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Edinburgh 16 Leinster 27: Edinburgh caught cold by Dubliners



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Published Date: 12 October 2008
YOU become a hostage to fortune when the theme tune from Mission: Impossible blares out of the PA system immediately ahead of the Heineken Cup opener as happened at Murrayfield yesterday. Sure enough, a win in the opening match of their campaign was beyond the home team as it proved third time lucky for their Irish visitors.
Edinburgh and Leinster have been paired in the European pool stages for the last three successive years, but yesterday was the Dubliners' first victory and it came in bizarre circumstances.

After 15 minutes Edinburgh were comfortably in control of events and leading 3-0 thanks to a Phil Godman penalty. By half time they were trailing 24-6 and effectively out of the Heineken Cup after just 40 minutes of rugby. Leinster had ripped them apart with four first-half tries, two of which came within two minutes of each other; it was Scotland versus Italy all over again, only worse.

Andy Robinson mentioned "luck" as one of his pre-requisites for European success, but the Irish had a monopoly on that commodity yesterday. The visitors spent long stretches of the opening half defending deep inside their own territory and they still managed to grab four tries on pretty much the only four times they entered the Edinburgh 22. Talk about taking your chances.

Even as Edinburgh launched a second-half fightback of sorts a golden opportunity for a try went west when Leinster's scrum-half Chris Whitaker slapped down Hugo Southwell's scoring pass to Scott Newlands and the referee decided that a penalty was sufficient sanction. But then again the performance of referee Rob Debney was almost as bad as that of the home team.

Leinster's second score only came after centre Luke Fitzgerald posted a new world record for the longest forward pass in the history of the game to go unflagged by any official. It travelled forward almost as far as it went sideways. Dan Marino would have been proud to own it, but not one of the three match officials spotted a mistake that was clear from the back of the stand.

And still Edinburgh were architects of their own downfall. They made a huge number of mistakes and missed tackles, more than they would expect to concede in an entire season. Everyone was guilty from new boy Scott Newlands to the experienced Mike Blair. The breakaway missed Filipe Contepomi, who slipped the ball to Brian O'Driscoll for Leinster's second score, while the Edinburgh skipper allowed O'Driscoll to counter attack deep inside his own half before returning the favour and sending Contepomi over the line for Leinster's third try.

The visitors' first touchdown was just as bad, not least because it set the tone for the entire match. Rocky Elsom benefited from turnover ball but the Aussie flanker was allowed to run nearly 40 yards to score with Blair and Godman both missing diving tackles. It was that sort of day. Paterson missed a simple penalty, Southwell missed touch and the team missed any direction.

Leinster scored their fourth try from the re-start immediately after their third try to claim a bonus point before the half time break after Jamie Heaslip was ushered down the blindside of a ruck with due pomp and ceremony, Girvan Dempsey was the link to Shane Horgan who scored in the corner.

All this came against a team that built a deserved reputation as terrier-like defenders last season. Edinburgh have been a fiendishly difficult team to break down in the past but they gifted yesterday's opposition absolute acres of space. It was embarrassingly bad at times and coach Andy Robinson was screaming blue murder in the back of the West Stand, as well he might.

The plus points for Edinburgh were rare. Allan Jacobsen played with some urgency late on, Alan MacDonald did well on his return to action and big Jim Hamilton enjoyed a couple of canters up the middle of the field, one of which led to Edinburgh's first and only try on 50 minutes. Hamilton's break took play to within a few yards of the Leinster try line and Blair's quick pass to the narrow side picked out Contepomi with precision. The Argentine was 20 yards offside but that irrelevance didn't prevent him from plucking the ball out of the air and clearing to touch. Leinster's fly-half was correctly yellow carded but the resulting penalty try may have been a tad generous; payback perhaps for that first-half forward pass.

Things got marginally better for Edinburgh in the second half but only because they couldn't get much worse. The home team occasionally got their high-tempo game up and running but the accuracy needed to break down the Dubliners was missing and too much of Edinburgh's play was too lateral.

Paterson kicked another penalty but it was wiped out by Contepomi as the match petered out without much more drama. There had obviously been a surfeit of that early on.

Edinburgh: C Paterson; M Robertson (J Houston 51 min), H Southwell (D Blair 77 min), N De Luca, S Webster; P Godman, M Blair (capt); A Jacobsen, R Ford, G Cross, M Mustchin, J Hamilton (B Gissing 60 min), S Newlands, A MacDonald, A Hogg.

Leinster: G Dempsey; S Horgan, B O'Driscoll, L Fitzgerald, R Kearney; F Contepomi, C Whitaker; S Wright, B Jackman (J Fogarty 73 min), CJ Van Der Linde, L Cullen (capt), D Toner, R Elsom, S Jennings, J Heaslip.

Scorers: Edinburgh – Try: Pen try. Conv: Paterson. Pens: Godman, Paterson (2). Leinster – Try: Elsom, O'Driscoll, Contepomi, Horgan. Conv: Contepomi (2). Pen: Contepomi

Referee: Rob Debney.

Yellow cards: Contepomi (Leinster), Mustchin (Edinburgh).

Attendance: 5,376

The full article contains 958 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

RDW,

12/10/2008 09:02:59
Well summed up - Edinburgh were simply aweful! At times the ref was even worse (how he gave a yellow card and a penalty try for dileberatly killing the ball, preventing the scoring pass from going through, the first time and not the second time is beyond me!) and don't get me started on how forward that pass was!

