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Leinster class shines through in bruising URC semi-final that proved familiarity breeds contempt

Leinster class shines through in bruising URC semi-final that proved familiarity breeds contempt

Irish Times09-06-2025
URC semi-final: Leinster 37 Glasgow Warriors 19
There were reminders aplenty of the dominance exerted by
Ireland
and
Leinster
over their Scottish counterparts for much of the professional era. This
United Rugby Championship
semi-final had echoes of Ireland dismantling and
eliminating Scotland in the World Cup
at the Stade de France, both in the scale of the victory and the undercurrent of hostility bubbling between the two sides.
Watching Adam Hastings grappling with, and sneering at James Lowe toward the end of the first half – by which point Leinster were almost out of sight – brought to mind some of the scuffles that day in
Paris
as well. Once again, it made you wonder why some Scottish players seem so intent on riling their Irish opposition.
Two late converted tries were of modest consolation to the Warriors and merely distorted the scoreline. Such was Leinster's command of the physical exchanges that this was much closer to the 52-0 rout in the Champions Cup quarter-final two months ago than the hard-earned 13-5 win in a dead-rubber three weeks ago.
After all, Leinster had two tries ruled out in the first half for crossing and a forward pass, and Jordie Barrett also couldn't ground the ball over the line. Furthermore, Sam Prendergast left behind 11 points off the tee by missing four conversions and a penalty.
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They say familiarity breeds contempt and it's evident that this ultra-focused and ruthless upgrade on Leinster's previous two displays was a backhanded compliment to Glasgow in dethroning the champions.
It was evident, right from the start, that Leinster were in the mood
'When you play a team you play quite frequently, and that gives it back to you in spades, there is that motivation to do your best,' admitted Jack Conan afterwards. 'We spoke just about being physical and dominant and we were for the majority and that is really pleasing. We'll use this as another stepping stone for next week.'
Equally as revealing was Jamison Gibson-Park when he told an array of ex-players-turned-pundits on Premier Sports: 'I suppose it was the ideal opponent for us in the semi-finals. We've a bit of history with Glasgow. We've had some ding-dong battles with them over the years.'
Dan Sheehan celebrates with Jamison Gibson-Park after scoring Leinster's first try against Glasgow Warriors. Photograph: Ben Brady/Inpho
It was evident, right from the start, that Leinster were in the mood. Prendergast's hanging kick-off led to Tommy O'Brien leading the charge as Henco Venter was engulfed. He conceded a penalty for not releasing.
Cue a kick to the corner, a lineout maul and a patient power play which culminated in the first of another brace by Dan Sheehan, thus taking his tally to 14 for the season.
When Leinster are 'on it' like they were here, to quote Conan, it serves to demonstrate how under-par their display was a week beforehand against the Scarlets. It also makes the performance against
Northampton in the Champions Cup semi-final
harder to understand, particularly the lack of urgency and intensity in defence.
As well as dominating on the ground, rarely has a team so reigned supreme in the air as Leinster did here. Franco Smith must regret restoring Hastings's kicking game to outhalf and seeking to target a fired-up Lowe in the air. Even so, the gulf in class was so pronounced that it probably didn't make a huge difference to the outcome.
