United Rugby Championship
Joshua Kenny brace helps unconvincing Leinster edge past Dragons
Published
6 months agoon
Dragons pushed champions Leinster to the brink at Rodney Parade before succumbing 24-10 in a fractious encounter marred by indiscipline and controversy, as the Irish province’s wait for fluency continued despite claiming a valuable bonus point.
Key moments:
4′ – TRY LEINSTER: Alex Soroka powers over from close range, Harry Byrne misses conversion (Dragons 0-5 Leinster)
7′ – PENALTY MISSED DRAGONS: Tinus de Beer strikes left upright with penalty attempt
28′ – YELLOW CARD LEINSTER: Diarmuid Mangan sent to sin bin for repeated offside infringements
31′ – TRY DRAGONS: Matthew Screech burrows over under posts, Tinus de Beer converts (Dragons 7-5 Leinster)
35′ – YELLOW CARD LEINSTER: Scott Penny sent to sin bin for offside
Half-time: Dragons 7-5 Leinster
44′ – TRY LEINSTER: Joshua Kenny dives over in right corner, Harry Byrne converts (Dragons 7-12 Leinster)
47′ – PENALTY DRAGONS: Angus O’Brien kicks penalty (Dragons 10-12 Leinster)
47′ – SUBSTITUTION LEINSTER: RG Snyman replaces Brian Deeny
52′ – TRY DISALLOWED LEINSTER: Luke McGrath’s score ruled out for dangerous Jack Boyle clearout
59′ – TRY LEINSTER: Joshua Kenny scores second try in right corner, Harry Byrne misses conversion (Dragons 10-17 Leinster)
75′ – CONTROVERSIAL DECISION: Scott Penny escapes red card after TMO review for high tackle on Levi Douglas
77′ – TRY LEINSTER: RG Snyman intercepts loose ball and races 25 metres to score, Harry Byrne converts (Dragons 10-24 Leinster)
80′ – YELLOW CARD LEINSTER: Luke McGrath sent to sin bin for not retreating 10 metres
Full-time: Dragons 10-24 Leinster
The 4,244 spectators who braved a cold Newport evening witnessed Leinster reduced to 13 men in the first half, trailing at the interval, and fortunate to escape with all four points after a baffling refereeing decision denied the hosts a late lifeline. For Dragons, the cruel manner of defeat extended their winless league run since September 2024, though few could question their spirit in the face of adversity.
Leinster’s intentions appeared clear from the off. Jack Boyle, perhaps eager to prove a point after losing his Ireland spot to Paddy McCarthy, demolished the Dragons scrum to win two early penalties. From the second, Harry Byrne found touch five metres out, and when Ciarán Frawley secured lineout ball at the tail, Alex Soroka required just one powerful surge to barrel through contact and touch down in the fourth minute.
It was a score of worrying ease for the Welsh hosts, already shorn of five players on Wales duty. Yet what followed proved anything but straightforward for Leo Cullen’s side, who proceeded to squander opportunity after opportunity through a toxic combination of handling errors, poor decision-making and chronic indiscipline.
Soroka’s defensive lineout work provided a silver lining, the flanker producing two crucial steals—one perilously close to his own line—whilst Joshua Kenny demonstrated his suitability to Jacques Nienaber’s aggressive defensive system with a pair of thumping hits flying out of the line. But these individual moments failed to coalesce into team-wide excellence. The penalty count mounted alarmingly, and on 28 minutes, referee Morne Ferreira lost patience, dispatching lock Diarmuid Mangan to the sin bin for repeated offside infringements.
The Welsh region, showing admirable patience and composure, opted against shots at goal to instead pile pressure on the depleted visitors. Their persistence bore fruit when, from a series of close-range tap penalties, lock Matthew Screech burrowed over under the posts. Tinus de Beer, who had earlier struck the left upright with a penalty attempt, made no mistake from straight in front to give Dragons a 7-5 lead after 31 minutes.
Matters worsened for Leinster when Scott Penny joined Mangan in the sin bin four minutes before half-time, the openside penalised for yet another offside offence. That Leinster reached the interval just two points adrift represented something of an escape, particularly given they had accumulated a remarkable 12 first-half penalties.
“We made very hard work of it at times,” Cullen admitted afterwards. “A lot of that was down to Dragons but a lot was in our own control. We squandered a lot of opportunities and then we started giving away a lot of penalties. We made life really difficult for ourselves. It was hugely frustrating.”
Dragons made changes at the break, Wyn Jones replacing Dylan Kelleher-Griffiths at prop, but injuries soon forced further disruption as Levi Douglas and debutant Will Austin—signed from Sale Sharks this week to cover a hooker crisis—were introduced early in the half.
