanov, 18 Rabah Slimani, 19 Diarmuid Mangan, 20 Jack Conan, 21 Luke McGrath, 22 Harry Byrne, 23 Garry Ringrose.
DHL Stormers: 15 Damian Willemse, 14 Wandisile Simelane, 13 Ruhan Nel (CAPT), 12 Dan du Plessis, 11 Leolin Zas, 10 Jurie Matthee, 9 Imad Khan; 1 Ntuthuko Mchunu, 2 AndrΓ©-Hugo Venter, 3 Neethling FouchΓ©, 4 AdrΓ© Smith, 5 Connor Evans, 6 Paul de Villiers, 7 Ben-Jason Dixon, 8 Evan Roos.
Replacements: 16 JJ KotzΓ©, 17 Vernon Matongo, 18 Zachary Porthen, 19 Salmaan Moerat, 20 Ruan Ackermann, 21 Marcel Theunissen, 22 Stefan Ungerer, 23 Warrick Gelant.
Match details
Leinster 20 (Tries: Ioane, Gibson-Park; Conversions: Prendergast 1/1, Byrne 1/1; Penalties: Prendergast 2/2)
DHL Stormers 11 (Tries: A. Smith; Conversions: Matthee 0/1; Penalties: Matthee 2/2)
Half-time: 13β8
Venue: Aviva Stadium, Dublin
Attendance: 15,346
Referee: Hollie Davidson (Scotland)
Assistant Referees: Sam Grove-White (Scotland), Adam Jones (Wales)
TMO: Mike Adamson (Scotland)
Player of the match: Jamison Gibson-Park (Leinster)
United Rugby Championship
Bulls stun Glasgow Warriors with epic comeback in URC semi-final
Published
4 days agoon
6th June 2026
The Vodacom Bulls produced one of the most remarkable comebacks in the history of the BKT United Rugby Championship to stun Glasgow Warriors 22β21 at Scottish Gas Murrayfield on Saturday, overturning an 18-point deficit to book their place in the Grand Final on 20 June.
Key moments
6 mins β PENALTY BULLS: Embrose Papierβs kick in behind pins Glasgow deep and Gregor Hiddleston concedes at the breakdown. Handre Pollard slots the penalty from in front of the posts to open the scoring. (Glasgow Warriors 0β3 Vodacom Bulls)
8 mins β YELLOW CARD BULLS: Handre Pollard shown yellow for a deliberate knock-on, swatting down a Sione Tuipulotu pass on the edge of his own 22. Glasgow have 10 minutes with an extra man.
15 mins β TRY GLASGOW WARRIORS: Glasgow make their numerical advantage count with a slick lineout move in the Bullsβ 22. Jamie Dobieβs kick puts the Bulls under pressure and from the attacking lineout, the ball is worked wide right where Kyle Steyn finishes in the corner. Dan Lancaster converts from wide on the right. (Glasgow Warriors 7β3 Vodacom Bulls)
18 mins β TRY GLASGOW WARRIORS: Glasgow tear the Bulls apart again within minutes. Kyle Rowe makes a superb break on the left before the ball is recycled right, with Sione Tuipulotu bursting into the 22 and putting Steyn in for his second. Lancaster converts. (Glasgow Warriors 14β3 Vodacom Bulls)
24 mins β PENALTY TRY GLASGOW WARRIORS: Lancasterβs penalty finds touch within 10 metres of the Bullsβ line. Glasgow form a devastating rolling maul that rumbles towards the line before referee Andrew Brace awards a penalty try. (Glasgow Warriors 21β3 Vodacom Bulls)
24 mins β YELLOW CARD BULLS: Ruan Nortje shown yellow for illegally collapsing the maul. The Bulls are down to 14 men for the second time in the first half.
32 mins β TRY VODACOM BULLS: Despite being a man down, the Bulls batter away at the Glasgow line through repeated carries. After captain Marcell Coetzee is denied by the TMO for a knock-on, Johan Grobbelaar forces his way over from close range on his 150th Bulls appearance. Pollard converts. (Glasgow Warriors 21β10 Vodacom Bulls)
Half-time: Glasgow Warriors 21β10 Vodacom Bulls. A scintillating first half, dominated by Glasgowβs clinical backline play. Kyle Steyn scored twice as the Warriors carved the Bullsβ defence apart during Pollardβs sin-bin period, before a penalty try made it 21β3. But the Bulls, even with 14 men, clawed one back through Grobbelaar to stay within striking distance at the break.
43 mins β YELLOW CARD GLASGOW WARRIORS: Scott Cummings shown yellow for not rolling away at the breakdown, after referee Braceβs repeated warnings about Glasgowβs discipline.
