Leinster race clear
PRO14 WRAP: Leinster stretched their lead at the top of Conference A to five points with a 35-29 win at Dragons.
* In the other Friday match a clinical display from Ulster ensured they kept the pressure on Leinster thanks to a 19-13 victory over Glasgow Warriors.
The Friday wrap!
Dragons 29-35 Leinster
Leinster stretched their lead at the top of Conference A to five points with a 35-29 win at Dragons.
In the first half, a committed Dragons side made life difficult for the reigning champions, but two yellow cards in quick succession swiftly turned the game Leinster’s way.
Peter Dooley, Josh Murphy, Scott Penny and Dan Sheehan scored Leinster’s tries. There was also a penalty try award, with Ross Byrne adding four conversions.
Sam Davies kicked five penalties and two conversions for Dragons, with replacements Luke Baldwin and Josh Lewis crossing for their tries.
The opening 15 minutes were quiet, with neither side threatening the try-line, and it therefore came as no surprise that the first points came via a kick – a well-struck 40-metre penalty from Davies.
Leinster continued to incur the wrath of referee Ben Whitehouse, conceding six penalties in the first quarter with Davies kicking another two in quick succession to give Dragons an early 9-0 advantage.
The Irish province responded with the first try of the game when prop Dooley burst away from a maul 10 metres out to score. Ross Byrne converted before Davies was again on target, this time with a straightforward 20-metre kick.
However, the stronger Leinster pack temporarily took control to move ahead for the first time when flanker Penny forced his way over from close range.
On the half-hour, former Osprey Dan Baker came on to make his Dragons debut as a replacement for Matthew Screech, before Davies kicked his fifth penalty of the half to regain the lead.
With the last move of the first half, Dragons looked to have their first try when Ben Fry finished off a driving lineout, but TMO replays ruled out the score for obstruction by lock Joe Davies.
Six minutes after the restart, Dragons prop Lloyd Fairbrother, playing his 100th PRO14 game for the region, was sin-binned for a no-arms tackle and Leinster immediately capitalised when Murphy forced his way over.
Still down to 14, Dragons suffered a hammer blow when the referee awarded a penalty try for collapsing an unstoppable lineout drive with the culprit Baker sin-binned.
A try from replacement hooker Sheehan took the Irish side out of sight before Baldwin and Lewis scored tries for Dragons, with Davies’ conversion giving them a bonus point.
Leinster now hold a five-point advantage over second-placed Ulster, who won at Glasgow Warriors on Friday night but missed out on a bonus point.
Play of the match
Leinster came out a much improved side after half-time, having been frustrated somewhat by Davies’ consistent kicking display before the interval.
And they forced themselves into a lead they would not relinquish when Murphy burrowed his way over after some dominant work on the Dragons try-line.
Player of the match
It was a milestone moment for Jack Conan as he made his 100th Leinster outing at Rodney Parade.
And he made it a performance to remember with an excellent all-around display which saw him gain 89 metres – more than any other player on the pitch – and pick up the Guinness Player of the Match award.
The scorers
For Dragons
Tries: Baldwin, Lewis
Cons: Davies 2
Pens: Davies 5
For Leinster
Tries: Dooley, Penny, Murphy, Sheehan, Penalty try
Cons: R Byrne 4, penalty try does not require a conversion
Teams:
Dragons: 15 Jordan Williams, 14 Jonah Holmes, 13 Aneurin Owen, 12 Jack Dixon, 11 Ashton Hewitt, 10 Sam Davies, 9 Rhodri Williams (captain), 8 Huw Taylor, 7 Ben Fry, 6 Matthew Screech, 5 Ben Carter, 4 Joe Davies, 3 Lloyd Fairbrother, 2 Richard Hibbard, 1 Brok Harris
Replacements: 16 Ellis Shipp, 17 Greg Bateman, 18 Chris Coleman, 19 Joe Maksymiw, 20 Dan Baker, 21 Luke Baldwin, 22 Josh Lewis, 23 Connor Edwards
Leinster: 15 Max O’Reilly, 14 Cian Kelleher, 13 Rory O’Loughlin, 12 Ross Byrne, 11 Dave Kearney, 10 Harry Byrne, 9 Luke McGrath (captain), 8 Jack Conan, 7 Scott Penny, 6 Josh Murphy, 5 Ryan Baird, 4 Ross Molony, 3 Michael Bent, 2 James Tracy, 1 Peter Dooley
Replacements: 16 Dan Sheehan, 17 Marcus Hanan, 18 Tom Clarkson, 19 Devin Toner, 20 Scott Fardy, 21 Rowan Osborne, 22 David Hawkshaw, 23 Jamie Osborne
Referee: Ben Whitehouse
Assistant referees: Dan Jones, Mike English
TMO: Ian Davies
— PRO14 RUGBY (@PRO14Official) February 19, 2021
Glasgow Warriors 13-19 Ulster
A clinical display from Ulster ensured they kept the pressure on Leinster thanks to a 19-13 victory over Glasgow Warriors.
