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Munster 25 Glasgow Warriors 17: Battling Glasgow emerge with credit despite Munster loss



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Published Date: 06 October 2008
GLASGOW were certainly far from being sacrificial lambs to the slaughter at Irish rugby's spiritual home, Thomond Park, on Saturday night. The game against the European champions and Magners League leaders, Munster, marked the opening of the splendidly revamped Thomond Park, now a 26,500-capacity ground which does justice to one of world rugby's most famous brands.
Glasgow head coach Sean Lineen paid tribute to his team's efforts after the game: "I was pleased with the way we got stuck in and we could have got something from the game if we had kicked our goals.

"We came here to win and not make up the numbe
rs and we really thought we could win the game tonight. The players are frustrated, but we can look forward now to next week."

Glasgow had presented Munster with a beautifully wrapped seven-point gift for their new home with only three minutes on the clock. A quick line-out throw from full-back Bernardo Stortoni was knocked forward by No8 Johnny Beattie in the in-goal area and veteran Munster scrum-half Peter Stringer was first to pounce on the loose ball, with Ronan O'Gara converting.

Munster almost returned the favour minutes later when their Maori centre Rua Tipoki fumbled the ball inside his own 22, but home full-back Keith Earls fell on the ball to prevent a probable try.

Given the constant heavy drizzle and keen Munster chasers, the Glasgow full-back Stortoni dealt well with a constant barrage of high balls from stand-off O'Gara. He shipped any number of heavy hits from Doug Howlett and the Irish midfield but stood his ground well.

Glasgow had a good deal of possession throughout the evening, mainly due to the back row's outstanding work at the breakdown and, to their credit, the visitors tried to move the ball wide whenever possible.

Indeed, Glasgow should have been ahead at half-time, a fact acknowledged by Munster director of coaching Tony McGahan, who said: "We were lucky enough to get the early try first up and realistically it should have been 9-3 to them at half-time. Glasgow are a very good defensive side, they work very hard and vary their attack well."

Glasgow were right in the game at half-time, only 10-6 behind, and there were three kickable penalties they either missed or kicked to touch for the line-out. A Colin Gregor effort on the stroke of half-time bounced back off the crossbar, but he did slot two penalties in the first half against one by O'Gara.

After the break, Munster added two further tries through centre Barry Murphy and wing Howlett, both touching down after fine handling moves which brought deafening cheers from the big Limerick crowd.

Gregor kicked two more penalties, but failed to capitalise on two further penalty awards. Crucially, Gregor failed to convert replacement wing Hefin O'Hare's late consolation try from wide out on the left touchline, depriving Glasgow of what would have been a well-deserved bonus point.

Scorers: Munster: Tries: Stringer, Murphy, Howlett. Cons: O'Gara 2. Pens: O'Gara 2.

Glasgow: Try: O'Hare. Pens: Gregor 4.

Munster: K Earls; D Howlett, B Murphy, R Tipoki, A Horgan; R O'Gara, P Stringer; M Horan, F Sheahan, J Hayes, D O'Callaghan P O'Connell (capt), A Quinlan, D Wallace, J Melck. Subs used: Fogarty, Buckley, O'Driscoll, Ronan, Prendergast, Warwick.

Glasgow: B Stortoni; L Fa'atau, M Evans, A Henderson, T Evans; C Gregor, M McMillan; J Va'a, D Hall, M Low, O Palepoi, A Kellock (capt), K Brown, J Beattie, J Barclay. Subs used: O'Hare, Barker, Kalman, Jackson, Morrison, Tkachuk, Swindall.

Referee: Andrew Small (RFU)

Attendance: 19,220.



The full article contains 625 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 05 October 2008 11:33 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Aligator,

06/10/2008 03:19:43
Well done Glasgow - at least one team in Scotland knows how to play rugby and fight to try to win.

2

Mutt,

Paisley 06/10/2008 08:04:16
And what possessed Bernie to throw a quick line-out INSIDE the in goal area?!?!
3

Shameless,

Chateau Croc, Mont Revard, Haute Savoie, France 06/10/2008 09:41:46
Sorry guys - simply not good enough to be valiant losers. That sort of thing just doesn't cut the mustard in the real world.

THE ONLY WAY TO ENSURE SUCCESS WITH SCOTTISH PRO RUGBY IS TO CUT THE PITIFUL TWO TEAMS LOOSE FROM THE SRU & GET THEM INTO PRIVATE OWNERSHIP. IF THAT IS NOT COMMERCIALLY FEASIBLE (AND IT MIGHT NOT BE IN THE CURRENT ECONOMIC CLIMATE) THEN THESE TWO UNDER-PERFORMING OUTFITS SHOULD BE WOUND UP / FINISHED. PLAYERS OF CLASS THEN DISPERSED & FUNDS THEREBY SAVED INVESTED IN GROWING THE GRASSROOTS FUTURE OF SCOTTISH RUGBY. MIGHT BE POSSIBLE TO CREATE A DEVELOPMENT DISTRICT CHAMPIONSHIP MODELLED ON LINES OF THE HISTORICALLY PRODUCTIVE OLD COMPETITION.

Difficult to envisage the non-rugby twits heading the SRU (especially McKie & Munro) understanding let alone accepting any of that.

What's the ruddy point, cobbers?
4

JBA,

06/10/2008 11:55:15
3rd pro team must be in the Borders and each team must have their own academies. Right now there are many really good young players coming through the Border clubs,and no doubt elsewhere, who are not getting the chance of apprentice placings, both them and Scotland are losing out because of the one centrally run academy and the lack of apprenticeships available.
5

Egg Chasing Ape,

06/10/2008 12:31:47
When is someone going to actually have the guts to referee this Munster team? They are habitual cheats, especially at the tackle area and this allowed them to win a European Cup last year at the expense of Toulouse who were robbed because refs will not take action.

The Glasgow game was much the same with any red jersey near the tackle area having hands all over the ball or players around it, buts refs just repeating “hands off” umpteen times before it actually happens, by which time quick ruck ball is lost! The opposition then find themselves pinged at the least opportunity for doing exactly the same thing for a shorter period!

Munster are the new Leicester in the way that they play rugby and before anyone shouts about it all being about getting results, if boring no risk rugby is the way that everyone is going to be encouraged to play in order to grind out a win then no thanks!

The GP teams are already grasping at the ELVs as an easy excuse to play no risk rugby in order to grind things out, so something needs to be done?
6

THE DREADED SILVER CROC,

Chateau Croc, Mont Revard, Haute Savoie, France 06/10/2008 22:21:11
#4 ExpatNI - there's a wee mindset problem in your approach / response to my buddy Shameless up there at #3.

You'll have to face the fact that the major club competitions will sooner or later take over from internationals as the game's pinnacle. Probably sooner, the way it is all going. Think on, cobber....
7

J.A.,

07/10/2008 08:57:48
#7
Well that sounds just great!! no international rugby and no pro rugby in Scotland. I’m trying to “think on”, how long will it be?

 

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