Tacit admittance of this came at half-time when Hastings was withdrawn and the departing Tom Jordan shifted back to outhalf, from where he had orchestrated the commanding quarter-final win over the Stormers.
While four of the six tries were down to the pack's dominance and power plays, a couple were a product of the highly-skilled, high-tempo rugby they are capable of producing when also in the mood.
The counterattack to set up an overload on the blindside of the recycle was nicely worked. The crowd witnessed quick hands by Prendergast, Barrett and Jimmy O'Brien before Lowe's one-handed offload sent Jamie Osborne through to finish along the touchline. That made it 15-5 and was vintage Leinster. So too was the bout of continuity initiated by Lowe's high take and carry, and support play by Ryan Baird which culminated in Tommy O'Brien keeping the ball alive for Ciarán Frawley to finish.
'We always want to play at pace,' said Conan, although there seemed to be a much more concerted effort to do so in this match than in that pedestrian quarter-final against the Scarlets.
Leinster's Ryan Baird, who was outstanding throughout, offloads the ball. Photograph: Dan Sheridan/Inpho
'If you look at our athletes, the players, we have pace across the board. We want to stretch teams, we want to put them under pressure, we want to play quick from rucks.'
Nor was this a pre-ordained tactic, as such. 'It was just the way the game developed. It started fast, we had the ball a lot. Sometimes you can get sucked into kick-battles and stuff like that and you are trying to play territory or whatever.
'But that wasn't the case today. We rolled up our sleeves and got to work and got the bit of pace which suits us.'
The energy brought by the less exposed players this season, such as Tom Clarkson, Baird, Osborne and the O'Briens, underlined that going deep into a season requires going deep into a squad.
In his fifth successive 80-minute outing, the outstanding Baird never let up, invariably leading Leinster's hungry kick-chase, even when first to a long restart in the 79th minute.
Watched by Andy Farrell, the thought occurred that such a rare talent should really be a Lion.
SCORING SEQUENCE – 3 mins:
Sheehan try, Prendergast con, 7-0;
5:
Horne try, 7-5;
23:
Prendergast pen, 10-5;
28:
Osborne try, 15-5;
33:
Clarkson try, 20-5; (
half-time 20-5
);
41:
Sheehan try, 25-5;
54:
Osborne try, Prendergast con, 32-5;
58:
Frawley try, 37-5;
72:
Dobie try, Jordan con, 37-12;
79:
Tuipulotu try, Jordan con, 37-19.
LEINSTER:
Jimmy O'Brien; Tommy O'Brien, Jamie Osborne, Jordie Barrett, James Lowe; Sam Prendergast, Jamison Gibson-Park; Andrew Porter, Dan Sheehan, Thomas Clarkson; Joe McCarthy, James Ryan; Ryan Baird, Scott Penny, Jack Conan (capt).
Replacements:
Rónan Kelleher for Sheehan, RG Snyman for Ryan (both 55 mins); Rabah Slimani for Clarkson, Ciarán Frawley for Barrett (both 56); Jack Boyle for Porter (59); Ross Byrne for Prendergast (61); Max Deegan for Conan (64); Luke McGrath for Gibson-Park (70 mins).
GLASGOW WARRIORS:
Josh McKay; Kyle Steyn (capt), Sione Tuipulotu, Tom Jordan, Kyle Rowe; Adam Hastings, George Horne; Jamie Bhatti, Gregor Hiddleston, Fin Richardson; Alex Samuel, Scott Cummings; Euan Ferrie, Rory Darge, Henco Venter.
Replacements:
Stafford McDowall for Hastings (h-t); Johnny Matthews for Hiddleston, Rory Sutherland for Bhatti, Sam Talakai for Richardson, Max Williamson for Samuel (all 45 mins); Jamie Dobie for Horne (52); Macenzzie Duncan for Venter (59), Jack Mann for Ferrie (73).
Referee:
Andrea Piardi (FIR).
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Eight years, two All-Irelands and five All-Stars, Kerry's David Clifford takes stock of career to date
Eight years, two All-Irelands and five All-Stars, Kerry's David Clifford takes stock of career to date

