Dave Rennie's Glasgow fall to their fourth loss of the season at the hands of Pro14 title favourites
Leo Cullen's Leinster extended their winning run and with it their lead at the top of Guinness Pro14 Conference A with a 23-10 victory over the Dave Rennie-coached Glasgow in a repeat of last season’s final.
Two Ruaridh Jackson tries in the opening 25 minutes helped Glasgow take a 10-3 lead but Leinster responded with a brace of tries from Cian Kelleher and 13 points from the boot of Ross Byrne to claim the spoils.
Leinster, who beat Glasgow 18-15 at Celtic Park in May to lift their second successive Pro14 title, have now won seven out of seven this season, while the Warriors have won three and lost four.
There was an eventful start at a freezing Scotstoun as Leinster lost full-back Hugo Keenen to a yellow card inside three minutes after he impeded Huw Jones. Then, from the resulting penalty, a combination of a successful line out and swift hands resulted in Peter Horne putting Jackson over in the corner.
Horne missed the conversion and a simple penalty but Ross Byrne made no mistake with his effort to get Leinster on the board.
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Errors abounded but it was Glasgow who stretched their lead when, following Sam Johnson’s break, Jackson was put clear on the left for his second try.
Again the kick was missed and that was followed by a nightmare four minutes for Glasgow as Leinster left wing Kelleher struck twice, first after lazy Glasgow tackling then three minutes later off a lovely pass from Keenan. With Ross Byrne converting both, the visitors were in the driving seat and despite a desperate Glasgow flurry, went in 17-10 ahead at the break.
The second half was all about Leinster power and control. They kept the ball, took over the set-piece and forced Glasgow into errors and frustration.
That frustration led to indiscipline as the Leinster pack splintered the Glasgow scrum for a penalty Ross Byrne was never going to miss and when the hosts, bereft of ideas, again kicked the ball away, the powerful return from Keenan and a big carry from Will Conners brought up the fly-half’s third penalty.
Starved of possession and territory, Glasgow had little hope of breaking down a solid Leinster defence and luck was not with them either, Niko Matawalu slipping when heading for the line and a Huw Jones try pulled back for an earlier infringement.
Conners, James Tracy and Jamison Gibson-Park all niggled away at the Glasgow defence and although no further points resulted, Leinster’s grip on the game did not flag for a moment.
It ended as the first half had done, a huge multi-phase effort from Glasgow which perished, even after they had twice crossed the line, on a ferocious Leinster defence, determined to deny their hosts even a losing bonus.
- AssociatedPress
All Black Ardie Save has made a few tongue-in-cheek comments about rugby's eligibility laws:
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He’s played there before but the opposition was much tougher this time around
Go to commentsBok hatey drivel. All four are solid candidates Legit rugby folk would applaud any of them getting the prize.
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