United Rugby Championship
Scarlets 24-28 Cardiff – URC Round 15
Published
2 months agoon
Cardiff snatched a four-point West Wales derby win at Parc y Scarlets, holding off a late Scarlets charge in a chaotic second-half thriller.
Key moments
10 mins – TRY Cardiff: Ben Thomas dots down after a patient phase attack from the visitors. Callum Sheedy converts. (Scarlets 0–7 Cardiff)
23 mins – TRY Scarlets: Taine Plumtree drives over from a line-out maul. Conversion missed. (Scarlets 5–7 Cardiff)
Half-time: Scarlets 5–7 Cardiff. A tight, error-strewn opening half left Cardiff narrowly ahead at the break.
46 mins – TRY Scarlets: Johnny Williams powers through traffic to score. Conversion added. (Scarlets 12–7 Cardiff)
48 mins – TRY Scarlets: Dane Blacker darts over from a ruck close to the line. Conversion missed. (Scarlets 17–7 Cardiff)
54 mins – TRY Scarlets: Blair Murray finishes brilliantly out wide. Conversion added. (Scarlets 24–7 Cardiff)
71 mins – TRY Cardiff: Javan Sebastian crashes over from close range. Sheedy converts. (Scarlets 24–14 Cardiff)
77 mins – TRY Cardiff: Cameron Winnett races in from his own half. Sheedy converts. (Scarlets 24–21 Cardiff)
81 mins – TRY Cardiff: Sebastian drives over again to seal the win. Sheedy slots the conversion. (Scarlets 24–28 Cardiff)
Full-time: Scarlets 24–28 Cardiff
Full match report to follow.
Teams
Scarlets: 15 Blair Murray, 14 Tom Rogers, 13 Eddie James, 12 Johnny Williams, 11 Ellis Mee, 10 Joe Hawkins, 9 Dane Blacker, 8 Fletcher Anderson, 7 Jarrod Taylor, 6 Taine Plumtree, 5 Max Douglas, 4 Sam Lousi, 3 Archer Holz, 2 Ryan Elias, 1 Kemsley Mathias
Replacements: 16 Marnus van der Merwe, 17 Josh Morse, 18 Harri O’Connor, 19 Jac Price, 20 Dan Davis, 21 Archie Hughes, 22 Carwyn Leggatt-Jones, 23 Joe Roberts
Cardiff: 15 Cameron Winnett, 14 Jacob Beetham, 13 Ben Thomas, 12 Rory Jennings, 11 Mason Grady, 10 Callum Sheedy, 9 Johan Mulder, 8 Alun Lawrence, 7 James Botham, 6 Alex Mann, 5 George Nott, 4 Josh McNally, 3 Keiron Assiratti, 2 Liam Belcher, 1 Rhys Barratt
Replacements: 16 Dafydd Hughes, 17 Danny Southworth, 18 Javan Sebastian, 19 Rory Thornton, 20 Dan Thomas, 21 Taine Basham, 22 Ellis Bevan, 23 Ioan Lloyd
Match details
Scarlets 24 (Tries: Plumtree, Williams, Blacker, Murray; Cons: 2/4; Pens: 0/0)
Cardiff 28 (Tries: Thomas, Sebastian 2, Winnett; Cons: Sheedy 4/4; Pens: 0/0)
Half-time: 5–7
Venue: Parc y Scarlets, Llanelli
Referee: Morné Ferreira (South Africa)
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United Rugby Championship
Leinster crush abject Bulls to retain URC title at Croke Park
Published
2 days agoon
19th June 2026
Leinster saved their best for last, producing a devastating display to demolish the Vodacom Bulls 36–7 at Croke Park and become the first side to win back-to-back BKT United Rugby Championship titles. In front of 39,184 supporters on a balmy but wet Friday night in Dublin, Leo Cullen’s side delivered a performance eerily similar to last year’s Grand Final at the same venue, tearing apart a Springbok-laden Bulls outfit that imploded through ill-discipline and errors to suffer a fourth defeat in five URC finals.
Key moments
2 mins – YELLOW CARD BULLS: Canan Moodie shown yellow for a deliberate knock-on, intercepting a Prendergast pass intended for McCarthy. Bulls down to 14.
5 mins – TRY LEINSTER: Tommy O’Brien pounces on a loose Pollard pass, grubbers ahead and gathers to score from 60 metres. Prendergast converts. (Leinster 7–0 Bulls)
6 mins: Caelan Doris goes off with a foot injury. Jack Conan replaces the Leinster captain.
