Ulster on Sunday kept their European Rugby Champions Cup hopes alive with their first-ever win away to Toulouse to knock the record four-time titleholders out of the competition.
The Irish province still trail runaway Pool 1 leaders Saracens by 10 points, albeit with a game in hand, after the English side crushed Oyonnax 55-13 on Saturday.
However, a second victory from three games for Ulster keeps them in the quarter-final race, while the 25-23 reverse on Sunday ended Toulouse’s interest after three defeats from four matches.
Photo: AFP
Tries from Ruan Pienaar, Andrew Trimble and Luke Marshall put Ulster in the driver’s seat, despite home scores from Gael Fickou and Louis Picamoles.
Ulster captain Rory Best hailed his teammates’ commitment.
“We knew it was going to be a very tough place to come and win and that proved to be the case, but the way the boys fought back against their momentum with our defense and our willingness to get back into the line was great, I can’t ask for more as a captain,” Best said.
“We’re not the biggest team, we don’t have players who weigh 130kg, but what we do have is a lot of heart, a lot of fitness and a very good skill level in the forwards with some exciting backs,” he added.
“We made some bad choices, but this game was largely ours to win, it’s a huge disappointment to be knocked out,” Toulouse skipper Thierry Dusautoir said.
Toulouse came into the game smarting from last weekend’s humiliating 38-0 reverse in Ireland.
However, despite dominating ball and territory in the first half, they paid for a lack of subtlety.
Flyhalf Paddy Jackson kicked an early penalty for Ulster, who then defended doggedly to keep a predictable Toulouse at bay.
And when the Irish province made a rare foray into the French 22, they made it count.
Ulster’s forwards bludgeoned their way up to the line until confusion reigned in the Toulouse defense, allowing South African scrumhalf Pienaar to pick the ball up from the back of a ruck and dive over unopposed.
Jackson, who converted the try, was then sin-binned for a deliberate knock-on as Toulouse rumbled toward the Irish line.
Sebastien Bezy kicked a penalty for the hosts, but disaster almost struck for Toulouse right at the end of the half against the 14 men.
Pushing for a late score beyond the halftime hooter, Toulouse lost possession and Ulster hit them with a remarkable length-of-the-field counterattack that culminated with Rory Scholes crossing the whitewash.
However, that was ruled out for a forward pass from Trimble earlier in the move, although Ulster still went back to the changing rooms leading 10-3.
Bezy kicked a second penalty early in the second half, but right after Jackson returned to the pitch, Ulster center Stuart McCloskey made a stunning break through the middle and, with Toulouse’s scrambling defense backtracking, Trimble dived over in the corner.
Toulouse then found themselves just two points behind after Fickou scored with Bezy converting.
Andy Warwick gave away a penalty and Bezy kicked Toulouse into a 16-15 lead.
However, a Jackson penalty restored Ulster’s lead before late on a clever inside pass from Alan O’Connor set up Marshall for the killer third try.
In Pool 2, French Top 14 leaders Clermont ran out 42-10 winners over Exeter to take revenge on the English visitors, who beat them 31-14 in Devon a week ago.
Sunday’s closing fixture saw Leicester eke out a hard-fought 17-6 victory over Munster to keep them in command of Pool 4 after four wins out of four, with Munster in trouble 13 points adrift.
On Saturday, reigning champions Toulon earned a crucial 20-16 win at Leinster that eliminated the Irish province, but kept the French Top 14 outfit in the Pool 5 hunt behind Wasps, who won impressively 36-10 at Bath.
It was a good day for the French, as Stade Francais thrashed Treviso 40-14 in Pool 4, while Bordeaux-Begles beat Ospreys 33-27 in Pool 2.
On Friday, Racing 92 kept in charge of Pool 3 with a 9-9 draw at Northampton.
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