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Leicester Tigers' very mediocre record against Ulster and 16 other European rugby factoids

Press Association

It’s a big semi-final weekend in Europe, with eight teams vying to make four spots across the two EPCR tournament finals after what has been a chaotic 14 months for the game.

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Organisers have released their preview notes for the weekend, and they make for interesting reading for stats nerds and casual fans alike.

HEINEKEN CHAMPIONS CUP

1 – Leinster have played four of their 11 semi-finals to date in France, winning once against ASM Clermont Auvergne in 2012, but losing the other three.

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Mike Brown and Maggie Alphonsi guests on The Offload:

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Mike Brown and Maggie Alphonsi guests on The Offload:

2 – Ugo Mola, a winner with Toulouse in 1996, is in line to emulate Leinster’s Leo Cullen who is currently the only person to have won the tournament both as a player and as a Head Coach. Although Ali Hepher, who won with Northampton Saints in 2000, is the Exeter Chiefs’ Head Coach, he is the club’s No 2 behind Rob Baxter. Similarly, Ronan O’Gara, a winner with Munster in 2006 and 2008, is currently the No 2 at La Rochelle to Director of Rugby, Jono Gibbes.

3- With Bordeaux-Bègles and La Rochelle both qualifying for the penultimate stage for the first time, Toulouse will be appearing in their 13th semi-final and Leinster Rugby their 12th. Munster Rugby hold the appearance record with 14.

4 – Three French clubs have qualified for the semi-finals for the first time since 2004/05 and Toulouse v Bordeaux-Bègles is the first all-French match at the penultimate since that season when Stade Francais Paris defeated Biarritz Olympique.

European Rugby
Antoine Dupont /PA
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5- The in-form Bordeaux-Bègles fly-half, Matthieu Jalibert, is this season’s leading scorer so far with 63 points. Jalibert has also made the most offloads with 10.

6- Ronan O’Gara holds the record for the most points scored in tournament semi-finals with 123 for Munster from 10 matches.

O'Gara Rochelle Gibbes Clermont
(Photo by Bob Bradford – CameraSport via Getty Images)

7 – Toulouse have played six semi-finals on French soil winning four but losing to Brive in 1998 on try count, as well as to Munster in 2000.

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8 – Cameron Woki of Bordeaux-Bègles is this season’s leading line out exponent with 20 won including three steals.

CHALLENGE CUP

9 – Leicester Tigers and Ulster Rugby are both bidding to emulate the four clubs to date – Bath Rugby, Leinster Rugby, Northampton Saints and Wasps – who have won the coveted double of the Challenge Cup and the European Cup.

10 – Leicester Tigers’ Director of Rugby, Steve Borthwick, captained Bath to Challenge Cup success in 2008.

McGinity
Steve Borthwick /(Photo by Alex Davidson/Getty Images)

11 – Ulster fly-half, Billy Burns, and his back-up, Ian Madigan, as well as teammates John Cooney and Jack McGrath, are all Challenge Cup winners. Madigan and McGrath started for Leinster Rugby in the 2013 final against Stade Francais Paris while Cooney was a replacement, and Burns was also a replacement for Gloucester Rugby against Edinburgh Rugby in 2015.

12 – Bath and Montpellier have met twice before in the Challenge Cup with Bath winning both pool matches in the 2006/07 season.

Goosen Bulls
(Photo by Tim Clayton/Corbis via Getty Images)

13 – On the only other occasion in 2016 that Montpellier reached the semi-final, they went on to lift the trophy.

14 – Bath will be appearing in a semi-final for the seventh time in their history. The 2008 tournament winners have won four matches at the penultimate stage and lost two.

15 – Leicester Tigers’ South African back row, Jasper Wiese, has beaten the most defenders so far this season with 18.

16 – Bryan Redpath, whose son Cameron could start for Bath against Montpellier on Saturday evening, captained Sale Sharks to success in the 2002 final.

17 – Leicester and Ulster will be meeting for the first time in the Challenge Cup. The clubs have played one another 10 times in Europe’s top flight with Ulster ahead by seven wins to three.

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J
JW 2 hours ago
Why the Aussie revival is for real and what it means for New Zealand

Yes, true, reading your first sentence I immediately remember reports of them just leaving them be, which also doesn’t sound very smart now. Quite a minor thing, but like with the “further stipulations” suggestion I had, even minor oversights can cause big problems!


Right, so that old decision basically came down to the Rebels license being newer (still in effect) that meant it was the Force that had to be cut? You can’t really extrapolate one to the other of course. Theres no hindsight ability to be able to say “well we should have taken out losses and cut the Rebels”.


I can agree on your last point/para, even though it’s largely the same argument you presented in your OP which I tried refuting. I say it’s similar really because it comes under the same ‘risk’ management as spreading your pro population. They wanted to be able to provide more opportunities to retain the likes of the Meafou’s, just as much as the wanted to tap in further to those Meafou’s in Melbourne. Bringing in the Rebels was the best way to do this, but perhaps it should’t have been done at such a sacrifice.


All considered though, it’s hard to know if one should believe the reports that the Rebels had a way out of the dilemma. They obviously had individuals involved powerful enough to make the State retaliate towards RA, but my stance had been that COVID and so, the stopped payment, had been what put them under. I don’t lay fault with RA for their demise, but I also had a bigger expectation that Melbourne was the sporting captial of Australia. It really does just seem like a AFL land however (they reckoned their 10k crowd was enough but it’s hard to believe).

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