logo
Playing Leinster 'like watching a horror movie' for Bulls coach Jake White

Playing Leinster 'like watching a horror movie' for Bulls coach Jake White

Irish Examiner11 hours ago

Bulls head coach Jake White has compared their URC final experience against Leinster to a 'horror movie' and heaped praise on a side which he stressed yet again is a Test-level team and the benchmark for the entire league.
Leo Cullen's side were 19-0 to the good shortly into the second quarter and they ultimately claimed a first trophy in four years with a four-try, 32-7 defeat of a South African team that was losing a third final in just four years.
'You have to understand, this is not a normal rugby team,' said the former World Cup-winning Springbok coach. 'We are naïve when… I made a note in my book, they are 19-0 up and they bring on RG Snyman.
'It's just a different league altogether and that's why Leinster supporters are probably so disappointed because they were waiting for that performance the whole year and we just happened to get the 40 minutes that they were waiting for the whole year.
'We couldn't get our hands on the ball, they started well. After 17 minutes they are 19-0 up and that is after everyone says don't let them start well. I say again to all the Irish, I don't think they give the credit to that Leinster team. They are well coached.'
White had been rich in his praise of Leinster last week in what appeared in large part to set the terms of engagement and frame his side as the underdogs but he was consistent in that take in the aftermath. If anything, the praise flowed even freer.
When asked who they didn't fire a shot in the opening salvos his reply was simple: they hadn't been allowed. He referenced the loss to Leinster of Jamison Gibson-Park pre-game and his replacement by Luke McGrath, a man with over 230 provincial caps.
Jacques Nienanber's defence was singled out for two phenomenal stands in the ten minutes before half-time.
'We got the 40 minutes the Leinster supporters were waiting for the whole season. It was like watching a horror movie, and you hope the ending will be different. This was Test-level rugby. It was like everything was played in fast forward.' For the Bulls, it is back to the drawing board now.
They have already recruited some class players for next season. Centre Jan Serfontein is arriving from Montpellier, Handre Pollard is flying in from Leicester Tigers. That's a start, no more, against a side that he believes is so far ahead at the summit.
'The lesson I've taken from that is we need more international players to play in our province. I need what Leinster have. I need to be able to fight fire with fire. Leinster, Toulouse, La Rochelle, what do you need to win those games? Academy players or seasoned internationals?
'The biggest cheer tonight was for Jordie Barrett. He's not Irish. Please don't take it the wrong way but that's what I've learned. They're sitting in the coaching box, 19-0 up, and say, ' RG, warm up.' They put him on and let him menace the defence like he did tonight.' What they need, he said, is to fight fire with fire.
Read More
Imperious Leinster display puts Champions Cup disappointment firmly in rear view mirror

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Leinster exorcised some demons in Croke Park with emphatic display
Leinster exorcised some demons in Croke Park with emphatic display