Leinster, still down to 14 men, struck the decisive blow in the 44th minute. Sharp interplay between Byrne and Frawley created space on the right, and Kenny required no second invitation to dive over in the corner. Byrne’s touchline conversion put Leinster 12-7 ahead.
Dragons responded through Angus O’Brien’s 47th-minute penalty after Leinster twice failed to roll away, but the momentum had shifted. The introduction of RG Snyman on 47 minutes proved transformative, the South African lock immediately making his presence felt with a fortuitous offload that bounced into Jimmy O’Brien’s arms.
Leinster thought they had scored when Luke McGrath dived over from close range, only for the TMO to spot Jack Boyle illegally clearing out Mackenzie Martin at a ruck—the second time in six days an Irish try had been chalked off for a dangerous cleanout.
The Springbok giant would not be denied his impact. On 59 minutes, Snyman produced a moment of outrageous skill, throwing two audacious offloads in three phases. The second, a looping basketball-style pass, found Kenny perfectly positioned to power through contact and score in the right corner for his second try.
At 17-10, the contest remained delicately poised, particularly when Dragons mounted a late siege on the Leinster line. What followed sparked fury amongst the home support and left head coach Filo Tiatia seething.
With five minutes remaining and Dragons hammering at the line, Penny made contact with Douglas’s head, his arm tucked and never wrapped in what appeared a clear example of dangerous play. After lengthy TMO consultation, Ferreira somehow concluded Penny had attempted a legitimate tackle and waved play on.
“It was clearly shoulder contact to the head,” Tiatia stated bluntly afterwards, his frustration palpable.
The decision proved doubly costly when, moments later, Huw Anderson spilled Luke McGrath’s high ball under pressure. Snyman pounced on the loose ball and, demonstrating pace belying his frame, galloped 25 metres to score in the corner. Byrne’s conversion completed the scoring with three minutes remaining.
McGrath became Leinster’s third sin-binned player in the dying seconds for failing to retreat 10 metres, but the damage was done. Josh Ericson made his debut in the final moments, a bright spot on a night he would remember more fondly than most.
For Leinster, the bonus point maintains their momentum heading into next weekend’s Champions Cup opener against Harlequins at the Aviva Stadium, though Cullen will demand significant improvement. The province has now won just three of their opening six league fixtures, an alarming return for the defending champions.
Kenny’s emergence as a try-scoring threat offers encouragement, his third and fourth tries in as many games suggesting genuine potential. Snyman’s impact off the bench proved decisive, though questions linger over whether Leinster can afford such unconvincing performances.
Dragons, despite the heartbreak, can draw genuine belief from pushing the champions so close whilst missing key personnel. Tiatia’s young charges showed admirable spirit and organisation, particularly in defence where they twice held up mauls and forced Leinster into uncharacteristic errors.
“I said in the huddle that I was proud of the performance because we had a lot of young guys that came on and got exposure at this level,” Tiatia reflected. “We’ve just got to keep learning and improving, which they have. We can take a lot of belief and confidence.”
Yet the stark reality remains: Dragons have not beaten Leinster at Rodney Parade since 2016, and this cruel defeat—snatched away by controversial officiating and late heartbreak—will do little to ease the pain of a winless league campaign stretching back over a year.
Dragons: Angus O’Brien (capt); Cai Evans, David Richards, Aneurin Owen, Huw Anderson; Tinus de Beer, Rhodri Williams; Dylan Kelleher-Griffiths, Oli Burrows, Robert Hunt; Seb Davies, Matthew Screech; Ryan Woodman, Thomas Young, Mackenzie Martin
Replacements: Shane Lewis-Hughes, Wyn Jones, Levi Douglas, Will Austin, Owain James, Niall Armstrong, Joe Westwood, Ewan Rosser
Leinster: Jimmy O’Brien; Joshua Kenny, Hugh Cooney, Ciarán Frawley, Jordan Larmour; Harry Byrne, Fintan Gunne; Jack Boyle, Gus McCarthy, Thomas Clarkson; Brian Deeny, Diarmuid Mangan; Alex Soroka, Scott Penny, Max Deegan (capt)
Replacements: RG Snyman, John McKee, Jerry Cahir, Rabah Slimani, Josh Ericson, Luke McGrath, Charlie Tector, Ruben Moloney
Yellow cards: Diarmuid Mangan (28-38 mins), Scott Penny (35-45 mins), Luke McGrath (80 mins)
Referee: Morne Ferreira (SARU)
Attendance: 4,244
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United Rugby Championship
BKT United Rugby Championship quarter-final preview
Published
1 day agoon
29th May 2026
The BKT United Rugby Championship Finals Series begins this weekend with four quarter-finals across two days as the race for the title enters knockout territory. Connacht, Munster and defending champions Leinster are all in action, while three South African sides – the Bulls, Stormers and Lions – look to keep their campaigns alive on home soil or across the water in Dublin.
