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Leinster v Scarlets preview: Heat is on the Blue front-row and kick fielders

Leinster v Scarlets preview: Heat is on the Blue front-row and kick fielders

Scarlets finished eighth in the URC league-proper, surviving failing to secure any league points from a brave display against Sharks, going down 12-3 in Durban, in the final round.
At the same time there is the temptation to say they deserved a break as their round 16 win over Leinster, 35-22 at Parc y Scarlets, was genuinely deserved, not least as they kept the Blues scoreless through the last half-hour.
Leinster were second-best on the day as Scarlet made off with a bonus point, winning the try-scoring 4-3, clean breaks 12-8, defenders beaten 34-31 and, thanks to some judicious kicking, had 53 percent of the territory.
Enough, admits Ronan Kelleher who was part of the starting front-row alongside Cian Healy and Thomas Clarkson in Llanelli, to give any team coming to the Aviva to play Leinster believe the feat can be repeated.
'Absolutely," grimaces the hooker, "obviously off the back of it they got into the play-offs and I thought they were really good on the day.
"I thought we obviously were poor in parts as well, but we obviously know how much of a threat that they can cause.
"Having played in it, you obviously get it first hand. We took a lot of learnings from that game, what we did wrong, what we need to get right this next day.
"And I think that is going to be a massive challenge this weekend, but it had also been a massive focus for us last week because obviously we had the down week not playing in that game and this week now going ahead.'
Scarlets started Alec Hepburn on the loose side and he played 78 minutes and there are those who will tell you he pushed Taine Plumtree close for Man of Match; Ryan Elias at hooker and Henry Thomas at tighthead at Parc y Scarlets played 54 minutes apiece.
Irish fans are not used to thinking modern Welsh sides are good scrummagers but there was cause for thought there.
'They're quite good, tricky to manage, to be fair." continues Leinster, Ireland and Lions panellist, Kelleher.
"Someone like Ryan Elias is experienced. He might not start on the weekend, I don't know what the story is with them, but he's quite good. Henry Thomas is a very experienced scrummager as well.
"Alec Hepburn has obviously been around the block (London Welsh 2013-14, Exeter Chiefs 2014-2024, England 6 caps 2018, Scotland 4 caps 2024). I think the word I'd use is tricky, to be honest.
"There has been a bit in the past about how some teams like to load up a lot of weight and you get that load on the neck in the scrum. I think they're a team that probably favours that a bit.
"It's just about how you manage that with the referee and how you get through that game. How you communicate that as well.
"Because it's important that we get clean scrums, because no one wants that in a game where it is collapsing, feet gone or people standing up because there is too much weight and that. It's just about how do you manage that really.'
Besides the Northampton loss was also raining on the Irishman's parade at a time when he should be celebrating his Lions selection, buoyed from the best piece of TV news this season.
'Obviously it was Thursday here. Finished up training, grabbed the gear bag, ran home. I live with Hugo Keenan, so it was the two of us just watching it together. It was tense.
"It was actually funny because it was one of those things. You hadn't really put much thought into it really. Obviously it was in the background of your mind, but you hadn't actually thought about it at all.
"When I left training I was like 'jeez, it's happening in the next half an hour', but obviously it dragged on a bit. It was pretty nervy, the two of us just on the couch watching it.
"Obviously absolutely delighted once my name was called. I was thrilled. Obviously we had to wait another couple of minutes [the forwards are announced en bloc first] until Hugo's name was called, so we could both celebrate together.
"It was great, I was absolutely delighted. My family as well were absolutely thrilled, over the moon. It was unreal.'
"As soon as my name was announced, my phone started buzzing. I had to throw it away until Hugo's thing. It was pretty surreal to be honest, but it was unbelievable.'
The countdown to Australia has begun.
'We met up as a group there over in London and that was good. It's good to meet everyone. Obviously with those things, there is always obviously a small bit of anxiety going in to meet everyone, but everyone was dead sound.
"It was brilliant meeting everyone. It's just a funny concept obviously because you're enemies for the three or four years in the build-up and then obviously you come together, and you have to get close quick.
"It was great, it's very much been focused on the here and now. Obviously we had the disappointment with the finish in Europe and now obviously all our eyes are on this competition and trying to win this one.'