16 mins – TRY LEINSTER: Gibson-Park takes a quick lineout and fires to Prendergast, who feeds Keenan. The full-back breaks through and sends Ioane over in the corner. Prendergast’s conversion misses. (Leinster 12–0 Bulls)
25 mins – YELLOW CARD BULLS: Willie le Roux sin-binned for a deliberate knock-on, cutting out Keenan’s pass to O’Brien.
27 mins – TRY LEINSTER: Jack Conan drives over from close range after sustained forward pressure from the lineout. Prendergast converts. (Leinster 19–0 Bulls)
31 mins – PENALTY LEINSTER: Prendergast slots from in front after a scrum free-kick and penalty for not releasing. (Leinster 22–0 Bulls)
39 mins: Tommy O’Brien limps off with a leg injury. Garry Ringrose on, Ioane moves to the wing.
Half-time: Leinster 22–0 Bulls. A carbon copy of last year’s final, with Leinster in total control. Two Bulls yellow cards for deliberate knock-ons proved devastating, O’Brien, Ioane and Conan all crossing while Prendergast ran the show. Pollard’s error-strewn half summed up the Bulls’ performance, ending with a penalty kicked dead on the stroke of half-time.
46 mins – TRY LEINSTER: Prendergast scores from close range after a clever no-look pass to Osborne opens space. Converts his own try. (Leinster 29–0 Bulls)
55 mins: Harold Vorster held up over the line after a TMO check. Controversial call, with the Bulls adamant he grounded the ball.
58 mins – YELLOW CARD LEINSTER: James Lowe sin-binned for a deliberate knock-on on his farewell appearance.
62 mins – TRY BULLS: Canan Moodie scores off Papier’s pass after a lineout maul. Pollard converts. (Leinster 29–7 Bulls)
67 mins: Ruan Nortjé try disallowed. TMO rules Moodie’s offload in the build-up went forward.
73 mins: Luke McGrath enters for his 257th and final Leinster appearance, replacing Gibson-Park to a standing ovation.
77 mins – TRY LEINSTER: Harry Byrne drives over from close range after sustained pressure. Converts his own try. (Leinster 36–7 Bulls)
Full-time: Leinster 36–7 Bulls
Player of the Match: Sam Prendergast (Leinster)
The victory secured Leinster’s 10th league championship across all formats, 25 years after they won the first Celtic League title in 2001, and went a considerable way towards healing the wounds of their 41–19 Champions Cup final defeat to Bordeaux Bègles in Bilbao just four weeks earlier. It was also a fitting farewell for James Lowe, Luke McGrath, Rieko Ioane and Jerry Cahir, all playing their final matches in blue.
Sam Prendergast, outstanding throughout, was named Player of the Match after contributing a try, three conversions and a penalty for a 13-point haul. The 23-year-old Kildare man controlled proceedings with a composure and authority that will have delighted Ireland head coach Andy Farrell ahead of next month’s Nations Championship opener against Australia in Sydney.
The only cloud over the evening was the first-half departures of captain Caelan Doris and try scorer Tommy O’Brien, both limping off with injuries that will be assessed before Ireland’s squad assembles. Doris, however, offered reassurance afterwards. “My knee was fine, it was actually something else,” the captain said. “We’ll get it checked later. But I’m looking forward to a few beers with the lads. From a big disappointment a few weeks ago, I’m very proud we have been able to turn the page. It’s been a massive motivation for us to get it right, it was great to watch.”
The Bulls had spoken all week about starting fast and maintaining their discipline. They failed on both counts inside 82 seconds. Lowe burst into the clear on the left and Prendergast’s searching pass intended for Joe McCarthy was slapped down by Canan Moodie, who was promptly shown a yellow card for a deliberate knock-on. The visitors initially defended heroically with 14 men, Cameron Hanekom producing a crucial turnover penalty on his own try line to repel Leinster’s opening siege. But they came unstuck on their first meaningful attack when Handré Pollard took his eye off a head-high pass that slipped through his fingers. O’Brien pounced on the loose ball in midfield, grubbed ahead, gathered a kind bounce and sprinted 60 metres to score unopposed. Prendergast converted from in front and Leinster led 7–0 after just five minutes.
Doris’s withdrawal with a foot injury in the sixth minute could have derailed the home side, but Jack Conan slipped seamlessly into the back row and soon made his presence felt. On 16 minutes, Leinster produced the try of the match. Jamison Gibson-Park took a quick lineout and fired a 35-metre pass to Prendergast, who fed Hugo Keenan. The full-back’s spin and acceleration opened up the Bulls defence before he sent it wide left to Ioane, who stepped inside Kurt-Lee Arendse and powered over in the corner. Prendergast’s conversion from the touchline curled wide, but at 12–0, Leinster were already in command.