Top seeds Glasgow Warriors host an in-form Connacht at Scotstoun on Friday evening in what shapes as the most intriguing tie of the round, before a South African double-header on Saturday sees the Bulls welcome Munster to Loftus Versfeld and the Stormers host Cardiff at DHL Stadium in a rematch of the final regular-season fixture. The weekend concludes under the lights at the Aviva Stadium, where Leinster look to bounce back from their Investec Champions Cup final defeat by taking on the Lions.
Should all four home sides progress, the semi-final draw would see the Stormers travel to Dublin to face Leinster, while the Bulls would host Glasgow at Loftus Versfeld. However, upsets in Glasgow or Dublin would reshape the picture entirely, with the Bulls and Stormers eyeing home semi-finals should Connacht or the Lions spring surprises.
Glasgow Warriors v Connacht Rugby
Venue: Scotstoun Stadium, Glasgow
Kick-off: Friday, 29 May – 19:45 IRE & UK / 20:45 ITA & SA
Referee: Adam Jones (WRU, 51st league game)
Assistant Referees: Ben Breakspear (WRU), Craig Evans (WRU)
TMO: Aled Griffiths (WRU)
Form
Glasgow locked in the top seed in the playoffs with wins over Ulster and Cardiff in their final two games of the regular season and have been formidable at Scotstoun, losing only twice in the URC at this ground since the start of the 2023/24 season – to Ospreys in March 2025 and to the Bulls in April 2025. Their only home defeat this calendar year came against Toulon in the Champions Cup quarter-final in April.
Connacht, by contrast, are the competition’s form team, having won eight of their last nine URC games to snatch eighth place after claiming just two victories in the first half of the season. Stuart Lancaster’s side have transformed their campaign in the second half of the season to secure both a playoff spot and Champions Cup qualification for next season. However, history is firmly against the visitors – Connacht have lost on all nine of their previous visits to Scotstoun since the Warriors moved there in 2012, with their last away win against Glasgow coming at Firhill in 2010.
Team news
Glasgow welcome back Scotland second row Scott Cummings for his first appearance since January after recovering from a calf injury sustained during Scotland’s Six Nations win over France in March. The British and Irish Lions international replaces the injured Gregor Brown and adds significant experience and physicality to the Warriors’ engine room. Patrick Schickerling starts at loosehead having been rested for last weekend’s away win at Ulster, while Matt Fagerson and Rory Darge both return to the back row having also missed the trip to Belfast. Jamie Dobie remains unavailable. Kyle Steyn captains the side, with Sione Tuipulotu and Stafford McDowall forming a powerful midfield combination.
Connacht are boosted by the return of hooker Dylan Tierney-Martin and lock Darragh Murray, both of whom come back into the starting XV after recovering from injury. Cian Prendergast captains the side from the back row alongside Shamus Hurley-Langton and Paul Boyle, with Bundee Aki providing experience and physicality in the midfield. Josh Ioane continues at fly-half with Ben Murphy at scrum-half. The bench features a strong collection of finishers including the experienced trio of Dave Heffernan, Peter Dooley and Finlay Bealham in the front row.
Glasgow Warriors: 15 Josh McKay, 14 Kyle Steyn (CAPT), 13 Stafford McDowall, 12 Sione Tuipulotu, 11 Kyle Rowe, 10 Dan Lancaster, 9 George Horne; 1 Patrick Schickerling, 2 Johnny Matthews, 3 Zander Fagerson, 4 Scott Cummings, 5 Alex Samuel, 6 Matt Fagerson, 7 Rory Darge, 8 Jack Dempsey.
Replacements: 16 Gregor Hiddleston, 17 Rory Sutherland, 18 Sam Talakai, 19 Jare Oguntibeju, 20 Euan Ferrie, 21 Sione Vailanu, 22 Jack Oliver, 23 Ollie Smith.
Connacht Rugby: 15 Sam Gilbert, 14 Shane Jennings, 13 John Devine, 12 Bundee Aki, 11 Shayne Bolton, 10 Josh Ioane, 9 Ben Murphy; 1 Billy Bohan, 2 Dylan Tierney-Martin, 3 Sam Illo, 4 Darragh Murray, 5 Josh Murphy, 6 Cian Prendergast (CAPT), 7 Shamus Hurley-Langton, 8 Paul Boyle.
Replacements: 16 Dave Heffernan, 17 Peter Dooley, 18 Finlay Bealham, 19 Joe Joyce, 20 Sean O’Brien, 21 Matthew Devine, 22 Hugh Gavin, 23 Sean Naughton.
