Ulster take record defeat on the chin and move on

Munster warm up for Leinster assignment with nine-try rout of depleted visitors


Munster 64 Ulster 7

The mid-winter campaign is not here yet but for Ulster this was a not-so-perfect storm. Their two-week, two-game trek to South Africa had left them with a casualty list of 16 players, including a raft of front-liners, and they were as travel weary as they were bedevilled by injury.

To compound all of this, their itinerary had pitched them into a meeting with a strong Munster selection at their Thomond Park citadel and after one of their no-holds-barred weeks of navel contemplation. Then, just to top it all off, they lost Iain Henderson, who failed his HIA, and John Cooney, who had his scalp wound reopened, in the first half.

“No, it was a good test,” maintained Dan McFarland, downplaying the myriad of factors that conspired against him and Ulster. “It was a good challenge. A lot of fellas will be feeling a lot of pain now, including me. Pain is good, you learn from pain.”

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Nevertheless, one felt for the recently installed Ulster coach when informed at the outset of his post-match press conference that this constituted a record competitive defeat for the province.

“I didn’t realise that. It’s not good is it? That wasn’t really a question that needed an answer, that was a rhetorical question.”

You’d wonder how much this record defeat will damage the momentum generated by a nine-game unbeaten run going into this game, or maybe it won’t do that much.

Certainly there were a host of mitigating circumstances which would seem to highlight a lack of depth.

“Is that down to depth?” asked McFarland rhetorically. “We have got a lot of young fellas out there. Two new caps, two new starts. There are a lot of guys who would be very experienced in the club who weren’t here today.”

Whether to dissect this horror show in detail with the players or keep the lesson to the coaching staff and refocus on Connacht’s trip to Belfast with a six-day turnaround was, admitted McFarland, “an interesting one”.

Weakened team

Either way, he speculated that Rory Best and Jacob Stockdale would be amongst those returning. "We have got a couple of the senior guys who are coming back in. We will be a lot better next week."

He also indignantly refuted the idea that Ulster had fielded a weakened team by choice.

“We weren’t doing that. The only person that could have possibly have played that didn’t play was Stuart McCloskey. Everybody else, it was all hands on deck.”

Amid the arrivals and turning of a new page, Ulster had also said farewell to a raft of retirees and departures, including an all-international backline. Thus, while they have the makings of a good team, this was a salient reminder that their squad is a work in progress.

“That was always the case,” admitted McFarland. “Coming in right at the start we all knew that. There was a lot of guys with a lot of experience who retired at the end of last season. Coming in there was always going to be a rebuild process. There were certain things that I was looking for from the squad when we came in and we saw that. But today we were tested and it demonstrated we have got a long way to go.”

Munster know from their own experience how taxing on the body a mini-tour to South Africa can be from their non-show in last season’s Heineken Cup semi-final, which puts the South African sides’ travails into perspective.

“We have got to analyse the stuff around the physical side of things and coming back from South Africa after a five-day turnaround,” said McFarland. “The travel, that’s one thing. I don’t think, in terms of the way we played, tactically I don’t think that was necessarily an issue. The stuff on the pitch I will need 24 hours to have a look at.”

Scoring sequence: 5 mins Goggin try, Carbery con 7-0; 9 O'Donnell try, Carbery con 14-0; 17 mins Carbery pen 17-0; 31 O'Donnell try 22-0; 33 Goggin try, Carbery con 29-0; (half-time 29-0); 46 Cave try, Burns con 29-7; 51 O'Mahony try, Carbery con 36-7; 64 Carbery try and con 43-7; 67 Arnold try, Keatley con; 71 Earls try, Keatley con 57-7; 78 Wootton try, Keatley con 64-7.

MUNSTER: Andrew Conway; Keith Earls, Dan Goggin, Rory Scannell, Alex Wootton; Joey Carbery, Alby Mathewson; Dave Kilcoyne, Niall Scannell, Stephen Archer; Tadhg Beirne, Billy Holland; Peter O'Mahony (capt), Tommy O'Donnell, CJ Stander.

Replacements: James Cronin for Kilcoyne, Duncan Williams for Mathewson (both 51 mins), Jean Kleyn for Beirne (58 mins), Kevin O'Byrne for N Scannell, Ciaran Parker for Archer, Arno Botha for Botha, Sammy Arnold for R Scannell (all 64 mins), Ian Keatley for Carbery (66 mins).

ULSTER: Peter Nelson, Craig Gilroy, Darren Cave, Angus Curtis, Angus Kernohan, Billy Burns, John Cooney; Andrew Warwick, Adam McBurney, Ross Kane, Alan O'Connor (Capt), Iain Henderson, Matthew Rea, Nick Timoney, Jean Deysel.

Replacements: Kieran Treadwell for Henderson (20 mins), Dave Shanahan for Cooney (33 mins), Tom O'Toole for Kane, Michael Lowry for Lowry (half-time), Eric O'Sullivan for Warwick (64 mins), John Andrew for McBurney, James Hume for Burns (both 66 mins), Clive Ross for Curtis, McBurney for Deysel (both 75-79 mins).

Sinbinned: Andrew (67-77 mins).

Referee: Dan Jones (WRU).