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Ireland 'need to be miles better' as Ward and McCabe target Slovenia shootout in Cork
Ireland 'need to be miles better' as Ward and McCabe target Slovenia shootout in Cork

The 42

time4 hours ago

  • The 42

Ireland 'need to be miles better' as Ward and McCabe target Slovenia shootout in Cork

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Scarlets and the secret weapon that defeated Leinster in April
Scarlets and the secret weapon that defeated Leinster in April

Irish Daily Mirror

time5 hours ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

Scarlets and the secret weapon that defeated Leinster in April

Leinster head into their URC quarter-final with Scarlets at the Aviva this afternoon as hot, hot favourites. The bookies are offering Scarlets at even money plus-24 points despite the Welsh team winning the similar fixture by 13 points in Llanelli in late April. The match was marked by Scarlets hiding their kicking intent well, using four different players - full-back Blair Murray, centre Johnny Williams and half-backs Sam Costelow, Gareth Davies (injured today), at various times to take on the task. Lesser noted was the pressure put on the Blues front-row with Ronan Kelleher labelling Scarlets 'tricky' and Leo Cullen adding there was some 'messing around' which starting trio Healy-Kelleher-Clarkson starting didn't quite get to grips with "Yeh, there was a little bit of just sort of messing around in terms of weight," offered Cullen who has recalled Andrew Porter to loose-head for the clash. "So in the scrum there's obviously different teams will do things differently, what they (Scarlets) will do is they will load up their locks (second-rows) off their knees and there can be a lot of weight that comes forward on the bind phase and it's trying to deal with some of that weight. "We are a team that comes off split-stance, we would like to have a gap so then you're able to so we have stability, whereas that's a different philosophy. "And obviously there's a lot of debate goes around with Scrum Coaches and referees and that's why they would communicate quite a lot in the dressing room. "Every time a referee comes into a dressing room before a game, who does he talk to? He talks to the front-row first." Scarlet loosehead Alec Hepburn stayed in the fight for 78 minutes last April essentially getting the better of Thomas Clarkson and 50th minute replacement Rabah Slimani and this will clearly be an area Leinster will be looking to improve on. Porter's restoration to loosehead and the interesting selection of Kelleher is down to the idea he is a better scrummager than Dan Sheehan (with the reverse applicable at lineout time). "No," said Cullen when asked where Scarlets doing anything illegal or was the referee at fault at Parc y Scarlets, "we wouldn't have complained but we would have an ongoing conversation pre and post games. That's why we just had normal course events." The end of the season is in sight - and linear - in that the focus is one competition, winning three games. 'Exactly, we want to extend it out now, it's not the worst thing to do as a career, train in the good weather. And for the group as well, the group wants to continue on. "Scarlets will be saying the same thing, they'll be hugely motivated, it's a big deal for them, they haven't been in a play-off game in a little while so we lost to them in the 2017 semi-final and that was a game that stung for a while as well." It was, to be fair, quite the shock at the RDS at the time. "They haven't changed that drastically in the way they play since then, strong poachers at the ball, Johnny Barclay and Tadhg Beirne were there, if you remember they had a player sent off in that game, no11 Steff Evans, after 37 minutes. "We played against 14 men, they were very clinical, they scored a couple of tries before half time which takes my memory back to recent memory, back to Northampton. "We conceded 17 points in the 12 minutes prior to half time when Northampton had a man in the bin. That's a proper sucker punch to a team,isn't it? "Everyone looks back at the Northampton game whether your mind goes to not being quite right, whatever it is, the players certainl talk like they were right mentally. "But there was a period before the half, ironically after we scored to go 15-10 up and then we conceded three tries, when we go 15-27 down at half-time and get stung by that. "Making sure we deal with that and learn from the past, I'm talking a long time ago in 2017 when Scarlets won a semi-final here, they'll be drawing on whatever they can draw on." It is knockout rugby from herein, no second chances, no backdoors. "It's on the day, it's not about what happened before. Scarlets, don't care if they are eighth or first, they are just here for a knockout game, and spoil the party for us, and go on and extend their season." "The players need to make sure that they do that. They need to make sure that however good Scarlets are going to be they will do everything in their power to be better than them so but the reality is that we know it's just about being one better than the opposition. "Listen to Bordeaux talking after the weekend, I don't think they said they played particularly well but they just need to play better than the opposition so unfortunately that's knockout games, what they come down to be that little bit better than the opposition." Scarlets captain Josh Macleod admits that while his side posted 35 points in attack the last time the sides met, he expects to have to work harder on the other side of the ball today.'I am not too sure, but one thing I do know is that when you get into knockouts, defences win you championships and we need to be there. "Attack is not really my forte, but if we can score another 35 points it will go a long way to winning the game. "We will try to be positive, we have a gameplan that we have installed, and yes, we do know that come the 80 minutes we are going to have to score that three, four, five tries in order to beat them.' Leinster: Hugo Keenan, Jimmy O'Brien, Jamie Osborne, Jordie Barrett, James Lowe, Sam Prendergast, Jamison Gibson-Park, Andrew Porter, Rónan Kelleher, Thomas Clarkson, Joe McCarthy, James Ryan, Ryan Baird, Josh van der Flier, Jack Conan (CAPT) Replacements: Dan Sheehan, Jack Boyle, Rabah Slimani, RG Snyman, Max Deegan, Scott Penny, Luke McGrath, Ciarán Frawley Scarlets: Blair Murray, Tom Rogers, Joe Roberts, Johnny Williams, Ellis Mee, Sam Costelow, Archie Hughes, Alec Hepburn, Ryan Elias, Henry Thomas, Alex Craig, Sam Lousi, Vaea Fifita, Josh Macleod (CAPT), Taine Plumtree Replacements: Marnus van der Merwe, Kemsley Mathias, Sam Wainwright, Dan Davis, Jarrod Taylor, Efan Jones, Ioan Lloyd, Macs Page

