Leinster v Bath, Champions Cup quarter-final, Aviva Stadium
Kick-off 15.15, BT Sport 1
Luke Fitzgerald at Leinster’s captain’s run in the Aviva Stadium yesterday. Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO
WATCHING ON AS Wigan Warriors beat St. Helen’s in yesterday’s excellent Super League contest, we couldn’t help but think of Leinster and Bath.
The blitzing defensive plays Leinster coach Matt O’Connor favours, the heavy contacts the Australian likes to see from his players, the deep, pull-back screen passes Bath regularly use in phase play; these are all familiar aspects of these Champions Cup contenders’ approaches.
And why wouldn’t they be, given that both O’Connor and Bath boss Mike Ford both have rugby league backgrounds.
The latter was born and bred in the 13-man code, representing Great Britain twice before moving into coaching in league too. Union eventually stole him across when Ireland came calling for a defence coach in 2002.
O’Connor is the son of a rugby league professional, playing the code himself briefly when he joined Paris Saint-Germain. Not quite the same depth of league development, but O’Connor’s ideas are tinged by those experiences nonetheless.
Just last month Ford called on his league contacts, bringing Bath for two days of training against Wigan Warriors. His Bath team today features former St. Helen’s man Eastmond, while Ford’s son George was brought up as a league player.
“If we can tackle them six times, we’ll be fine!” joked Leinster head coach O’Connor this week. “Yeah, they’ve got a couple of rugby league guys there and I know Mike [Ford] quite well.”
This is a momentous game for Matt O’Connor. Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO
This Champions Cup quarter-final pits a coach who has yet to fully convince his team’s supporters of his worth against one who is enjoying an ever-improving reputation in charge of a club that will continue to grow and grow.
Leinster’s recent run of one win in six Pro12 games coming into this European tie is cause for concern, and defeat at home this afternoon would be disastrous for O’Connor’s standing with the Leinster faithful.
Returning internationals like Sean O’Brien, Devin Toner, Jamie Heaslip, Rob Kearney, Mike Ross, Cian Healy and Luke Fitzgerald [the last two played off the bench last weekend] bring with them Six Nations-winning form and confidence.
How much does that count for? Against this impressive Bath unit?
Currently third in the Premiership and having emerged top of a difficult European group that also included Toulouse, Glasgow and Montpellier, Ford’s men are at the opposite end of the form spectrum.
O’Connor referred to a “very, very dangerous backline” when previewing Bath earlier this week, and the qualities of the likes of Anthony Watson, Jonathan Joseph, Matt Banahan, Ford and Eastmond have been well flagged.
Man-for-man and in terms of performances this season, Bath’s backline looks superior to Leinster’s. What of the packs?
Leinster forwards coach Leo Cullen spoke of one of the finest set-piece in Europe when analysing Bath, and the memory of their scrum obliteration of Glasgow Warriors in the pool stages remains strong.