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Stephen Jones points finger of blame in Leinster loss

By Ian Cameron
Ross Byrne of Leinster, bottom, looks on during the Investec Champions Cup final between Leinster and Toulouse at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London, England. (Photo By Harry Murphy/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

Sunday Times journalist Stephen Jones has pointed the finger of the blame in Leinster's lastest Investec Champions Cup final loss.

Toulouse achieved their sixth European rugby title with a 31-22 victory over Leinster at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, decided in extra time.

Antoine Dupont's exceptional performance was pivotal for the French champions while Thomas Ramos’ crucial kicks pushed them ahead after an 80-minute 15-15 tie. Leinster - facing their third consecutive final defeat after losses to La Rochelle in 2022 and 2023 - must now quickly recover and focus on the United Rugby Championship.

For controversial pundit Stephen Jones, it seems much of the blame for Leinster's failure in attack can be laid at the feet of stand-off Ross Byrne.

"Leinster at least tried to use their attacking machine but the truth is that with the rather pedestrian Ross Byrne at fly half they simply do not have the midfield energy and inspiration," wrote Jones this weekend. "They ran and rucked like crazy, but the edge of inspiration that they needed to pull clear was never present and in fact they were fortunate to be given the equalising penalty at the very end of normal time, which was put over by Ciaran Frawley...

"Even though Leinster have an unfortunate record in finals, they deserved to be as great themselves.

"Even without their normal inspiration and attacking edge, they were almost ferocious and always frantic in trying to ease out the victory that was lurking somewhere out there."

While it may have become a cliché to blame Byrne following the retirement of Johnny Sexton (many have done it), Jones isn't the only critic who believes Leinster's attack is quite hitting its straps as it did under Stuart Lancaster. This week Brian O'Driscoll told RugbyPass that he was worried about Leinster's attack under Jacque Nienaber.

"The evolution of Stuart [Lancaster] from year one through to year seven or eight would have been significant. He took defence and attack, and Jacques has come in and redefined what defence looks like from a Leinster perspective as so much time, effort, and energy will have to have gone into it.

“It’s very hard to then give that same focus towards your attack game when you are kind of reinventing a defensive system. So as a result, the defence and the physicality looks much better this year. Perhaps Leinster’s Achilles' heel was where it felt teams could physically dominate them.

“Now that is their modus operandi; it’s big, physical teams that they go and dominate but I don’t think that the attack game has quite been as sharp as it has the last two years."

Cerebral Leinster head coach Leo Cullen wasn't throwing the baby out with the bath water after the game, pointing out that his side had once again lost by the finest of margins.

“It comes down to the finest thing," said Cullen. "There was a drop goal at the end and if that goes a metre to the right then we’re having a very different conversation here. That’s the nature of sport at the top end,” Cullen said.

“I’m not sure the game got away from us. It was a very tight contest. We had some really positive passages of play.

“Toulouse scrambled well and came up with big moments defensively and that was the difference.

“The lads were immense out there and kept firing shots throughout but didn’t get the rewards for lots of difference reasons. We poured a lot into it.

“We just felt we’re so close to breaking them and most people in the stadium would have that sense.”

With silverware still the offing, Leinster - who haven't had to open the trophy cabinet in three years - won't have the luxury of feeling sorry for themselves.