The province’s defensive line speed was suffocating. When the Bulls briefly flickered into life through Stravino Jacobs, Prendergast accelerated back to make a brave sliding gather that prevented a certain try — a moment of defensive brilliance that encapsulated his influence on the evening. At the other end, Gibson-Park’s grubber forced Willie le Roux to concede a five-metre scrum, and although Rónán Kelleher was held up over the line, Leinster’s relentless pressure soon produced a third score. Keenan magnificently claimed a Prendergast bomb inside the Bulls 22 and le Roux, attempting to intercept Keenan’s pass to O’Brien, became the second Bull to be sin-binned for a deliberate knock-on in the 25th minute. From the resulting lineout, Conan drove low and reached out to ground the ball from close range. Prendergast converted and, at 19–0 after 27 minutes, the contest was effectively over.
Prendergast’s penalty after a scrum free-kick extended the lead to 22–0 in the 31st minute and the Bulls could not find an answer before the break. Their lineout, targeted superbly by Max Deegan and Josh van der Flier throughout, lost four first-half throws, while Pollard’s nightmare continued when he kicked a penalty dead on the stroke of half-time, denying his side any late momentum.
The second half brought no reprieve. Prendergast struck again within six minutes of the restart, reacting smartly to lazy defence on the edge of a ruck to snipe and dive over from close range after his elegant no-look pass to Jamie Osborne had opened the space. He converted his own try to make it 29–0 and the rout was on.
The Bulls showed more fight after introducing their bench, with the Springbok bomb squad of Marco van Staden, Jan-Hendrik Wessels, Wilco Louw, Cobus Wiese and Jeandré Rudolph all arriving in the 53rd minute. Harold Vorster appeared to have crossed for the visitors’ first try, but a TMO review upheld the on-field decision of held up, a call that drew fierce protests from the South Africans and was widely regarded as harsh. Minutes later, Lowe became the third player to be sin-binned for a deliberate knock-on — an unfortunate moment on his farewell appearance — and the Bulls finally breached the Leinster defence when Moodie shot through a gap off Embrose Papier’s pass to score. Pollard converted to make it 29–7 in the 62nd minute.
Any faint hopes of a miracle were extinguished almost immediately. Ruan Nortjé crossed for what appeared to be the Bulls’ second try, but the TMO ruled that Moodie’s offload in the build-up had gone forward — another contentious call that left the visitors fuming. The Bulls’ frustrations should, however, have been directed internally. Their senior players failed to deliver when it mattered most: le Roux and Moodie’s yellow cards were self-inflicted, Pollard’s error led directly to the opening try, and their lineout never functioned.
Leinster, by contrast, were clinical to the end. McGrath’s arrival for his 257th and final appearance in the 73rd minute was greeted with an enormous ovation, and the departing scrum-half helped set up the final try, conducting the forwards’ carries before Harry Byrne drove over from five metres and converted his own score to seal it at 36–7.
Doris, grimacing but on his feet, led the squad up to the trophy podium alongside Lowe, whose two children joined him on stage for an emotional lift of the trophy. “That’s pretty special,” said Prendergast. “We have unbelievable characters leaving the group, it’s nice to have a happy memory to end it on and we can celebrate that in the next few days. Since Europe, all our group has been focused on has been winning this back-to-back. Nobody had done it before.”
Ioane, visibly moved, was succinct. “We saved our best performance until last. I’ve loved my time in Dublin.”
And Lowe, the province’s all-time leading try scorer, offered a promise: “We will go enjoy Japan for a few years, then we will be back in a few years.”
For the Bulls, the questions that have lingered through four finals in five seasons now echo louder than ever. They came to Dublin with 11 Springboks in their starting XV and the momentum of eight consecutive wins, but produced a performance that head coach Johan Ackermann will find difficult to defend. The same mistakes, the same venue, the same outcome — and a record that now reads four defeats from five URC Grand Finals.
Leinster, meanwhile, can bask in the glow of a perfect end to a frustrating season. The URC may not be the trophy they covet most, but it is one worth celebrating — and the sight of Lowe, McGrath and their teammates completing a lap of honour in the Dublin rain, trophy aloft, was the farewell this group deserved.
Teams
Leinster: 15 Hugo Keenan, 14 Tommy O’Brien (Garry Ringrose 40+2), 13 Rieko Ioane, 12 Jamie Osborne, 11 James Lowe, 10 Sam Prendergast (Harry Byrne 68), 9 Jamison Gibson-Park (Luke McGrath 73); 1 Jerry Cahir (Alex Usanov 49), 2 Rónán Kelleher (Dan Sheehan 47), 3 Tadhg Furlong (Thomas Clarkson 47), 4 Joe McCarthy (Diarmuid Mangan 70), 5 James Ryan, 6 Max Deegan, 7 Josh van der Flier, 8 Caelan Doris (captain) (Jack Conan 6).