Tries from Michael Lowry, Craig Gilroy and Nick Timoney saw Ulster bounce back from their first defeat of the Pro14 season, which came against the Conference A leaders on January 8.
The visitors made the most of a dominant period after a tight opening 50 minutes and secured only their second PRO14 win at Scotstoun.
Ulster fell a further point behind Leinster, whose win over Dragons saw them move five ahead, after their bonus-point hopes were hit by a late yellow card for Alby Mathewson. But they survived a frantic finale after substitute Aki Seiuli went over for Glasgow’s only try.
It was Warriors’ eighth defeat of the league campaign, which left them 11 points off the top three.
Danny Wilson started with Oli Kebble, Huw Jones and Richie Gray after they were released from international duty while Leone Nakarawa made his first start in a year against the club he will join in the summer.
John Cooney and Stuart McCloskey started for Ulster having been released from the Ireland squad.
Warriors had the early territory but could not make the most of a series of lineouts and they had a let-off when Marcell Coetzee went over from a similar chance for the visitors but could not get the ball grounded.
Adam Hastings opened the scoring with a 36th-minute penalty on his comeback from a shoulder injury before Ulster scored their first try 30 seconds before half-time.
Ian Madigan intercepted Jamie Dobie’s pass on his way back to start a flowing move which saw James Hume and Cooney make ground down the right before setting up Lowry to use his pace and cross. Cooney added the easy conversion.
The injured Coetzee did not reappear after half-time and Hastings reduced the deficit to one with a penalty from nearly 40 metres.
Gilroy was denied just short of the line by the combined efforts of Jones and Ratu Tagive before the winger crossed moments later in the 55th minute following a penetrating move down the right. Cooney could not convert.
Warriors lost skipper Ryan Wilson to injury with James Scott coming on for his debut and Ulster got their third try seconds later as Timoney went over following a lineout maul in the 62nd minute. This time Cooney converted to extend the lead to 13.
Mathewson was sent to the sin bin for a deliberate knock-on in the 75th minute and Seiuli soon made some home pressure count, with Ross Thompson kicking Glasgow within a converted try of victory. But Ulster held out to maintain their title hopes.
Play of the match
Ulster’s first two tries came from flowing moves but the first gave them a platform which they were able to build on, and involved a series of passes from left to right.
Madigan started it off after intercepting Dobie’s pass as he ran back. Centre Hume produced a good shimmy and burst of pace and Cooney made further ground before Lowry sprinted clear to go under the posts.
Player of the match
Lowry was involved in almost everything that Ulster did well.
After scoring the opener, the full-back played the final pass in the move which led to Gilroy going over.
And he almost crawled through a tackle to break Glasgow’s lines and kick the ball over the top before Ulster won a penalty which ultimately led to the third try.
The scorers
For Glasgow Warriors
Try: Seiuli
Con: Thompson
Pens: Hastings 2
For Ulster
Tries: Lowry, Gilroy, Timoney
Cons: Cooney 2
Teams:
Glasgow Warriors: 15 Huw Jones, 14 Ratu Tagive, 13 Robbie Fergusson, 12 Sam Johnson, 11 Rufus McLean, 10 Adam Hastings, 9 Jamie Dobie, 8 Ryan Wilson (captain), 7 Thomas Gordon, 6 Rob Harley, 5 Leone Nakarawa, 4 Richie Gray, 3 Enrique Pieretto, 2 Johnny Matthews, 1 Oli Kebble
Replacements: 16 Grant Stewart, 17 Aki Seiuli, 18 D’arcy Rae, 19 James Scott, 20 TJ Ioane, 21 Sean Kennedy, 22 Ross Thompson, 23 Ollie Smith
Ulster: 15 Michael Lowry, 14 Craig Gilroy, 13 James Hume, 12 Stuart McCloskey, 11 Rob Lyttle, 10 Ian Madigan, 9 John Cooney, 8 Marcell Coetzee, 7 Jordi Murphy (captain), 6 Nick Timoney, 5 Kieran Treadwell, 4 Alan O’Connor, 3 Marty Moore, 2 John Andrew, 1 Eric O’Sullivan
Replacements: 16 Adam McBurney, 17 Andrew Warwick, 18 Tom O’Toole, 19 Cormac Izuchukwu, 20 Greg Jones, 21 Alby Mathewson, 22 Stewart Moore, 23 Matt Faddes
Referee: Ben Blain
Assistant referees: Hollie Davidson, Dunx McClement
TMO: Andrew McMenemy
Source: @PRO14Official
A month after their last fixture, Guinness Player of the Match Michael Lowry was delighted to take home the win with @UlsterRugby 🎙
🌍 @eirSport
💻 https://t.co/CeNCIlfD9i
#️⃣ #GLAvULS
🏆 #GuinnessPRO14 pic.twitter.com/yH5lO0RlAF— PRO14 RUGBY (@PRO14Official) February 19, 2021