Extra.ie​

time29 minutes ago

  • Extra.ie​

Leinster exorcised some demons in Croke Park with emphatic display

Four years of hurt has finally come to an end and, at times during this compelling performance, it felt like Leinster were taking all that frustration out on a Bulls team which looked overwhelmed long before the final whistle. Willie le Roux was one of many Springboks stars who fluffed their lines. When the Bulls full-back fumbled a pass with nine minutes left on the clock and proceeded to boot the ball into the stand in anger, it summed up a wretched day for the South Africans who have now lost three URC finals in four seasons. After all those Champions Cup and URC knockout failures, this entire Leinster setup finally has something tangible to show for it. They turned up a big day and played to their potential. No, it won't exorcise the European demons but this will kickstart the healing process. Leinster celebrate as champions of the URC. Pic: INPHO Leinster have borne so much criticism in the wake of that Champions Cup semi-final defeat but there was merit to much of it. Because Leo Cullen's side look untouchable when they're in this kind of form. There was a focus, intensity and intent about Leinster from the first whistle yesterday. Leinster were dealt a massive injury blow on the morning of the game when Jamison Gibson-Park was ruled out. Or was it? This game was made for Luke McGrath. No, the veteran Leinster scrum-half does not offer the same fast-twitch, hawk-eyed brilliance as Gibson-Park but McGrath is an experienced, savvy and utterly committed operator. The 32-year-old won the last of his 19 Ireland caps in 2019, but he remains a valued member of this Leinster squad. Yesterday was fresh evidence. This was a day for playing the percentages. No better man than McGrath. He had a huge game. He wasn't alone. Much has been made of the sizeable list of injured frontliners in the Leinster ranks. A stellar crew featuring Tadhg Furlong, Caelan Doris, Robbie Henshaw and Hugo Keenan. Leinster's Ryan Baird celebrates with Dan Sheehan with champagne in the dressing room after the game Mandatory Credit ©INPHO/Ben Brady None of them were missed yesterday. Thomas Clarkson had a huge day at the coalface. All the pre-game chat centred around this gargantuan Bulls pack, spearheaded by their giant tighthead Wilco Louw, and how their scrum was going to play a bit part in this final. Clarkson didn't get the memo. From the moment he won an early scrum penalty, the 25-year-old was in the zone. This was a big day in a fledgling career. Clarkson made his Test debut last November and endured a rough outing against Wales in the Six Nations. This was a galvanising performance against elite opposition. Andrew Porter deserves plenty of credit for Leinster's scrum effort, too. Porter was part of Leinster unit which bullied the Bulls. Dan Sheehan, Joe McCarthy, James Ryan, Ryan Baird, Josh van der Flier and Jack Conan all turned up in a big way. Conan has led this team manfully since Doris was suffered that season-ending shoulder injury against Northampton Sam Prendergast answered a few critics as well. The Leinster out-half bossed the game. He made his tackles, kicked his goals and looked right at home. Individually and collectively, this Leinster team swarmed the visitors during a dominant first half. The hosts were positively feral in the opening 40 minutes. There were echoes of the Champions Cup final in 2023 when Leinster established a similar lead against La Rochelle only to fall away in the final quarter. There was let up this time around. The 'everyone hates Leinster' mantra has served this squad well in recent weeks. It lit a fire under this playing group after that Northampton defeat had seemingly punctured their entire campaign. Leinster head coach Leo Cullen. Pic: INPHO/Craig Watson Andy Farrell will be heartened by what he saw. The sizeable Leinster contingent are straight into Lions duty today and they will arrive into camp with a spring in their step. The Lions head coach knows that the Leinster contingent have finally flushed those Champions Cup gremlins out of the system. Fittingly, the first-half concluded with McGrath lunching himself at Johan Goosen like an exocet missile after Ryan Baird had levelled Marcell Coetzee during a late defensive stand. The Bulls eventually ran out of willing carriers and ideas and Leinster charged off the pitch with a deserved 19-point lead. Thing is, it could have been even worse for the Bulls. Harold Vorster was a lucky man when he appeared to make contact with the eye area of McCarthy during an early skirmish. Referee Andrea Piardi absolutely bottled that call, merely awarding a penalty in Leinster's favour. It harked back to the Battle of Pretoria in 2009 when Lions wing Luke Fitzgerald was gouged by Springbok flanker Schalk Burger and French referee Christophe Berdos deemed the infraction only worthy of a yellow card. Shocking. No matter, the Bulls could have had 16 men on the field yesterday and they would have struggled. The visitors looks positively shellshocked as they left for the sanctity of the half-time break. Leinster, meanwhile, charged off the pitch with Clarkson getting a pat on the back from fellow tighthead Rabah Slimani. After biblical downpours all day, the sun then broke through the clouds over Hill 16. We were barely two minutes into the second half when Ryan – who put in a serious shift – was called ashore, with RG Snyman entering the fray. Prendergast kept the scoreboard ticking over with a penalty front of the sticks and when replacement hooker Akker van der Merwe was mauled over the line, we wondered if a late Bulls resurgence was on the cards? No way. Leinster weren't in the mood. When Prendergast shanked a kickable three-point in the 62nd minute, it drew a collective gasp from the 46,127-strong crowd. It felt like the first time that a Leinster player had made a big error. A perfect day at GAA headquarters was topped off when replacement scrum-half Fintan Gunne, who wasn't even in the matchday 23 until Gibson-Park's late withdrawal yesterday morning, showed a clean pair of heels to score in the corner. Ross Byrne, playing his last game for Leinster before his summer move to Gloucester, fired over the touchline conversion. What a way to land a first URC title. It should be the first of many if Leinster can replicate this performance in the seasons ahead. Even the haters would agree.

Rúaidhrí O'Connor: Huge relief as Leinster secure important win for Irish rugby at the end of underwhelming season
Rúaidhrí O'Connor: Huge relief as Leinster secure important win for Irish rugby at the end of underwhelming season

Irish Independent

time6 hours ago

  • Irish Independent

Rúaidhrí O'Connor: Huge relief as Leinster secure important win for Irish rugby at the end of underwhelming season

No one summed up the province's will to succeed more than their No 6, Ryan Baird When the Bulls were finally put out of their misery, Ryan Baird threw both hands into the air and roared into the sky. All around him, large South Africans in white jerseys sank to their knees in despair. No one summed up Leinster's refusal to let another final slip by more than their No 6. Man of the match in the semi-final and the final, Baird spoke about how he'd felt the pressure in the build-up, mentioned the fact that he is among a large contingent of Leinster players who have never enjoyed a trophy-winning moment in front of a crowd.

Dublin earn nervy win, Galway secure preliminary quarter-final place
Dublin earn nervy win, Galway secure preliminary quarter-final place

The Journal

time8 hours ago

  • The Journal

Dublin earn nervy win, Galway secure preliminary quarter-final place

The 42 The 42 is the home of quality journalism for passionate Irish sports fans, bringing you closer to the stories that matter through insightful analysis and sharp sportswriting. Dublin 0-22 Derry 0-20 DUBLIN EARNED A nervy 0-22 to 0-20 win over Derry at Pairc Esler today. Advertisement The result means Dessie Farrell's men secure a home draw for next weekend's preliminary quarter-final of the All-Ireland football championship, while Derry exit the championship. Galway 2-22 Armagh 0-27 Galway came from eight points down at half-time to score an after-hooter winner over defending All-Ireland champions Armagh and seal a preliminary quarter-final place. Armagh had already secured their passage into the last eight, but still came close to pulling off a victory The 42 Subscribers can read the full match reports here and here (€) The 42′s award-winning team produces original content that you won't find anywhere else: on GAA, League of Ireland, women's sport and boxing, as well as our game-changing rugby coverage, all with an Irish eye.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store