Irish Examiner

time13 minutes ago

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Eight years, two All-Irelands and five All-Stars, Kerry's David Clifford takes stock of career to date

David Clifford at 26. It's an interesting time to take stock, at the halfway point of an extraordinary inter-county football career. It's eight years since Jack O'Shea, speaking after watching Clifford shoot 1-10 for the Kerry minors in the 2017 All-Ireland semi-final win over Cavan, said that the Fossa phenom was already equipped for senior duty. The Kerry seniors were preparing to play Mayo and O'Shea said he'd start Clifford if he could, 'without a doubt'. The rules prohibited it so a teenage Clifford stuck to minor duty and memorably hit Derry for 4-4 in that year's final. "I'm looking forward to watching him for the next 10 years," said O'Shea at the time. That decade has almost passed and Clifford last month claimed his second All-Ireland senior medal. He has seven Munster medals too, five All-Stars and will probably break new ground as the first three-time recipient of the Footballer of the Year award. But Jacko is still well out in front in the All-Ireland medal count, with seven. So how has the first half of his career been for Clifford, is he happy with everything he has achieved at this stage? "If I am to look back from here, it's been a very fast eight years with Kerry," said the PwC GAA/GPA Player of the Month for July in football. "Jesus, it doesn't seem like I've been playing senior for that long. I still feel 21 or 22 but it's not the case anymore. I don't know, like, you want to be winning All-Irelands and you'd love to win it every year but I suppose you're kind of realising that that's not the case and you kind of understand how hard they are to win." Clifford finished this year's Championship with 8-62 from nine games, comfortably the country's leading scorer with an average of just under 10 points per game. Even accounting for the 14 two-pointers he kicked - again, a record - it's outrageous scoring. What the schoolteacher and father of one can say for certain is that he enjoyed this All-Ireland more than the 2022 win. It was 'relief' back then, just to finally get a medal, while it was more smiles and celebrations across the 2025 campaign. There were plenty of comments about just how much Clifford celebrated his points and goals. "It probably just comes out, particularly the scores in Croke Park," he explained. "The crowd seemed to be behind us and if you can get a score and then get involved with the crowd, it just gives the crowd, and you, an extra lift again. So yeah, it probably just comes out of you at the time and sometimes you're probably over-celebrating and things but at the time it seems to be what's right." Clifford cuts a relaxed figure as his mid-20s eye up his late-20s. Lead him down avenues that he doesn't wish to travel and he's confident enough to immediately cut you off with the same ruthlessness he showed Brendan McCole on All-Ireland final day. For instance, he is asked if he'd fancy any new rules in Gaelic football. "I think we might be better off leaving them alone with all the changes over the last year," he deadpanned. He doesn't see much value in going deep into his apparent mentorship of the younger players in the Kerry panel either. "I don't think I said much to them, to be honest." Yet when Clifford felt a need mid-season to open up and encourage the supporters to get behind the team, he jumped on it. Ahead of the Armagh game, Clifford took the unusual step of publicly urging fans to turn out in big numbers at Croke Park. Did he feel the supporters weren't fully engaged? "Not really, there was a big crowd for the Meath game but we were brutal against Meath," he said. "As a team, we were miles off it. It would have been easy for people to stop coming after that game, that was the thing. It wasn't that they weren't behind us but it would have been easy to stop going to games after that because we were way off it. It wasn't good enough." The no-show against Meath will eventually be forgotten. When the story of the 2025 Championship is reflected upon, it'll be all about the smiles and scores of Kerry's lethal talisman. "There was a lot more joy and a lot more fun associated with it," acknowledged Clifford of 2025. Because of the new rules? "Obviously that made a massive difference," he nodded. "Look, the way the game had gone in the last few years, it became hard to get space. There weren't many kick-pass plays. So it was hard. You were trying to pick your way around it. At the time, maybe you didn't realise how hard it was. When you see the new game now, it's made a huge difference." Back in May, Clifford was only half joking when he lamented how quickly the four-point goal trial had been jettisoned. "I was liking the sound of the four points for a goal," he said at the time. The Football Review Committee had a look at it again recently. Presumably, given his eight goals in this year's Championship, Clifford would favour a rethink? "Possibly, yeah," he said. "Because I suppose at the moment the difference between a two-pointer and a goal isn't hectic. But still, a goal is still...I know it's only worth one more than a two-pointer, but it's just a bit different." And on the Clifford show will go, for the coming weeks and months with Fossa. After games, he will continue to be besieged by kids and autograph and selfie hunters, win or lose. "It can be hard at times, after a loss maybe with Fossa or whatever, and the kids still want their photo," said Clifford. "To try and remove yourself from the loss and understand that the kids just want their photo or whatever it is. You kind of get used to it. I'm not perfect with it. Sometimes you're just not in the form for meeting people or taking photos or whatever but I try, if I can, I try to help them out. 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John McGrath: Second half of final beyond 'wildest dreams'
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RTÉ News​

time27 minutes ago

  • RTÉ News​

John McGrath: Second half of final beyond 'wildest dreams'

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David Clifford urges GAA chiefs to stop tinkering with rules after Kerry's All-Ireland glory
David Clifford urges GAA chiefs to stop tinkering with rules after Kerry's All-Ireland glory

The Irish Sun

time42 minutes ago

  • The Irish Sun

David Clifford urges GAA chiefs to stop tinkering with rules after Kerry's All-Ireland glory