Vodacom Bulls: 15 Willie le Roux, 14 Kurt-Lee Arendse, 13 Canan Moodie, 12 Harold Vorster, 11 Stravino Jacobs (Stedman Gans 56), 10 Handré Pollard, 9 Embrose Papier (Zak Burger 67); 1 Gerhard Steenekamp (Jan-Hendrik Wessels 53), 2 Johan Grobbelaar (Nizaam Carr 72), 3 Francois Klopper (Wilco Louw 53), 4 Ruan Vermaak (Cobus Wiese 53), 5 Ruan Nortjé, 6 Marcell Coetzee (captain), 7 Elrigh Louw (Marco van Staden 53), 8 Cameron Hanekom (Jeandré Rudolph 53).
Match details
Leinster 36 (Tries: O’Brien, Ioane, Conan, Prendergast, H. Byrne; Conversions: Prendergast 3/4, H. Byrne 1/1; Penalties: Prendergast 1/1)
Vodacom Bulls 7 (Tries: Moodie; Conversions: Pollard 1/1)
Half-time: 22–0
Venue: Croke Park, Dublin
Attendance: 39,184
Referee: Andrea Piardi (Italy)
Assistant Referees: Adam Jones (Wales), Ben Breakspear (Wales)
TMO: Matteo Liperini (Italy)
United Rugby Championship
BKT United Rugby Championship Grand Final preview
Published
3 days agoon
18th June 2026
The fifth BKT United Rugby Championship Grand Final brings together its two most compelling rivals for a second consecutive year, as defending champions Leinster host the Vodacom Bulls under Friday night lights at Croke Park. It is the first Friday evening Grand Final in competition history, a scheduling quirk forced by the Aviva Stadium’s unavailability, with GAA fixtures occupying Croke Park across the rest of the weekend. The 82,000-capacity home of the GAA will provide a spectacular backdrop for the ninth meeting between these sides in the URC era — a rivalry that has become the competition’s defining fixture.
This is the fourth successive cross-continental final and the first time the same two teams have met in back-to-back Grand Finals. With 11 Springboks in the Bulls’ starting XV and 14 Ireland internationals across the Leinster matchday squad, Friday’s decider will resemble a Test match in club colours. Leinster are chasing a record-extending tenth overall league title and aim to become the first side to defend the crown in the URC era. The Bulls arrive in Dublin for a fourth final in five seasons, seeking to finally get their hands on the trophy after defeats to the Stormers (2022), Glasgow Warriors (2024) and Leinster last year.
Leinster – Defending champions with a point to prove

BKT United Rugby Championship Grand Final Photocall 16/6/2026 Leinster and Ireland captain Caelan Doris posing with the URC Trophy. Mandatory Credit ©INPHO/Dan Sheridan
Form
Leo Cullen’s side have had a season of two halves. Finishing second in the regular-season standings behind Glasgow Warriors and reaching the Champions Cup final gave them a formidable look heading into the knockout rounds, but the 41–19 demolition by Bordeaux Bègles in Bilbao on 23 May left deep psychological bruising. It was Leinster’s fifth successive Champions Cup final loss and fourth in five seasons, raising legitimate questions about their defensive system under senior coach Jacques Nienaber, particularly against teams capable of sustained, high-tempo attack.
The response in the URC play-offs has been effective rather than spectacular. A 59–10 demolition of the Lions in the quarter-final offered catharsis, before a more anxious semi-final against the Stormers at the Aviva Stadium. Leinster built a 13–0 lead through a Rieko Ioane try and two Sam Prendergast penalties, but Andrew Porter’s first-half departure with a calf injury destabilised their scrum and the Stormers clawed back to 13–11. A late red card for Ruan Ackermann and a yellow for Salmaan Moerat opened the door for Jamison Gibson-Park’s clinching try in a 20–11 victory.
Friday’s final completes a clean sweep of South African opponents in this season’s play-offs — the Lions in the quarter-final, the Stormers in the semi-final and now the Bulls in the decider. Their only defeat in their last six fixtures across all competitions was the Bordeaux reversal. At Croke Park, Leinster have played six matches including last season’s Grand Final, with their only defeat coming in their most recent visit — a 14–31 loss to Munster in Round Four.
Through the various guises of this competition, this is Leinster’s 13th appearance in a league final, with eight victories and four defeats. Their only loss in the last eight finals was to Connacht at Murrayfield in 2016.
