Munster 22
Racing 10
Sean Farrell reports from Thomond Park
MUNSTER WERE MADE to work for everything by Racing 92, but work they did and eventually got exactly what they needed from this Champions Cup pool one finale.
Tries from Simon Zebo, Ronan O’Mahony and Ian Keatley on top of another terrific pack effort secured a home Champions Cup quarter-final and second-seed status.
Ronan O’Gara’s downtrodden yet seething post-match demeanour a fortnight ago was a clear warning for Munster. The 7 -32 loss in Paris hurt the Top 14 champions. So despite leaving their brightest lights in France, le Ciel et Bleu had pride in abundance to display before bowing out of this tournament.
After an initial burst of intent from Munster, the visitors owned the first quarter of the game, sucking momentum from Munster by dominating territory and ensuring no collision was a comfortable one for the men in red.
Any of the 26,200 fans who wrapped up for Thomond Park expecting to see a bonus point win come easily were soon resetting goals. CJ Stander and Jaco Taute provided the breakdown muscle to break the siege and then it was their turn to build an onslaught.
The scrum, complete with the enforced early addition of Dave Kilcoyne, was a potent weapon and pinned Racing onto their line for long periods before half-time. Conor Murray thought he had grounded after an NFL-style dive over the top of the ruck, but Marc Andreu did just enough for the TMO to decide he had knocked it on.
With Stander, as ever, blazing a trail and leaving tacklers in his wake, out-half Benjamin Dambielle earned a yellow card when killing the ball after the number eight burst to within 10 metres of the try-line.
This time, though it would take almost 10 minutes of pressure, Munster were not leaving the 22 without their try. The long-awaited breakthrough came thanks to Zebo and that scrum, the fullback brilliantly wriggling through heavy traffic for a 37th minute try.
Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO
Not content with merely providing the breakthrough, the Corkman had some heroics to perform at the other end before the break. Andreu broke from midfield with plenty of green space to raid until the fullback glided across and took him to ground.
There was to be a reward for the visitors though as Maxime Machenaud punished a stray Peter O’Mahony hand with a penalty to leave the scoreline 7 – 3 at the interval.
Saracens’ win over Toulon set Munster a target of an 11-point win to seal a place as second seed in the quarter-finals and that message seemed to be ringing in ears at the start of the second period as Bleyendaal kicked an early penalty.
The bonus point didn’t matter, but tries never hurt the cause and Munster struck a beautiful second on 48 minutes, O’Mahony sliding over after diving to catch Rory Scannell’s inviting pass.
Source: Billy Stickland/INPHO
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The visitors clawed Munster back inside that 11-point margin thanks to an outstretched Henry Chavancy arm. But this Munster outfit are increasingly difficult to deny.