What they said
Glasgow Warriors head coach Franco Smith said: “Connacht will present a strong challenge tomorrow evening. They have a well-drilled squad full of talent, and come here as one of the most in-form teams in the competition. We are pleased to welcome Scott back into our matchday 23 after his injury layoff – he has worked hard and worked closely with our medical and S&C teams to put himself in the best possible position ahead of his return. We know the difference that the Warrior Nation can make, and we look forward to hearing them get behind the team at Scotstoun as we kick off the playoffs tomorrow night.”
Connacht Rugby head coach Stuart Lancaster said: “This is exactly where we wanted to be at the start of the season, so credit must go to all the players for what they’ve displayed in recent months to get us to this position. Now we have to go out there and seize the opportunity. Glasgow are a formidable opponent especially away from home, with an array of talented players who are very well coached, but we are excited by the challenge ahead of us.”
Where to watch
Premier Sports, TG4, SuperSport, Flo Rugby & URC.tv
Vodacom Bulls v Munster Rugby
Venue: Loftus Versfeld, Pretoria
Kick-off: Saturday, 30 May – 12:00 IRE & UK / 13:00 ITA & SA
Referee: Andrea Piardi (FIR, 62nd league game)
Assistant Referees: Federico Vedovelli (FIR), Fillipo Russo (FIR)
TMO: Matteo Liperini (FIR)
Form
The Bulls have been in remarkable form since recovering from a bruising mid-season wobble that saw them lose seven games in a row across all competitions. Johan Ackermann’s side have won nine of their last 10 URC games and come into the quarter-finals with a winning streak of six matches in the competition, having also lost just once in their last 10 games overall – that defeat coming against the Stormers in the home derby. Captain Marcell Coetzee has spoken about the backs-against-the-wall mentality that emerged from those difficult weeks, insisting the squad have been in knockout mode for some time already.
Munster’s season has been a story of inconsistency. Having started the campaign with five wins from five in the URC, the province somehow needed three wins from their final four games to secure a playoff spot and Champions Cup qualification. They arrive in Pretoria without Tadhg Beirne and Jack Crowley among a lengthy injury list, but know how to win at altitude, having done so in 2024. The head-to-head between these sides stands at 3–2 in the Bulls’ favour from five meetings, with the most recent being a gripping 34–31 thriller at Loftus Versfeld in March that the hosts shaded after Embrose Papier crossed for a brace. Both sides have been ever-present in the URC finals across all five seasons of the competition.
Team news
The Bulls have loaded up with power and pace for the knockout clash. Ruan Nortje returns to the engine room for what will be his 150th appearance for the franchise, replacing Cobus Wiese who drops to the bench. Kurt-Lee Arendse moves back to the right wing in place of Devon Williams, while Stravino Jacobs returns on the left wing for Sergeal Petersen. Captain Marcell Coetzee returns from a bout of flu to take his place in the back row alongside Cameron Hanekom and Elrigh Louw, with Jeandre Rudolph moving to an impact role from the bench. Handre Pollard and Embrose Papier form the halfback pairing, with Willie le Roux at full-back. The bench is formidable, featuring Springboks Marco van Staden, Jan-Hendrik Wessels and Wiese among the forwards.
Munster have made just one change from the side that faced the Lions in their final regular-season fixture, with Alex Nankivell returning to the starting XV after his late withdrawal from that game. Craig Casey again captains the side from scrum-half, with JJ Hanrahan at fly-half in the continued absence of Jack Crowley. Tom Ahern and Evan O’Connell form the second-row partnership in the absence of Tadhg Beirne, while the back row of Jack O’Donoghue, John Hodnett and Brian Gleeson offers a blend of experience and dynamism. Fineen Wycherley is set to reach 150 Munster appearances if called upon from the bench.
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 Wilco Louw, 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 Francois Klopper, 19 Cobus Wiese, 20 Jeandre Rudolph, 21 Paul de Wet, 22 Stedman Gans, 23 Sergeal Petersen.
Munster Rugby: 15 Mike Haley, 14 Andrew Smith, 13 Alex Nankivell, 12 Seán O’Brien, 11 Shane Daly, 10 JJ Hanrahan, 9 Craig Casey (CAPT); 1 Jeremy Loughman, 2 Niall Scannell, 3 Michael Ala’alatoa, 4 Tom Ahern, 5 Evan O’Connell, 6 Jack O’Donoghue, 7 John Hodnett, 8 Brian Gleeson.
Replacements: 16 Diarmuid Barron, 17 Josh Wycherley, 18 Conor Bartley, 19 Fineen Wycherley, 20 Gavin Coombes, 21 Ben O’Donovan, 22 Dan Kelly, 23 Alex Kendellen.
What they said
Vodacom Bulls head coach Johan Ackermann said: “We’re looking forward to playing in front of our home crowd. We have tremendous respect for Munster, a team that has shown its pedigree and were champions two seasons ago. They have a rich history and a proud culture. We are privileged to be in the quarter-finals, and will hopefully put in a good performance.”