Team news
Cullen has made three changes to the side that defeated the Stormers. Captain Caelan Doris has been passed fit after the knee injury he sustained during the semi-final — he was pictured wearing a brace at last week’s Leinster Rugby Awards night but trained fully this week and takes his place at number eight. Dan Sheehan, who missed the semi-final entirely, has also recovered and is named among the replacements.
Tadhg Furlong returns at tighthead for his first start since April, having missed both knockout fixtures through injury. His comeback is a significant boost, replacing Thomas Clarkson who drops to the bench. Jerry Cahir comes in at loosehead in place of the injured Porter, preferred to 20-year-old Alex Usanov, who came under considerable scrum pressure after replacing Porter in the semi-final. Cahir is making his 15th appearance in what is also his final game before joining Connacht. Rónán Kelleher retains the hooker’s jersey ahead of the returning Sheehan.
Tommy O’Brien is the third change, returning on the right wing for Jimmy O’Brien after recovering from a back complaint that kept him out of both knockout fixtures. O’Brien had a stellar regular season and was named Nissan Supporters’ Player of the Year, Bank of Ireland Men’s Player’s Player of the Year, and picked up the Optimum Nutrition Tackle of the Year prize at the Leinster Rugby Awards.
James Lowe starts on the left wing in his 101st and final appearance for the province before his move to Japan’s Suntory Sungoliath, departing as Leinster’s all-time leading try scorer with 71 tries across nine seasons. Rieko Ioane and Jamie Osborne continue in the centres, with Prendergast and Gibson-Park — the player of the match in the semi-final — renewing their half-back partnership. Joe McCarthy and James Ryan are unchanged in the second row, with Max Deegan and Josh van der Flier completing the back row.
The bench features six Ireland internationals, including the returning Sheehan, Jack Conan, Garry Ringrose and Luke McGrath, who is set for his 257th and final appearance before joining Perpignan. The selection of Harry Byrne at back-up fly-half confirms Ciarán Frawley has played his last game for the province.
Ryan Baird, Jack Boyle, Will Connors, Hugh Cooney, RG Snyman, Charlie Tector and Paddy McCarthy remain long-term absentees.
Leinster (caps in brackets): 15. Hugo Keenan (85), 14. Tommy O’Brien (61), 13. Rieko Ioane (17), 12. Jamie Osborne (76), 11. James Lowe (101), 10. Sam Prendergast (51), 9. Jamison Gibson-Park (173); 1. Jerry Cahir (15), 2. Rónán Kelleher (94), 3. Tadhg Furlong (166), 4. Joe McCarthy (65), 5. James Ryan (111), 6. Max Deegan (160), 7. Josh van der Flier (175), 8. Caelan Doris (108, captain).
Replacements: 16. Dan Sheehan (88), 17. Alex Usanov (9), 18. Thomas Clarkson (79), 19. Diarmuid Mangan (30), 20. Jack Conan (179), 21. Luke McGrath (256), 22. Harry Byrne (93), 23. Garry Ringrose (150).
What they said
Leinster assistant coach Robin McBryde was forthright about the set-piece challenge awaiting his pack. “You know they are going to come after you in the tighter aspects – the scrum, the lineout maul – so it would be foolish to look any further than that from a set piece point of view,” McBryde said. “We can’t be scared. We’ve got to meet them head-on and go for it. And that’s what we’ll do.”
Former Leinster captain Isa Nacewa, who won four European Cups across two spells with the province, identified the full-back battle between Hugo Keenan and Willie le Roux as the key contest. “There will be a bit of kicking in this game,” Nacewa said. “There will be a lot of field cover needed by both teams. They are both stand-out, world-class players, but for me, the fullback battle is key. It is not just the flat stuff, but also some key tactical decisions needed by both these players. Willie [le Roux] oozes class and always has. When he is on, every team has to watch out.”
Vodacom Bulls – redemption on their minds

BKT United Rugby Championship Grand Final Photocall 16/6/2026 Vodacom Bulls skipper Marcell Coetzee posing with the URC Trophy. Mandatory Credit ©INPHO/Dan Sheridan
Form
The Bulls’ season has been a story of transformation. Under head coach Johan Ackermann, who replaced Jake White after last year’s 32–7 final humiliation at this same venue, the Pretoria side endured a torrid mid-season run that saw them lose seven consecutive matches across the URC and Champions Cup. Ackermann has spoken candidly about questioning his own decisions during that period, eventually taking direct control of the forwards coaching to rebuild relationships and restore confidence.