45 mins β TRY VODACOM BULLS: The Bulls capitalise immediately on Cummingsβ sin-binning, building phases patiently before Embrose Papier snipes over from close range β his 13th try of the season. Pollard drags the conversion wide. (Glasgow Warriors 21β15 Vodacom Bulls)
54 mins β TRY VODACOM BULLS: The comeback is complete. Cameron Hanekom charges through the Glasgow defence and into the 22 before feeding Willie le Roux. The ball is recycled and Francois Klopper powers over from close range. Pollard converts to put the Bulls ahead by a single point. (Glasgow Warriors 21β22 Vodacom Bulls)
66 mins β MISSED PENALTY BULLS: Pollard attempts a long-range penalty from near the touchline and halfway but slices it well wide.
69 mins β MISSED PENALTY BULLS: Pollard strikes the left upright from a more central position. Back-to-back misses keep Glasgowβs hopes alive.
73 mins β MISSED PENALTY BULLS: Pollard misses a third consecutive penalty, this time dropping it wide of the left post from 45 metres. The Bulls have left 11 points on the tee in the second half.
80 mins: Glasgow desperately seek a score in the dying moments but Tuipulotu is tackled and penalised for holding on near the halfway line. Grobbelaar boots the ball into the stands to seal the Bullsβ victory.
Full-time: Glasgow Warriors 21β22 Vodacom Bulls
Match report
For 25 breathtaking minutes, Glasgow had been untouchable. Kyle Steyn scored twice and a devastating rolling maul produced a penalty try as the hosts raced into a 21β3 lead, carving the Bullsβ defence apart with precision and pace while Johan Ackermannβs side haemorrhaged yellow cards. But a try before half-time from Johan Grobbelaar kept the Bulls in touch, and a ferocious second-half fightback β three tries to nil, 19 unanswered points β completed a heist that will live long in the memory of those who witnessed it.
It was a match of two starkly contrasting halves played in front of almost 18,000 supporters at the home of Scottish rugby, and it ended Glasgowβs season in the cruellest fashion. The Warriors had topped the regular-season standings and beaten the Bulls twice already this campaign, but when it mattered most, the South Africans found the resolve and physicality that Franco Smithβs side could not match after the interval.
The opening exchanges were tense and tactical, both sides testing each otherβs aerial game in the Edinburgh drizzle. The Bulls struck first through a Handre Pollard penalty in the sixth minute after Gregor Hiddleston was penalised at the breakdown, but the fly-halfβs afternoon took a sharp turn just two minutes later when he was shown yellow for a deliberate knock-on, swatting down a Sione Tuipulotu pass on the edge of his own 22. It was a decision that would prove pivotal β but not in the way many expected.
Glasgow made the extra man count ruthlessly. Jamie Dobie, starting in place of George Horne after the scrum-half failed a late fitness test, kicked intelligently to earn an attacking lineout in the Bullsβ 22. Clean set-piece ball and slick handling worked the ball right, where Steyn hit the line at full speed to finish in the corner. Dan Lancasterβs superb conversion from the touchline made it 7β3 after 15 minutes.
Within three minutes, the Warriors had struck again. Kyle Rowe made a scintillating break down the left before the ball was recycled right, Tuipulotu bursting into the 22 and putting Steyn away for his second. Lancaster converted again, and at 14β3 the Warrior Nation sensed something special was building.
It was. Lancasterβs penalty found touch within 10 metres of the Bullsβ line on 24 minutes, and Glasgowβs rolling maul proved unstoppable. Ruan Nortje was forced to collapse it illegally, with referee Andrew Brace running under the posts to award the penalty try and dispatching the lock to the sin bin. At 21β3, with the Bulls down to 14 men for the second time in the half, the contest appeared over.
But the Bulls are made of stern stuff. Captain Marcell Coetzee, marking his 100th appearance for the franchise, thought he had scored on 31 minutes only for the TMO to spot a knock-on. The visitors were not to be denied, however, and Grobbelaar β on the occasion of his 150th Bulls cap β forced his way over from close range after sustained forward pressure. Pollard converted to make it 21β10 at the break, a scoreline that felt significant rather than comfortable.
What followed was as complete a turnaround as the URC has seen. Ackermann revealed afterwards that his half-time message was deliberately simple. βMy challenge to them was, βitβs 21-10, boys and we couldnβt play worse so letβs go score one try and see it from then.β As it happened, we scored one try and then game on,β he said.
Scott Cummingsβ yellow card for not rolling away on 43 minutes, after repeated warnings from Brace, handed the Bulls the initiative they needed. Within two minutes, URC Player of the Season Embrose Papier had snipped over from close range β his 13th try of a remarkable campaign β to reduce the deficit to six. Pollard dragged the conversion wide, but the momentum had shifted irreversibly.
The decisive score came on 54 minutes. Cameron Hanekom charged through the Glasgow defence with irresistible power, feeding Willie le Roux in the 22. The ball was recycled and prop Francois Klopper β the man Ackermann had backed ahead of Wilco Louw in the starting XV β powered over from close range. Pollard converted and the Bulls led 22β21. Nineteen unanswered points. The comeback was complete.