Clifford, top scorer with a stunning 8-62, says he 'enjoyed it a lot more' this time as the Kingdom mastered Gaelic football's revamped rulebook TOO MUCH David Clifford urges GAA chiefs to stop tinkering with rules after Kerry's All-Ireland glory THE new rules that have revamped Gaelic football helped to make David Clifford's second All-Ireland SFC triumph even more enjoyable than the first. But with the Football Review Committee considering further changes, the talismanic Kerry forward reckons it is time to leave well enough alone. 2 David Clifford scooped the PwC GAA/GPA Player of the Month for July 2 The Kerry icon wants GAA brass to stop adjusting the rule in Gaelic Football Clifford thrived under the rule changes this year as the Kingdom regained the Sam Maguire. The victory over Donegal in last month's final delivered another Celtic Cross for the 26-year-old, who claimed his first in 2022. He said: "I think the first one was probably a lot of relief because you hadn't won one. This one, personally I enjoyed it a lot more. There was a lot more joy and a lot more fun associated with it." With 8-62 to his credit, Clifford finished atop the Championship scoring charts with a 33-point buffer separating him from team-mate Seán O'Shea in second. His tally was boosted by no fewer than FOURTEEN two-pointers. Addressing the role played by the rules, he continued: "Obviously it made a massive difference. "The way the game had gone in the last few years, it became hard to get space and there wasn't many kick-pass plays and there wasn't many fast plays, so it was hard. "You were trying to kind of pick your way around it and at the time maybe you didn't realise how hard it was. But when you see the new game now, it's made a huge difference." The roll of honour will forever show that Kerry were the first team to master the game since it underwent a significant overhaul ahead of the 2025 season. Clifford added: "The three-up and the fact that you can have bodies in the top half of the pitch when you turn over a ball, that you're able to kick-pass, we would have felt that would have suited us. Henry Shefflin among GAA stars at Oasis gigs where Man City tradition made its Croke Park debut "Obviously every team kind of adapts and it ends up suiting a lot of different teams. But we thought the way they were written up would have suited us alright." Further amendments to the rule book could still be made as the FRC recently put a couple more to the test in a trial game between Dublin clubs Round Towers and Fingallians. Players were unable to bring the ball back into their own half once it had crossed the halfway mark. The four-point goal, which Clifford admits to being 'not sure' about, was also given another spin after being scrapped from the agenda last winter. But the five-time All-Star said: "I think we might be better off leaving them alone with all the changes after last year. No, I'm happy with the way it is, to be honest." A third Footballer of Year award in four seasons looks likely for Clifford, who enhanced his status as an all-time great with a string of superb performances while also claiming National League and Munster SFC medals in 2025. The secondary school teacher, who made his senior debut just a few days removed from his 19th birthday, said: "I suppose if I'm to look back from here, it's been a very fast eight years with Kerry. "Jesus, yeah, it doesn't seem like I've been playing senior for that long. I still feel 21 or 22, but it's not the case anymore. 'Like, you want to be winning All-Irelands and you'd love to win it every year. "But I suppose you're kind of realising that's not the case and you kind of understand how hard they are to win so you kind of cherish the ones we've won a bit more maybe." While being tightly marked by Brendan McCole, Clifford spent just 43 seconds in possession during this year's All-Ireland final. Yet it is a mark of his magic that he still managed to rack up 0-9. He explained: "You might have only eight or nine possessions in the final and in another game you could have 30 possessions. It just depends what kind of comes in front of you. "I'm delighted if I can keep wide and let the rest of the boys do damage. I'm delighted with that. At this stage, it's just about winning as a team. "The individual stuff now doesn't really matter much. It's about winning as a team. That's kind of all that matters to me now." KINGDOM FAME As a bona fide superstar, Clifford has grown accustomed to being mobbed by young supporters in the aftermath of games, particularly with his club Fossa and divisional outfit East Kerry. On life in the limelight, he said: "It can be hard at times. Let's say after a loss, maybe with Fossa or whatever and kids still want their photo, to try and remove yourself from the loss and understand that the kids just want their photo or whatever. "You kind of get used to it. I'm not perfect with it in one sense. Sometimes you're just not in the form for meeting people or taking photos or whatever. But I try, if I can, to help them out. 'I was a young person meeting Kerry players not that long ago, so I kind of understand what it brings to them.'

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