The turnaround has been extraordinary. The Bulls arrive at Croke Park on an eight-match URC winning streak, the form team in the competition. Their timing has been impeccable. The quarter-final destruction of Munster (45–14) at Loftus Versfeld was emphatic, with Handré Pollard slotting all six conversions and recording 15 points. But it was the semi-final at Murrayfield that will live longest in the memory. Trailing 21–3 after just 25 minutes, having conceded two tries to Kyle Steyn and a penalty try while Pollard and Ruan Nortjé were in the sin bin, the Bulls produced one of the most remarkable comebacks in URC history. Johan Grobbelaar, Embrose Papier and Francois Klopper all crossed as the visitors scored 19 unanswered points, holding Glasgow scoreless in the second half to win 22–21.
The Bulls have visited Ireland on 12 occasions, winning four times — more than any other South African team. The two sides have met in three previous play-off fixtures, with the Bulls holding the edge two wins to one courtesy of semi-final victories at the RDS in 2022 (a sensational 27–26 raid) and in Pretoria in 2024 (25–20), though Leinster’s 32–7 victory last year remains the largest winning margin in URC Grand Final history. The Bulls also won the solitary regular-season meeting this campaign, a 39–31 thriller at Loftus Versfeld in early October.
This is the Bulls’ fourth final in five URC seasons, though they are yet to taste victory. They do, however, have pedigree when it comes to finals, having won all three of their Super Rugby deciders in 2007, 2009 and 2010.
Team news
Ackermann has named an unchanged matchday 23 from the Glasgow semi-final, a resounding vote of confidence in the group that engineered the Murrayfield comeback. Eleven Springboks start, with captain Marcell Coetzee leading the side. Francois Klopper is retained at tighthead ahead of Springbok Wilco Louw — a significant show of faith in Klopper, who will earn his 50th URC cap on Friday alongside full-back Willie le Roux. Louw’s considerable power is held in reserve on a bench that has all the hallmarks of a bomb squad, with Marco van Staden, Jan-Hendrik Wessels and Cobus Wiese completing a 6–2 split designed to increase the intensity in the second half rather than defend it.
The half-back pairing of Pollard and Embrose Papier is the axis around which the Bulls’ game plan revolves. Papier — the joint URC leading try scorer this season with 12 tries and the competition’s Player of the Year, with six Man of the Match awards — provides sniping threat and tempo, while Pollard is the competition’s third-highest points scorer with 127 this campaign, behind fellow South African playmakers Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu and Chris Smith.
Harold Vorster and Canan Moodie form the midfield partnership, with Vorster’s direct carrying providing a hard edge through the centre channel. Kurt-Lee Arendse and Stravino Jacobs offer genuine finishing pace on the wings, while le Roux orchestrates from full-back. Ruan Vermaak and Ruan Nortjé provide lineout security and physicality in the second row, with Coetzee, Elrigh Louw and the outstanding Cameron Hanekom — last season’s URC Next-Gen Player of the Year — completing a formidable loose trio.
Vodacom Bulls: 15. Willie le Roux, 14. Kurt-Lee Arendse, 13. Canan Moodie, 12. Harold Vorster, 11. Stravino Jacobs, 10. Handré Pollard, 9. Embrose Papier; 1. Gerhard Steenekamp, 2. Johan Grobbelaar, 3. Francois Klopper, 4. Ruan Vermaak, 5. Ruan Nortjé, 6. Marcell Coetzee (captain), 7. Elrigh Louw, 8. Cameron Hanekom.
Replacements: 16. Marco van Staden, 17. Jan-Hendrik Wessels, 18. Wilco Louw, 19. Cobus Wiese, 20. Jeandré Rudolph, 21. Zak Burger, 22. Stedman Gans, 23. Nizaam Carr.
What they said
Ackermann has framed the occasion in terms of gratitude rather than entitlement. “For me it’s important that we understand that it’s a privilege to be here,” he said. “It’s not your right, you’re not entitled to be here. To come to work every day and call this work – it’s a great privilege. We’ve got a shot, and if you ask me, do I believe we can win? Then I’m going to say yes.”
Former Bulls and Springbok great Victor Matfield identified the scrum-half and midfield battles as decisive. “Gibson-Park is the heart of the Leinster attack,” Matfield said. “Embrose Papier has been outstanding. Hopefully, he gets a good run with the Springboks this year. His kicking game is spot-on, especially the contestable kicks.” On the centres, Matfield backed Moodie to rise to the occasion. “Moodie is an up-and-coming star, and I do enjoy him at No.13. That will be his position going forward with the Boks as well. It will be a great test for him against this Leinster attack, and you need a No.13 that makes good decisions [on defence].”
Key battles
Here are three head-to-head contests that could prove decisive on Friday night.