What followed was 26 minutes of extraordinary tension. Pollard, usually so reliable from the tee, missed three consecutive penalties β slicing the first wide from distance on 66 minutes, striking the left upright from a central position three minutes later, and then pushing a third wide on 73 minutes. The double World Cup winner left 11 points on the field in the second half alone, keeping Glasgowβs hopes alive by the narrowest of threads.
But those hopes never truly materialised into anything tangible. Glasgowβs composure had deserted them after the break, their passing game losing its zip, their defence giving too many yards. A burst from replacement hooker Seb Stephen offered a flicker of promise, but time and again the Bullsβ defence held firm. In the dying seconds, Tuipulotu was tackled and penalised for holding on near halfway, and Grobbelaar counted down the final moments before booting the ball into the Edinburgh sky.
Ackermann was visibly moved at the final whistle. βThis must be right at the top,β he said. βThe comeback is special because they were really playing good rugby. This is probably one of the best victories Iβve had, just the character that the guys showed.β He refused to criticise Pollardβs kicking, noting with a smile that βone of the coaches made the comment that it kept Glasgow in their half, even the misses.β
Coetzee, his voice thick with emotion, spoke of collective belief. βIβm lost for words about the character of this team,β the captain said. βWe went into the sheds and we knew we werenβt out of it. We just had to do what we do well, itβs in our DNA. With momentum comes belief. When we got the ball, we could play our game.β
For Glasgow, the defeat was a bitter end to a campaign that had promised so much. Smith was measured but clearly wounded. βIβm obviously disappointed with the result. Bulls did very well in the second half,β he said. βWe gave too many yards in defence and thatβs most disappointing. I know this group, we can deliver a better defensive performance. We worked really hard this season, fought when weβve had some difficulties regarding international players and injuries. Finishing top of the log was an important milestone for us. To have played here in front of so many fans is remarkable. Yes, we wanted to go one more but Iβm really proud of the season and the way the boys have played.β
Flanker Rory Darge, who had been immense in the first half, captured the dressing-room mood. βPretty gutted,β he told BBC Scotland. βWe started so well, and second half you saw the importance of the physical side of the game. Itβs a weird feeling because thereβs been so much good stuff this season. Weβll look back at the good bits but to not honour it at the business end is frustrating.β
It was also the final appearance in Glasgow colours for several players, with Jack Dempsey, Sione Vailanu and Adam Hastings all departing, alongside the injured Huw Jones. More than half an hour after the final whistle, the Murrayfield crowd remained in the stands to applaud their team off β a fitting tribute to a squad that had topped the URC table and reached a third consecutive semi-final, even if the ending was not the one they had envisioned.
The Bulls, meanwhile, will contest their fourth URC Grand Final in five seasons on 20 June. They have lost the last two β to Glasgow in 2024 and Leinster last year β and this time they will be desperate to finally get their hands on the trophy that has so far eluded them.
Teams
Glasgow Warriors: 15 Josh McKay, 14 Kyle Steyn (CAPT), 13 Stafford McDowall, 12 Sione Tuipulotu, 11 Kyle Rowe, 10 Dan Lancaster, 9 Jamie Dobie; 1 Patrick Schickerling, 2 Gregor Hiddleston, 3 Zander Fagerson, 4 Scott Cummings, 5 Alex Samuel, 6 Matt Fagerson, 7 Rory Darge, 8 Jack Dempsey.
Replacements: 16 Seb Stephen, 17 Rory Sutherland, 18 Sam Talakai, 19 Jare Oguntibeju, 20 Euan Ferrie, 21 Sione Vailanu, 22 Jack Oliver, 23 Adam Hastings.
Vodacom Bulls: 15 Willie le Roux, 14 Kurt-Lee Arendse, 13 Canan Moodie, 12 Harold Vorster, 11 Stravino Jacobs, 10 Handre Pollard, 9 Embrose Papier; 1 Gerhard Steenekamp, 2 Johan Grobbelaar, 3 Francois Klopper, 4 Ruan Vermaak, 5 Ruan Nortje, 6 Marcell Coetzee (CAPT), 7 Elrigh Louw, 8 Cameron Hanekom.
Replacements: 16 Marco van Staden, 17 Jan-Hendrik Wessels, 18 Wilco Louw, 19 Cobus Wiese, 20 Jeandre Rudolph, 21 Zak Burger, 22 Stedman Gans, 23 Nizaam Carr.
Match details
Glasgow Warriors 21 (Tries: Steyn 2, Penalty Try; Conversions: Lancaster 2/2)
Vodacom Bulls 22 (Tries: Grobbelaar, Papier, Klopper; Conversions: Pollard 2/3; Penalties: Pollard 1/1)
Half-time: 21β10
Venue: Scottish Gas Murrayfield, Edinburgh
Attendance: c. 18,000
Referee: Andrew Brace (Ireland)
Assistant Referees: Eoghan Cross (Ireland), Robbie Jenkinson (Ireland)
TMO: Olly Hodges (Ireland)
Player of the match: Embrose Papier (Vodacom Bulls)
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