Bulls captain Marcell Coetzee added: “If you take me through the season, we were under pressure, and it kind of forced us to be in a knockout rugby mindset every week. So I think we got used to that pressure now, knowing what the task is at hand. They’ll always stay in the fight until the last minute. Munster in particular, they’ve got ways to break you down and disrupt your rhythm. We just have to counter that this weekend.”
Where to watch
SuperSport, Premier Sports, Flo Rugby & URC.tv
DHL Stormers v Cardiff Rugby
Venue: DHL Stadium, Cape Town
Kick-off: Saturday, 30 May – 14:30 IRE & UK / 15:30 ITA & SA
Referee: Eoghan Cross (IRFU, 40th league game)
Assistant Referees: Andrew Brace (IRFU), Andrew Cole (IRFU)
TMO: Leo Colgan (IRFU)
Form
The Stormers enter the quarter-finals under pressure after an inconsistent run of form that saw them slip from a potential top-two finish to third place. John Dobson’s side started the season brilliantly and were unbeaten through early January, but have since won just one of their last five games – a run that includes a draw with Ulster, defeats to Connacht and Cardiff, and two losses to the Sharks. Their most recent outing, a 22–16 defeat to Cardiff at the Arms Park two weeks ago, was particularly chastening. However, the Stormers have been formidable at DHL Stadium this campaign, suffering only two home defeats, and have won both of their previous home quarter-finals in 2022 and 2023.
Cardiff arrive in Cape Town having achieved something few predicted at the start of the season. This is their first time making the playoffs of any iteration of this competition since 2002/03, made all the more remarkable given head coach Matt Sherratt departed a week before the season started, with Corniel van Zyl stepping up from forwards coach. The Welsh side won 11 of 18 URC games and never dropped out of the top eight all season, with their home form at Cardiff Arms Park the foundation – 10 wins from 11 in all competitions. Their weakness has been on the road, with just one URC win outside Wales all season, at Zebre in November. Still, they arrive with the confidence of that victory over the Stormers fresh in the memory.
Team news
The Stormers are boosted by the return of several key players. Regular captain Ruhan Nel returns from injury to lead the side from inside centre, while the pacy Seabelo Senatla is back on the right wing. Both full-back Damian Willemse and wing Leolin Zas were doubts after a collision in training on Wednesday but have been declared fit to start. Up front, the pack that dominated the scrum against Cardiff is retained, with the changes coming on the bench where Vernon Matongo, whom Dobson expects to become a top Springbok, returns from injury, and Ruan Ackermann – son of Bulls head coach Johan – is available for the first time since his influential display in the narrow win over the Bulls in early January. Salmaan Moerat also returns to the bench and could be playing his last home game as a Stormer before departing for La Rochelle. Lock Ruben van Heerden, also heading to France, starts in what could be his DHL Stadium swan song.
Cardiff make four changes to the side that beat the Stormers in the Arms Park. Josh Adams returns to fitness and takes his place on the left wing, while influential lock Josh McNally comes into the second row. Props Rhys Barratt and Keiron Assiratti are introduced in the front row, with Liam Belcher captaining the side from hooker. The coaches opt for six forwards on the bench. Wales flanker Alex Mann and wing Mason Grady were considered for selection after returning from injury but neither features in the matchday 23.
DHL Stormers: 15 Damian Willemse, 14 Seabelo Senatla, 13 Ruhan Nel (CAPT), 12 Dan du Plessis, 11 Leolin Zas, 10 Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu, 9 Imad Khan; 1 Ntuthuko Mchunu, 2 André-Hugo Venter, 3 Neethling Fouché, 4 Adré Smith, 5 Ruben van Heerden, 6 Paul de Villiers, 7 Ben-Jason Dixon, 8 Evan Roos.
Replacements: 16 JJ Kotzé, 17 Vernon Matongo, 18 Zachary Porthen, 19 Salmaan Moerat, 20 Ruan Ackermann, 21 Marcel Theunissen, 22 Stefan Ungerer, 23 Jurie Matthee.
Cardiff Rugby: 15 Cam Winnett, 14 Jacob Beetham, 13 Ben Thomas, 12 Rory Jennings, 11 Josh Adams, 10 Ioan Lloyd, 9 Johan Mulder; 1 Rhys Barratt, 2 Liam Belcher (CAPT), 3 Keiron Assiratti, 4 Josh McNally, 5 Rory Thornton, 6 James Botham, 7 Dan Thomas, 8 Taine Basham.
Replacements: 16 Daf Hughes, 17 Danny Southworth, 18 Javan Sebastian, 19 George Nott, 20 Alun Lawrence, 21 Evan Lloyd, 22 Ellis Bevan, 23 Tom Bowen.