Back to Edinburgh - Mike Blair was awful, Godman passed to every memeber of the Leinster team at some point of the game, the forward seemed to like running up and pop passing to no one at an alarming rate, we couldn't but winning a ruck, gave away so many turnovers, passed the ball stright to touch frequently, missed SO many first up tackles....the list goes on!

The only plus for me was the scrum - stood up admirably well against the monsters in the Leinster front row.

On a final note - oh how we need De Luca and Cairns back together in the centre!
2

RDW,

12/10/2008 09:10:23
And another thing - the most depressing part is that Leinster weren't even that great! THe did the basics well and ran hard and straight but if we had played anything like we did last year I reckon we could have beaten them - come on Edinburgh, you are better than this.
3

Venachar,

12/10/2008 09:45:13
Have to disagree with you on Godman there RDW. I would like to ask if any of the coaches or players have digiboxes? Why, because if they had watched the Munster and Connacht matches they would have seen that the way to beat Leinster is to retain possession and attack out wide and fast.
Mark Robertson was the only person to have any success at this yesterday. Mossy, Webbo and Shug when they didn't kick brought the ball into the centre against the Leinster forwards - that's suicide. A number of times Mossy had shug, de Luca and Robertson outside him with only two defenders yet the ball was booted away to a Leinster player or taken into contact and as we saw lost.
The front 5 did well against a much heavier pack but that was not enough to keep the season ticket holders behind me leaving at half time - they had seen enough!
4

Big Ron,

Edinburgh 12/10/2008 10:01:55
I thought the biggest disapointment of the day by far was Chris Patterson (apart from the Murrayfield hot-dogs). Patterson is obviously good place kicker, but he's a very overrated all-round rugby player. His kicking from hand was woefull and he keeps getting turned over. His positioning was terrible when Horgan scored straight from the kick off. Southwell is no centre and Godman continues to blow hot and cold. Blair was very average and although Jacobsen gets mentioned above as being a contributor, his attempted tackle on Elsom on his way to the line was an embarrassment. I was frustrated at what looked like a lack of enthusiasm and urgency towards the end of the first half. It's disapointing to say, but no-one from the Edinburgh team looks like they'll get anywhere close to a Lions call. Some of the 'big names' like Hogg, Patterson, Blair are simply not showing enough in the way of leadership. Hadden certainly has his work cut out, especially when one considers that Glasgow don't appear to be doing any better than Edinburgh.
And whilst I'm having a moan - can the SRU please have a ticket office at the ice rink side of the stadium. It's a nonsense that so many people have to walk round the ground just before kick-off. Use some commercial sense - the more time people have in the stadium, the more time they have to spend on beer, food etc, and when people are late into the gorund they are less likely to stop and buy a programme. It would also have been nice if the gates next to the rink were properly opened at the end of the game again. Having hundreds of people exit in single file through a small exit is ridiculous. I hated the hearing the Irish laughing and joking about Scottish rugby as we queued to leave.
5

Edinburgh Pete ,

12/10/2008 10:03:03
The frustrating start to the season just got worse unfortunately.

After a pretty solid start to the game the defence just switched of. You cant miss tackles at this level and expect to win games. By half time we hadn’t won a meaningful throw in of our lineout, put one effective kick in and were turned over too many times in the tackle.

It says it all about the current state of the squad in that Robinson did not change the team around second half, he hasn’t got any options that can make a difference due to all the injuries. Fingers crossed that some are close to returning. Now Houston’s back can we please end the experiment of Southwell at outside centre – very painful to watch.

Game against Castres will go a long way now to determining whether our season is over before Christmas.
6

B.McGeek,

12/10/2008 15:32:13
This is a depressing start again for Scottish rugby - attacking play - the only try for Edinbugh was a penalty try which mean the defence was not breeched! would hate to see what Edinburgh have in reserve if this is the best that can be put out on the park - pathetic performance

Believe the Prem 1 teams were without their secondary pro players yesterday as was commented in a local paper by Hawick coach Jim Hay, the players were coaching youngsters before the main Edinburgh match, hope these players have the approriate coaching & police clearance for this role, a common practice for all other coaches/people dealing with children in sport.
7

JT,

12/10/2008 18:38:21
Not only did the officials miss THAT Forward pass, they also let the dangerous play/high tackle go in the second half. Having said that no wonder the players and coach needed to apologise to the fans, no one played to the level we need and expect. If this is the standard of Scotland then Im glad I didnt fork out £50 for any of the upcoming tests, Carter and co are going to crucify Scotland.
8

macrugby,

armchair 12/10/2008 18:48:41
Edinburgh passed it around in the expectation that something would happen but few were willing to take responsibility for making things happen. Leinster contolled the game at half back and BoD just waited for opportunities - targeting slow players in the defence line. Don't like singling out players but Southwell is just not good enough at this level - he adds very little value - and though tries his heart out Jacobsen regularly makes makes costly errors. The departed Dickinson much more suited to the style Edinburgh should be playing.
9

RDW,

12/10/2008 18:59:07
Just watched the game again on sky plus - that ref was infinately worse when seeing it on tv! That guy shouldn't be let near an under 9's game never mind one like that! Edinburgh weren't as bad as I saw at the game...were still pretty terrible though!
10

Upandunder,

12/10/2008 19:09:49
Disaster. Ref was terrible, but Edin were dire too.

How some of our players could learn from O'Driscoll's breaks: Head up, punch the knees while keep moving forward, look left and right and above all, BOTH hands on the ball.

It's not rocket science.

 

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