The scrum-half duel between Gibson-Park and Papier is the most intriguing individual match-up. Gibson-Park has been instrumental in both knockout victories — he was the scorer of the semi-final clinching try against the Stormers and a British and Irish Lions stalwart who sets the tempo for everything Leinster do. Papier’s 12 tries and six Man of the Match awards make him arguably the most dangerous nine in the competition, with a sniping running game and contestable kicking that has added a new dimension to his game this season.
At fly-half, Prendergast has tallied 83 points in the URC this campaign and is set to start in back-to-back Grand Finals, having notched 10 points off the tee in last year’s one-sided affair. He re-established himself as Leinster’s first-choice ten after missing out on the 23-man squad for the Champions Cup final defeat to Bordeaux, and has since operated almost flawlessly. Pollard, with 127 points as the competition’s third-highest scorer and 85 Springbok caps behind him, is the big-match operator the Bulls will look to for composure and territorial control. A two-time World Cup winner, Pollard defines knockout rugby — territory, scoreboard pressure, composure.
In the back row, former World Player of the Year van der Flier — who scored a 23rd-minute try in last year’s final to help set the platform for Leinster’s victory — goes head-to-head with Elrigh Louw, who has returned from almost 11 months on the sidelines to feature in nine wins from his last 10 URC appearances.
Porter’s absence, however, looms as the most significant factor. Without their first-choice loosehead, Leinster’s scrum faces a Bulls pack that dismantled Glasgow at set-piece time. McBryde’s refusal to shy away from the challenge suggests Leinster know this is where the match could be won or lost.
Head-to-head record
The Bulls lead the overall head-to-head 5–3 across eight previous meetings since the South African sides joined the URC in 2021.
| Date | Match | Venue |
|---|---|---|
| October 2025 | Bulls 39–31 Leinster | Loftus Versfeld |
| June 2025 | Leinster 32–7 Bulls | Croke Park (Grand Final) |
| March 2025 | Bulls 21–20 Leinster | Loftus Versfeld |
| June 2024 | Bulls 25–20 Leinster | Loftus Versfeld (Semi-Final) |
| March 2024 | Leinster 47–14 Bulls | RDS |
| April 2023 | Bulls 62–7 Leinster | Loftus Versfeld |
| June 2022 | Leinster 26–27 Bulls | RDS (Semi-Final) |
| September 2021 | Leinster 31–3 Bulls | Aviva Stadium |
The bigger picture
Beyond the trophy, the match carries implications on multiple fronts. Ireland head coach Andy Farrell named his squad for the summer Nations Championship fixtures on Wednesday, with Ireland facing Australia, Japan and New Zealand in their opening matches.
For the Bulls, a victory in Dublin would represent the most significant result in the franchise’s URC history, validating Ackermann’s appointment and the project he has built since inheriting a side scarred by three final defeats. Their Super Rugby pedigree — three titles in 2007, 2009 and 2010 — demonstrates this is a franchise that knows how to win finals, even if the URC trophy has proved elusive.
The decline in Leinster’s attendances is a backdrop Cullen will want to address. Only 9,493 and 15,346 attended the quarter-final and semi-final respectively, a trend that has prompted discussion among the province’s supporters and media. Last year’s Grand Final at Croke Park attracted 46,127, and a comparable figure on Friday would ease concerns about supporter engagement.
For James Lowe, this is the final chapter of an extraordinary Irish adventure that began in 2017, departing as the province’s all-time leading try scorer with 71 tries. McGrath’s 257th and final appearance brings to a close one of the longest and most decorated careers in Leinster’s history. Ioane’s 17th and final cap completes a short but impactful stint in Dublin. And Cahir, in just his 15th appearance, plays his last game before joining Connacht. A farewell under the Friday night lights at Croke Park, with a championship on the line, is the stage they all deserve.
Venue: Croke Park, Dublin
Kick-off: Friday, 19 June – 19:30 (UK & Ireland) / 20:30 (South Africa) / 04:30 Saturday (AEST) / 06:30 Saturday (NZST)
Referee: Andrea Piardi (FIR, 63rd league game)
Assistant Referees: Adam Jones (WRU), Ben Breakspear (WRU)
TMO: Matteo Liperini (FIR)
Live on: Premier Sports 1, SuperSport, Flo Rugby & URC.tv
United Rugby Championship
Bulls back semi-final heroes for URC final against Leinster
Published
4 days agoon
17th June 2026
Vodacom Bulls head coach Johan Ackermann has named an unchanged matchday 23 from the dramatic semi-final comeback against Glasgow Warriors for Friday’s BKT United Rugby Championship Grand Final against Leinster at Croke Park (kick-off 7.30pm Irish time / 8.30pm SA time, live on SuperSport, Premier Sports, Flo Rugby and URC.tv).