'That's an Irish mentality' - Carla Ward hails spirit in Turkey
'That's an Irish mentality' - Carla Ward hails spirit in Turkey

RTÉ News​

time7 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

'That's an Irish mentality' - Carla Ward hails spirit in Turkey

Carla Ward believes "an Irish mentality" helped her side turn things around against Turkey and keep their Nations League promotion hopes alive. One down heading into the 80th minute, a Busem Seker OG and an excellent Emily Murphy volley got the Republic of Ireland out of Istanbul with a precious 2-1 victory. They finish their campaign with a clash against unbeaten Slovenia at Páirc Ui Chaoimh on Tuesday. The Girls in Green were hammered 4-0 in Koper, so they must beat the Slovenians by five goals or more to top the group and gain promotion to League A. If they don't, Ireland will head for the two-legged promotion/relegation play-offs in the autumn, when they'll be pitted against one of the third-placed League A sides. "That's character, that's character for you," Ward told RTÉ Sport when reflecting on Friday's win. "That's an Irish mentality... never rolling over. Even when we went 1-0 down - which we're disappointed with the goal - the reaction after that, the togetherness, the attitdue to go and win tackles, close gaps, making sure we were front footed is something we can walk away and be proud of. "I actually think winning it like that at the death puts us in a good position for Tuesday." Any late win is a sweet one, but overall this was not a strong Irish display. They looked short of ideas against well organised, physical opponents, delivering another under-par first-half showing - something that's become a bad habit over the last few matches. "It's something we've got to keep addressing," Ward said. "We've got to keep trying to work out why, and it's something we spoke about before the game, 'let's not wait till half-time to adjust and go after things, we have to start brighter'. "We can't wait for 45 minutes against Slovenia to be at them. There's going to be a lot of looking at that. We've got to dissect it, we've got to get into it, we'll go and have some honest conversations about how we start bright. "But listen this group's hungry. They don't want to roll over, they want to go. We've got a young and hungry squad that want to all play. "We saw that tonight with some changes. We need to be way better come Tuesday. There'll be a few things we need to tweak again, but the most important thing is we got the three points." Slovenia have won all five of their games so far and utterly dismantled Ireland back in February. Managed by Sasa Kolman, who counts Donegal boss Jim McGuinness as mentor, they are unquestionaly a coming team. To beat them by any scoreline will require a top performance . To beat them by five would be a minor miracle. But Ward insists her players will keep the faith and give everything to pull off what would be a remarkable result. "We've lost one game, which we know hurt us," she added. "We walked away with a win tonight, let's remember that. We've put ourselves in a position were we can go on Tuesday and try and finish top. If we don't, then we've put oursleves in a position now where we get a second bite of the cherry in (the play-offs in) October. "We have to win 5-0, which is not easy against any team now because women's football is improving in every country as you can see in all the Nations Leagues, A, B and C. So it's going to be tough. "One thing we will do is go out there with an attitude, a mindset and a belief that anything is possible. The Irish love that. I love that. It's why I took the job. We'll certainly give it absolutely everything. "I've heard an awful lot about Cork, I've heard about the noise down there. We're going to need everyone. We're going to need every single bit of Irish noise and blood because we're going to give everything, and we need the fans to back us, we need the fans to be there, loud.

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