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Leinster Soar Past Scarlets In Dominant Semi-Final Display

Leinster will contest their first Champions Cup final since 2012 after swatting the Scarlets aside in an utterly-dominant 38-16 win at the Aviva Stadium.

VIDEO HIGHLIGHTS: LEINSTER 38 SCARLETS 16

Leo Cullen’s men were relentless at times as they put the Welsh region to the sword, notching first half tries through James Ryan, Cian Healy and Fergus McFadden, and adding two more after the break from man-of-the-match Scott Fardy and Jonathan Sexton.

They had clearly done their homework on last year’s disappointing GUINNESS PRO12 semi-final defeat to the Scarlets at the RDS, McFadden’s try on the stroke of half-time giving the province a significant 24-9 half-time lead this afternoon.

Leigh Halfpenny’s three penalties from three attempts, and a solid return from their scrum, were the Scarlets’ only positives in this one-sided Celtic clash, and they salvaged some pride late on with a try from their former Leinster forward Tadhg Beirne.

It was Leinster’s eighth straight European victory this season and sets up the possibility of an all-Irish final in Bilbao in three weeks’ time if Munster can come through tomorrow’s semi-final against Racing 92 in Bordeaux.

Beirne forced an early turnover to lift the Scarlets, who had reached the last-four for the first time since 2007. Steff Evans then drew a high tackle from Fardy which allowed Halfpenny to smash over a sixth-minute penalty for the lead.

That brought the best out of Leinster, Rob Kearney finding a superb touch and Fardy charging down Aled Davies, before they went wide and Ryan evaded Beirne’s attempted tackle and bounced up to score his first try for the province, converted by Sexton.

The hosts were 10-3 in front after fit-again centre Robbie Henshaw, who returned to the scene of his shoulder injury against Italy, had a couple of powerful runs and the Scarlets infringed close to the posts, allowing Sexton to widen the margin to seven.

Halfpenny’s supreme goal-kicking kept the Welshmen within range, despite the concession of a second Leinster try. A scrum penalty against Healy closed the gap to 10-6 before the Ireland prop, with support from the ever-willing Fardy, crashed over for a 26th-minute converted score. Sexton’s initial cross-field kick had seen Steff Evans concede a five-metre scrum.

Halfpenny punished a Dan Leavy offside seven minutes later, but Leinster’s forwards flooded forward from a late penalty and the pressure told, Garry Ringrose flinging a pass wide for winger McFadden to reach over in the right corner ahead of Evans.

Sexton added the conversion for good measure, putting 15 points between the sides at the interval, and Leinster, with Jamison Gibson-Park keeping a high tempo and passing crisply, showed not signs of letting up when play resumed.

Tadhg Furlong lost the ball in contact as the Scarlets defended close to their line, a Sean Cronin break had Leinster knocking on the door again with Jordan Larmour, a replacement for the injured McFadden, showing his sidestepping ability.

It was Larmour who ripped the ball from Rhys Patchell to set the wheels in motion for the fourth try, Ryan and Fardy combining slickly in the 22 for the Australian international to power over. Sexton’s conversion made it 31-9.

Leinster’s pack came hunting for more, carrying hard on the hour mark before Sexton stepped off his left for a smart finish and the conversion completed his handsome 18-point haul. In contrast, the Scarlets knocked on from a gilt-edged lineout opportunity, and they needed Scott Williams’ last-ditch tackle to deny Kearney a try.

With their strong bench keeping them on the front foot, Leinster missed out on a further try when a lunging Fardy had a 73rd-minute score chalked off for hands in the ruck. A rare missed tackle from the former Wallaby allowed Beirne through for his consolation score in the final minutes, with Rhys Patchell drop-kicking the conversion.

Giving his reaction afterwards, Sexton said: “The game-plan today was what we were meant to do last year (in the PRO12 semi-final), you need to play a little bit different against the Scarlets. You need to be more direct because they’ve got 14 guys in the line, on their feet, and you have to puncture holes in their defence as opposed to get around them, as you’re never really going to get around him.

“I think at times last year we tried to go around them and we got caught out but today we picked our moments when we went wide a lot better. In fairness to the forwards, they fronted up time and time again…and Robbie, he was insane.”

Asked if Leinster can go on to end their six-year wait for a fourth European Cup, the Dubliner replied: “We’ll find out in a couple of weeks. It really is, when you come to a final, anything can happen. We know that. We’ve been underdogs before in finals and won, we’ve been favourites and lost.

“You need to be humble and realise everything is about our preparation now. Keeping our feet on the ground, I don’t think we are that much better than the Scarlets today, we just took a couple of chances. We were quite clinical, which is the pleasing part.”
 

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