The selection is a resounding vote of confidence in the group that trailed 21–3 after 25 minutes at Murrayfield before producing one of the most remarkable recoveries in URC history, scoring 19 unanswered points to win 22–21 and book their place in a fourth Grand Final in five seasons.
Eleven Springboks are named in the starting XV, giving the contest the feel of a Test match in club colours. Captain Marcell Coetzee leads the side for what promises to be the biggest match of the Bulls’ URC era, as they chase a first title after defeats in the 2022, 2024 and 2025 finals.
Forward pack built to impose
Ackermann has resisted the temptation to introduce Springbok tighthead Wilco Louw to the starting front row, instead retaining Francois Klopper at number three alongside hooker Johan Grobbelaar and loosehead Gerhard Steenekamp. It is a significant show of faith in Klopper, who will earn his 50th URC cap on Friday night. Louw’s considerable power is held in reserve on a bench that has all the hallmarks of a Springbok-style bomb squad.
Ruan Vermaak and Ruan Nortjé continue their partnership in the second row, providing lineout security and the relentless work rate that underpinned the Glasgow comeback. Behind them, Coetzee is flanked by Elrigh Louw and the outstanding Cameron Hanekom — last season’s URC Next-Gen Player of the Year — in a back row built for confrontation at the breakdown.
The bench reinforcements are formidable. Marco van Staden, Jan-Hendrik Wessels, Wilco Louw and Cobus Wiese are all Springbok internationals, ensuring there is no drop-off in intensity when the replacements arrive. Jeandré Rudolph, Zak Burger, Stedman Gans and Nizaam Carr complete a 6–2 split that underlines the Bulls’ intention to win the forward battle first and foremost.
Pollard and Papier direct operations
The half-back pairing of Handré Pollard and Embrose Papier is the axis around which the Bulls’ game plan revolves. Pollard’s big-match temperament and territorial kicking will be central to the visitors’ strategy of making Leinster play in their own half, while Papier — the joint URC leading try scorer this season and the competition’s Player of the Year — provides the tempo and sniping threat around the fringes.
Harold Vorster and Canan Moodie form the midfield partnership, with Vorster’s direct carrying offering a hard edge through the centre channel. Out wide, Kurt-Lee Arendse and Stravino Jacobs provide genuine finishing pace, while Willie le Roux — who will also reach his 50th URC cap on Friday — orchestrates from full-back. Le Roux’s vision and positioning will be crucial to the Bulls’ ability to counter-attack against a Leinster defence that conceded opportunities on transition against the Stormers in the semi-final.
Ackermann’s message: Privilege, not entitlement
Ackermann has framed the occasion in terms of gratitude rather than expectation, while leaving no doubt about his belief that this squad can deliver what three previous final appearances could not.
“For me it’s important that we understand that it’s a privilege to be here,” Ackermann said. “It’s not your right, you’re not entitled to be here. To come to work every day and call this work – it’s a great privilege. We’ve got a shot, and if you ask me, do I believe we can win? Then I’m going to say yes.”
The Bulls arrive in Dublin on an eight-match URC winning streak and with the momentum of a season that has been transformed since a torrid mid-season run of seven consecutive defeats. Friday’s final is a repeat of last year’s decider at the same venue, which Leinster won 32–7, and the Pretoria side will be desperate to prove that result was an aberration rather than a reflection of where the two sides stand.
Vodacom Bulls: 15. Willie le Roux, 14. Kurt-Lee Arendse, 13. Canan Moodie, 12. Harold Vorster, 11. Stravino Jacobs, 10. Handré Pollard, 9. Embrose Papier; 1. Gerhard Steenekamp, 2. Johan Grobbelaar, 3. Francois Klopper, 4. Ruan Vermaak, 5. Ruan Nortjé, 6. Marcell Coetzee (captain), 7. Elrigh Louw, 8. Cameron Hanekom.
Replacements: 16. Marco van Staden, 17. Jan-Hendrik Wessels, 18. Wilco Louw, 19. Cobus Wiese, 20. Jeandré Rudolph, 21. Zak Burger, 22. Stedman Gans, 23. Nizaam Carr.
Referee: Andrea Piardi (FIR, 63rd league game)
Assistant Referees: Adam Jones (WRU), Ben Breakspear (WRU)
TMO: Matteo Liperini (FIR)
Kick-off: 7.30pm (Irish time) / 8.30pm (SA time), Friday 19 June
Venue: Croke Park, Dublin
Live on: SuperSport, Premier Sports 1, Flo Rugby & URC.tv
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