What they said
DHL Stormers director of rugby John Dobson said: “Absolutely, this is a game that we need to show our true colours. We started off the season really well but this game will determine if we are still the team that was so good in the early part of the season or whether we have a lot of work to do to set things right before the next season starts. This calendar year, since the Bulls game in early January, we have been inconsistent and it has understandably led to questions about our game and how we are tracking.”
Stormers captain Ruhan Nel warned against complacency: “If there’s any sort of comfort or relaxation because they’re coming to our turf, it’s a given win for us – that’s completely the wrong mentality. They beat us fair and square, not because of the pitch but because we were outplayed, and we are fully aware of the danger that Cardiff bring and how good they are.”
Cardiff Rugby coach Corniel van Zyl said: “The pressure was on us last time out at Cardiff Arms Park, but I think that has obviously shifted back onto them a little now. If we can start well and apply pressure through what we do best – scoring points – then we can put them under pressure. That is ultimately the only way we can impose ourselves on them.”
Cardiff wing Josh Adams added: “We haven’t just crept into these play-offs, let’s be straight. We finished sixth and didn’t drop out of the top eight all season. We have finished sixth with all the uncertainty in Welsh rugby over the past 12 months – or longer – and how we have kept our focus and been disciplined in what we want to achieve has been excellent.”
Where to watch
SuperSport, S4C, Premier Sports, Flo Rugby & URC.tv
Leinster Rugby v Fidelity SecureDrive Lions
Venue: Aviva Stadium, Dublin
Kick-off: Saturday, 30 May – 20:00 IRE & UK / 21:00 ITA & SA
Referee: Sam Grove-White (SRU, 63rd league game)
Assistant Referees: Hollie Davidson (SRU), Ru Campbell (SRU)
TMO: Mike Adamson (SRU)
Form
Leinster’s quarter-final arrives just one week after their Investec Champions Cup final defeat to Bordeaux-Béglès, a heavy 41–19 loss that extended their agonising run to five European final defeats in six years. Leo Cullen’s side are now chasing the URC title as the one piece of silverware that can salvage a season of near-misses. Despite that European setback, Leinster’s domestic record has been strong – they finished second in the regular season, have won all five of their previous URC quarter-final appearances, and are making their eleventh successive appearance in the competition’s playoffs. They have not lost at the Aviva Stadium this season.
The Lions are making their first-ever URC playoff appearance at the fifth time of asking, a landmark moment for Ivan van Rooyen’s side. The Johannesburgers have remained in Ireland since the conclusion of the regular season to maximise preparation time for this clash. While the Lions have scored 17 more points than Leinster across their 18 regular-season matches, they face one of the strongest defensive units in the competition. Their recent record in Ireland is sobering – the Lions have won just once in their previous 10 games on Irish soil, that coming at Connacht in 2024, and they were beaten 31–7 by Leinster in their Round 17 meeting just three weeks ago. The loss of key players Morne van den Berg (bicep), Ruan Venter (knee) and Asenathi Ntlabakanye (doping ban) weakens their squad significantly.
Team news
Leinster name a formidable side. James Lowe starts on the left wing and is set to earn his 100th Leinster cap, currently level with Shane Horgan on 69 tries for the province’s all-time try-scoring record. Hugo Keenan is at full-back, with Jimmy O’Brien and Rieko Ioane on the right wing and outside centre respectively, and Jamie Osborne at inside centre. Sam Prendergast continues at fly-half with Luke McGrath at scrum-half. The pack is near full strength with Andrew Porter, Dan Sheehan and Tadhg Furlong in the front row, Joe McCarthy and James Ryan in the second row, and a back row of Max Deegan, Scott Penny and captain Caelan Doris. The bench is laden with internationals including Josh van der Flier, Jamison Gibson-Park, Harry Byrne and Robbie Henshaw.
The Lions received a significant boost with captain Francke Horn and centre Henco van Wyk both declared fit after injury concerns following the loss to Munster. Richard Kriel has also been cleared through his return-to-play protocols after suffering a concussion. With Morne van den Berg out, Nico Steyn starts at scrum-half with World Junior Player of the Year Haashim Pead on the bench. Erich Cronje comes in on the wing. JC Pretorius will bring up 50 caps for the Lions if called upon from the bench. The rest of the squad is unchanged from the Munster defeat.
Leinster Rugby: 15 Hugo Keenan, 14 Jimmy O’Brien, 13 Rieko Ioane, 12 Jamie Osborne, 11 James Lowe, 10 Sam Prendergast, 9 Luke McGrath; 1 Andrew Porter, 2 Dan Sheehan, 3 Tadhg Furlong, 4 Joe McCarthy, 5 James Ryan, 6 Max Deegan, 7 Scott Penny, 8 Caelan Doris (CAPT).
