THE SERIOUS BUSINESS.
The start of a big European week in Leinster’s UCD headquarters, and there’s a mixture of excitement and tension. It’s palpable. Nobody needs reminding of what’s at stake come Saturday lunchtime, nor the size of the task facing the province. These are big weeks, season-defining ones.
Unbeaten in their last 12 games, it would be hard to select a tougher challenge than Toulouse for the defending champions to come up against this weekend, as Pool 1 prepares itself for a heavyweight showdown between two European titans, both of whom are four-time champions.
Maxime Medard celebrates Toulouse’s win back in October. Source: James Crombie/INPHO
Stuart Lancaster hasn’t even considered what a second defeat of the pool campaign would mean for Leinster. It wouldn’t prove fatal, but would certainly rank on a catastrophic scale. The province’s fate is in their own hands, but nobody inside these four walls are under any illusions of the magnitude of what awaits. This is the sternest test of their season to date.
The week hasn’t exactly started as Leinster would have hoped. Johnny Sexton and Devin Toner are in a race to be fit, and while Ross Byrne and Scott Fardy are able deputies, Cullen needs a full deck at his disposal to topple the Top 14 leaders and regain control of the pool. Leinster know they’ll need to be at their big-game best.
Since October’s round two clash between the sides, when Toulouse ended Leinster’s unbeaten run in Europe which stretched back to April 2017, the French outfit have seen off Perpignan, Bordeaux, Pau, Stade Français, Wasps in the back-to-back December games, Toulon and, at the weekend, Agen.
They’re in pole position to claim a first Top 14 title in six years and lead Leinster by two points in Pool 1, having won all four of their outings to date, heading into the final two rounds of European action.
Furthermore, six of the games in their 12-match unbeaten streak have been on the road, where their record is won five, drawn one — that stalemate coming against Clermont when a much-changed side wrestled their way back from a 17-13 deficit at one juncture.
All in all, Toulouse travel to Dublin as the in-form side in Europe.
“Playing at home at the RDS with a one o’clock kick-off and a full house, it will be a fantastic atmosphere,” Lancaster says.
“It’s certainly the premier game in Europe in my mind because of the quality of the two teams. I mean they’re as good a team as I’ve coached against.
“Jerome Kaino is back, and he makes a difference. It will be a similar backline, but I think Antoine Dupont is playing more consistently. I think he’s world class, Dupont. They’ll probably play [Thomas] Ramos at 10. They’ve got [Romain] Ntamack and then there’s the back three of [Yoann] Huget, [Maxime] Medard and [Cheslin] Kolbe — he didn’t play at the weekend.
“But also they’ve got, which is different for normal French teams, they’ve got ball-handling forwards. So [Joe] Tekori is a huge handful and [Charlie] Faumuina. Across the board, they’re just tough to play. This type of rugby that Toulouse like to play.
“So, we need to play our style, obviously, but we need to make sure that we respect the ball as well because if we turn the ball over quickly, or cheaply, they’ll be gone or they’ll be trying to go.