Northern Edition
Select Edition
Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

Munster claim see-saw win over Connacht in 68pt thriller

By PA
Limerick , Ireland - 21 September 2024; Munster players celebrate as teammate Gavin Coombes scores their side's third try during the United Rugby Championship match between Munster and Connacht at Thomond Park in Limerick. (Photo By Brendan Moran/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

Last season’s table toppers Munster had to come from behind four times before seeing off Connacht 35-33 at Thomond Park in the United Rugby Championship.

ADVERTISEMENT

Debutant half-backs Josh Ioane and Ben Murphy inspired a rejuvenated Connacht to lead 19-14 at half-time despite Santiago Cordero’s sin-binning.

Former Leinster scrum-half Murphy squeezed in his second try, replying to Munster scores from Alex Nankivell and Mike Haley, as the provincial rivals eventually shared 10 tries.

Video Spacer

Joe Schmidt and Harry Wilson dissect the Wallabies loss to the All Blacks

Video Player is loading.
Current Time 0:00
Duration 0:00
Loaded: 0%
Stream Type LIVE
Remaining Time 0:00
 
1x
    • Chapters
    • descriptions off, selected
    • captions off, selected
      Video Spacer

      Joe Schmidt and Harry Wilson dissect the Wallabies loss to the All Blacks

      Connacht replacement David Hawkshaw and Cathal Forde cancelled out efforts from John Hodnett and Gavin Coombes but Tony Butler, Munster’s reserve fly-half, coolly converted Shane Daly’s 69th-minute try to decide the outcome.

      Murphy cut inside Craig Casey off a 13th-minute scrum, connecting with Shayne Bolton out wide, and had Ioane up in support to score Connacht’s opener.

      Fixture
      United Rugby Championship
      Munster
      35 - 33
      Full-time
      Connacht
      All Stats and Data

      Seven minutes later, Murphy brilliantly collected Ioane’s instinctive offload to go in behind the posts and the New Zealander converted.

      After Casey was caught high by Cordero for his yellow card, Nankivell broke out of Conor Oliver’s attempted tackle to cut the gap to five points.

      ADVERTISEMENT

      Munster newcomer Billy Burns also converted Haley’s 31st-minute effort, with the tricky full-back stretching out of a Bolton tackle to touch down.

      Nonetheless, Ioane’s superb straight line and return pass allowed Murphy to complete his brace just before the break, with Forde adding the extras.

      There were four more tries inside the opening 23 minutes of the second half. Hodnett burrowed over and then Hawkshaw zoomed in from a nicely-timed Dave Heffernan pass.

      Casey’s tap-and-go set up Coombes to give the hosts a 28-26 lead, only for Forde to muscle over just past the hour mark.

      ADVERTISEMENT

      However, Connacht’s dreams of repeating their famous 2015 and 2021 wins in Limerick were dashed when Daly scored from a Haley pass and Butler’s right boot did the rest.

      Related

      ADVERTISEMENT
      Play Video

      South Africa vs Black Ferns XV | Women's International | Full Match Replay

      Play Video

      Namibia vs United Arab Emirates | Asia/Africa Rugby World Cup Play-off | Full Match Replay

      Play Video

      Lions Share | Episode 5

      Play Video

      Classic Wallabies vs British & Irish Legends | First Match | Full Match Replay

      Play Video

      Did the Lions loosies get away with murder? And revisiting the Springboks lift | Whistle Watch

      Play Video

      The First Test, Visiting The Great Barrier Reef & Poetry with Pierre | Ep 6: The Ultimate Test

      Play Video

      KOKO Show | July 22nd | Full Throttle with Brisbane Test Review and Melbourne Preview

      Play Video

      New Zealand v South Africa | World Rugby U20 Championship | Extended Highlights

      Trending on RugbyPass

      Comments

      1 Comment
      B
      Blanco 312 days ago

      Lucky win for Munster. Half backs Ioane and Murphy were outstanding. Murphy's debut was incredible, basically a better version of Craig Casey. Caolin Blade who featured against SA in Durban did not match when he subbed Murphy late in the game. Tough solid defence by Connaught. Top match. Connaught will be gutted to lose out on that one.

      Join free and tell us what you really think!

      Sign up for free
      ADVERTISEMENT

      Latest Long Reads

      Comments on RugbyPass

      F
      Flankly 2 hours ago
      There remains a culture of excuses in Australian rugby

      One team has exceeded expectations in this series and the other has not. Hats off to a Wallabies team in rebuild mode for a smile-inducing effort in the second test (especially the first half).


      Completely agree that a top ranked team finds ways to defend a big half-time lead, and they did not quite pull it off. The fact that Piardi did not run the Head Contact Process in the 79th minute Tizzano/Morgan incident is worth discussion. However, Schmidt will be pointing out to the team that avoiding a defensive breakdown on your own 5m line at that point in the game is the thing in their control. Equally, clarification 3-2022 says you cannot jump or dive as a means of avoiding a tackle, as Sheehan admits to have done, but the question for Australia is why and how they were facing a tap-and-go 5m from their line (again).


      Where I disagree with this article is the suggestion that Australia are caught in an excuse-making trap of poor performance. For me they are on a steep curve of improvement, and from what we have seen of Schmidt, there is little reason to assume that this will end now. Granted Australia lacks player depth, and that’s a real problem against big teams and in major campaigns. But the Lions are a pretty good team, probably ranking in the top five in the world, and the rebuilding Wallabies were seconds (and a couple of 50/50 ref calls) away from beating them at the MCG.


      In the end, the Wallabies are building to a home RWC, and were expected to lose the Lions series on the way to that goal. Success looks like being seriously competitive in the series loss, with good learnings about what needs to be fixed. A series win would have been a fantastic bonus, and humiliation for the UK/Ireland team.


      I expect the Wallabies to be very credible in the 2025 RC, to be much better in 2026, and to be a very challenging opponent for any team in the 2027 RWC.

      2 Go to comments
      TRENDING
      TRENDING The change in Maro Itoje spotted by Eddie Jones in Lions 2nd Test The change in Maro Itoje spotted by Eddie Jones in Lions 2nd Test