Replacements: 16 Gus McCarthy, 17 Alex Usanov, 18 Thomas Clarkson, 19 Diarmuid Mangan, 20 Josh van der Flier, 21 Jamison Gibson-Park, 22 Harry Byrne, 23 Robbie Henshaw.
Fidelity SecureDrive Lions: 15 Quan Horn, 14 Angelo Davids, 13 Henco van Wyk, 12 Richard Kriel, 11 Erich Cronje, 10 Chris Smith, 9 Nico Steyn; 1 SJ Kotze, 2 PJ Botha, 3 Sebastian Lombard, 4 Reinhard Nothnagel, 5 Darrien Landsberg, 6 Siba Mahashe, 7 Batho Hlekani, 8 Francke Horn (CAPT).
Replacements: 16 Franco Marais, 17 Eddie Davids, 18 RF Schoeman, 19 Ruan Delport, 20 Siba Qoma, 21 JC Pretorius, 22 Rynhardt Jonker, 23 Haashim Pead.
What they said
Leinster prop Andrew Porter said: “We’re incredibly lucky that we still have something to play for. We’re throwing everything into this weekend and there’s still a trophy to be won. We’re leaving no stone unturned this week. We want to have something to celebrate, that’s what we’re chasing. We’re chasing the URC trophy now and we have to throw everything into it.”
Lions flanker JC Pretorius, set for his 50th cap, said: “For me it is an honour and a privilege to get my 50th cap. Coming from Sevens I never thought I would get here and it actually arrived very quickly. I think Bordeaux made 250 tackles – that’s how you put teams under pressure. They like to play quick rugby so we need to be making the right choices at the right time and not going into a bad trap of getting stuck in the breakdown when the defence needs you.”
Where to watch
TG4, Premier Sports, SuperSport, Flo Rugby & URC.tv
United Rugby Championship
Special times for blond bombshell Dan Thomas at Cardiff
Published
2 days agoon
28th May 2026
For Dan Thomas, it’s been a special season with a special group and he’s now hoping for the perfect ending.
The flanker has had an outstanding campaign as he’s helped Cardiff Rugby reach the BKT URC Play-Offs for the first time, making more tackles (248) than any other player in the league and the second most turnovers (17).
His huge contribution has seen him recognised by his team-mates who have chosen him as the club’s Players’ Player of the Season.
Now the man with the flowing blond locks is looking to put the icing on the cake as Cardiff go in search of the BKT URC title, with a Quarter-Final clash against the DHL Stormers coming up in Cape Town this Saturday.
Thomas, who hails from a farming family in west Wales, moved to the Arms Park in the summer of 2024 after seven years with Bristol Bears and it’s proved to be a dream move for him.
“Having been long term at Bristol, I didn’t really know what to expect coming to Cardiff, but I’ve loved every minute of it. It has been really revitalising.
“It’s a great crack with the boys and I love the rugby we play. It suits my style and it’s very rewarding. We love throwing the ball around, plus we will never give up.
“I love the boys. It’s a special group and I hope we go forward and do special things.”
As for his award, he says: “It’s a huge honour to get voted by the boys. It’s a big thing for me. I am extremely happy.
“I feel good. I feel better when I play every week. This season it’s worked out pretty well.
“I have always prided myself on working hard and doing the things that don’t require talent well.
“At the end of the day, rugby is a simple sport. As long as I do my bit right, that’s all that matters.
“I knew coming to Cardiff, with the back rowers that were here already, it was going to be huge competition, but I feel that has helped me.
“I didn’t come here to cruise. I came here to push myself, to play rugby and have a smile on my face.
“It’s not every week the back row is the same, so everyone has been kept on edge. You have to play your best rugby, otherwise you miss out.
“It has driven us on to be better and obviously the results have shown that.”
The 32-year-old openside added: “At the end of the day, rugby is a short career and to enjoy it and put your body on the line with your mates every week is a special thing and a huge privilege.
“I’m going to try and play as long as I can because I love doing it.
“Rugby on and off the field is quite a special thing and the memories I make with the boys off the field mean just as much to me. I have loved my time here on and off the field.
“I am very thankful with how the season’s gone so far, but obviously the job is not done yet, so it’s on to the next one.
“It’s exciting and all eyes are on this weekend now.”
As for the trip to Cape Town, Thomas says: “We play in Scotland, we play in Ireland, we play in Italy, we play in South Africa, we play in France.
“We’ve all travelled enough now to know what’s happening and what’s coming. It’s not as if we are going to turn up there and say this is a shock.
“There is no excuse when it comes to travel or the body being sore or anything like that.
“As long as your mentality is up there, your body will catch up, so it’s about turning up on Saturday with the right mentality.
