Leicester fight back from 11-point deficit to break 12-year hoodoo
Leicester reached a first European final for 12 years as they claimed an impressive 33-24 Challenge Cup victory over Ulster at Mattioli Woods Welford Road.
Tigers wiped out an 11-point interval deficit to book a place against Bath or Montpellier in the Twickenham final on May 21 after England fly-half George Ford ran the show.
For half the contest, it looked like Leicester would go the same way as Harlequins and Northampton as Ulster chased a hat-trick of wins against Gallagher Premiership clubs in Europe this season.
But with British and Irish Lions assistant coaches Gregor Townsend and Steve Tandy conducting a watching brief ahead of next Thursday’s South Africa tour squad announcement, Leicester rallied brilliantly.
Ford kicked 18 points from a drop-goal, three penalties and three conversions, while Tigers’ England prop Ellis Genge, South African number eight Jasper Wiese and wing Guy Porter scored tries.
Ulster claimed touchdowns from skipper Iain Henderson, fly-half Billy Burns and number eight Nick Timoney, plus a Michael Lowry conversion and two conversions and a penalty by scrum-half John Cooney, but Leicester prevailed and booked a first European final appearance since being beaten by Heineken Cup opponents Leinster in 2009.
Richard Wigglesworth was handed the starting scrum-half spot for Leicester ahead of Ben Youngs, while George Martin returned at blindside flanker and Fiji international wing Nemani Nadolo also started.
Ulster showed five changes from the team that faced Rainbow Cup opponents Connacht last Friday, with centre Stuart McCloskey, prop Marty Moore and flanker Jordi Murphy among those called up.
The visitors dominated early possession and territory, but they then conceded two quickfire penalties inside their own half, with Ford accepting his second opportunity and nudging Leicester ahead.
Cooney, though, soon replied for Ulster, and Leicester found themselves pinned in their own 22 as wing Robert Baloucoune dived over in the corner, but the try was disallowed following a knock-on by Timoney.
Ulster only had to wait another three minutes for an opening touchdown, though, and it arrived after Tigers skipper Tom Youngs was sin-binned for a technical infringement.
The Ulster forwards laid siege to Leicester’s line, and Henderson smashed his way across, claiming a try that Cooney converted for an early 10-3 lead.
An impressive long-range penalty by Ford cut Leicester’s deficit, yet Tigers’ optimism proved short-lived as Ulster carved them open for a second try after 22 minutes.
This time, Burns was the beneficiary of outstanding work by Ulster’s pack, cutting a delicious attacking angle to score, before Cooney again converted.
Leicester responded with a spell in Ulster’s 22 as the first half drew to a close, but Ulster were full value for an 11-point interval lead.
Cooney went off early in the second period following a collision with Nadolo, and his departure understandably rocked Ulster, with Leicester scoring a try just two minutes after he exited the contest as Wiese touched down and Ford converted.
It was just what the Tigers needed, and when Ford completed his penalty hat-trick shortly afterwards, they found themselves just a point adrift.
Ulster could not handle Leicester’s ferocity, and they fell behind when Genge scored a 54th-minute try that Ford converted from the touchline, then Ford’s drop-goal afforded Tigers a degree of breathing space.
But Ulster hit back through a fine try from Timoney, converted by Lowry, to set up a tense finish, before Porter’s score calmed the nerves and took Tigers to Twickenham.
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I will consider such. But I think outliers like Rod Macqueen are difficult to plan for and or identify logically.
But I’ll keep an open mind and include Rod Macqueen in my assessment.
Go to commentsi think Argentina v France could be a good game too, depending on which Argentina turns up. The most difficult to call is Scotland Australia.
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