IN TOULOUSE, LEINSTER lost their way even after edging in front.
In Bath, it was a different story as Leo Cullen’s side nudged ahead via Jordan Larmour’s intercept try and then closed out a hard-fought victory. The win puts them back into a strong position from which to earn Heineken Champions Cup quarter-final qualification.
“Finding a way is sometimes important,” said Cullen post-match at the Rec, where the conditions were miserable.
Leinster celebrate Jordan Larmour’s try. Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO
“In that game against Toulouse when we go ahead, do we just mentally switch off a little bit or do we think we’re naturally going to go and score a try to get a bonus point to win? I think that probably is in a lot of people’s heads.
“Suddenly, the opposition team who are fighting in their home ground come back strong and they take a chance and get an intercept.
“We got an intercept today, and that’s the fine margins. You’re playing top-end teams that have massive resources, so I think everyone talks about us because we had a good year but we’re playing against the same teams that we were struggling against two or three years ago.
“It’s certainly fine margins and you need to get a lot right on any given day, particularly when you’re away from home.”
Those fine margins were evident throughout a gruelling December encounter. Important moments all over the place, enough of them going in Leinster’s favour.
Cian Healy’s turnover penalty in the Leinster 22 in the second half. Rob Kearney cleverly falling to ground to ensure Joe Cokanasiga couldn’t hammer him on kick chase.
James Wilson opting for a double skip pass on a windy day, presuming he had advantage. The scrum penalty won by Healy, Sean Cronin and Tadhg Furlong. Cullen’s men just about edged onto the right side of those fine margins.
That said, they were bettered at breakdown time by the ferocious dual threat of Bath back rows Sam Underhill and Francois Louw, with Cullen citing some poor ball-carrying and lethargy in support players who were “losing that race into the space.”
It was a highly-physical encounter in Bath. Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO
It remains to be seen exactly what kind of shape Bath arrive in Dublin this weekend for the return fixture, although boss Todd Blackadder promised that they will come “full metal jacket” in a bid to keep their quarter-final hopes alive.