“There are no excuses, this is a great opportunity. How many boys have played in Quarter-Finals before? If you’re not up for it mentally, you shouldn’t be on the pitch.”
The last eight clash will be a rapid rematch as it was the DHL Stormers that Cardiff beat 22-16 at the Arms Park a fortnight ago to book their spot in the Play-Offs.
Looking back on that game, the Carmarthen-born Thomas said: “From minute one, everyone’s attitude was there.
“It wasn’t like ‘We will feel our way into the game and see where we are at 50’.
“It was ‘From minute one, we will take the game to them’.”
He concluded: “We were disappointed not to make the play-offs last year, so the hunger has been greater than ever this season.
“We wanted to be in the play-off mix because anything can happen then. You play rugby to win things. You want to win silverware.”
United Rugby Championship
Bulls 45–19 Benetton – URC Round 18
Published
2 weeks agoon
17th May 2026
The Bulls powered past Benetton with seven tries in a commanding 45–19 bonus-point win at Loftus Versfeld.
Key moments
3 mins – TRY BULLS: Canan Moodie breaks through and Handre Pollard sets up Sergeal Petersen for the opening try. Pollard converts. (Bulls 7–0 Benetton)
12 mins – TRY BULLS: Spellbinding play from Pollard opens up space and Willie le Roux takes full advantage. Pollard converts. (Bulls 14–0 Benetton)
18 mins – TRY BENETTON: Matt Gallagher sets up a wonderful passing move finished off by Louis Lynagh. Unconverted. (Bulls 14–5 Benetton)
28 mins – TRY BULLS: The Bulls maul proves unstoppable as Johan Grobbelaar powers over. Pollard misses the conversion. (Bulls 19–5 Benetton)
34 mins – YELLOW CARD BENETTON: Alessandro Garbisi is shown yellow.
37 mins – TRY BULLS: The pick and go results in a try for Cobus Wiese. Pollard converts to secure the bonus point. (Bulls 26–5 Benetton)
39 mins – TRY BENETTON: Rhyno Smith wriggles through a gap to score. Smith converts his own try. (Bulls 26–12 Benetton)
Half-time: Bulls 26–12 Benetton. The hosts in command with the bonus point already secured.
41 mins – TRY BENETTON: Matt Gallagher creates again and Louis Lynagh finishes for his second. Smith converts. (Bulls 26–19 Benetton)
56 mins – TRY BULLS: Stedman Gans plays a key part as Petersen scores a stunning individual try for his second. Pollard converts. (Bulls 33–19 Benetton)
62 mins – TRY BULLS: Mpilo Gumede breaks through the defensive line to touch down. Pollard converts. (Bulls 40–19 Benetton)
74 mins – TRY BULLS: Paul de Wet sets it up and Ruan Nortje scores from close range. Pollard’s conversion drifts wide. (Bulls 45–19 Benetton)
Full-time: Bulls 45–19 Benetton
Full match report to follow.
Teams
Bulls: 15 Willie le Roux, 14 Sergeal Petersen, 13 Canan Moodie, 12 Harold Vorster, 11 Devon Williams, 10 Handre Pollard, 9 Embrose Papier; 1 Gerhard Steenekamp, 2 Johan Grobbelaar, 3 Wilco Louw, 4 Ruan Nortje, 5 Cobus Wiese, 6 Marcell Coetzee, 7 Elrigh Louw, 8 Cameron Hanekom
Replacements: 16 Marco van Staden, 17 Jan-Hendrik Wessels, 18 Francois Klopper, 19 Ruan Vermaak, 20 Mpilo Gumede, 21 Paul de Wet, 22 Stedman Gans, 23 Stravino Jacobs
Benetton: 15 Matt Gallagher, 14 Louis Lynagh, 13 Paolo Odogwu, 12 Mattia Midena, 11 Rhyno Smith, 10 Alessandro Garbisi, 9 Federico Zanandrea; 1 Nahuel Tetaz Chaparro, 2 Bautista Bernasconi, 3 Tiziano Pasquali, 4 Federico Ruzza, 5 Lorenzo Cannone, 6 Manuel Zuliani, 7 Alessandro Izekor, 8 Toa Halafihi
Replacements: 16 Nicholas Gasperini, 17 Ivan Nemer, 18 Marcos Gallorini, 19 Niccolo Cannone, 20 Cristiano Tizzano, 21 Jadin Kingi, 22 Leonardo Marin, 23 Giulio Marini
Match details
Bulls 45 (Tries: Petersen 2, le Roux, Grobbelaar, Wiese, Gumede, Nortje; Cons: Pollard 5/7)
Benetton 19 (Tries: Lynagh 2, Smith; Cons: Smith 2/3)
Half-time: 26–12
Venue: Loftus Versfeld Stadium, Pretoria
Referee: Craig Evans (WRU)
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