Leicester will face Toulouse in the Heineken Cup semi-final later this month
after producing a dominant performance to beat top seeds Leinster 29-13 in Dublin.
The Tigers had been left to carry all of English rugby's Heineken Cup hopes
after Toulouse and Stade Francais comprehensively sent Northampton and Newcastle
packing in the first two quarter-finals.
And, in the manner that saw them crowned European champions in 2001 and 2002,
Leicester responded with an emphatic performance to become the first English
side ever to win a Heineken Cup quarter-final on the road.
Ollie Smith and Daryl Gibson scored a try in each half and Andy Goode booted
19 points from four penalties, two conversions and a drop goal as Leicester
moved a step closer to a record third European title.
The Tigers had battled into the last eight as runners up in the toughest of
all the Heineken Cup pools, while Leinster had become only the fourth side to
reach the quarter-finals unbeaten.
It was officially top seeds against eighth seeds today - but Leicester made a
mockery of the rankings to set up the thrilling prospect of a home semi-final
with Toulouse, possibly at the Walkers Stadium.
The Tigers had been forced into a late but not entirely unexpected change when
Julian White, who had aggravated his neck injury during the week, was replaced
by veteran prop Darren Morris.
It had made little difference as Leicester bossed the forwards battle with
their back row particularly effective and Lewis Moody named man of the match.
Leinster were put under intense and constant pressure in the first half and
their devastating back division was nullified as they were forced to play almost
exclusively on the back foot.
In many ways, Leinster were fortunate to only concede one try to Smith and
trail 16-3 at the interval.
Shane Horgan, the leading try-scorer in the Heineken Cup this season, had
returned to the Leinster wing after recovering from a broken hand, but it was
his defence that was tested early as Leicester dominated possession and
territory right from the kick-off.
Horgan twice had to shackle Leon Lloyd, which he did effectively, as Leicester
spread the ball wide, prodding for an opening. Martin Corry, less tentative,
burst through the Irish defence and charged 20 yards.
Leicester were building the phases, forcing Leinster to play from inside their
own half but they could not work the opening and after 10 minutes of dominance
it was left to fly-half Goode, who had already missed one simple penalty, to
slot his second attempt and put the Tigers ahead.
Leinster responded by piecing together their first meaningful attack,
stretching Leicester after Horgan, Girvan Dempsey and Guy Easterby had combined
down the right.
Horgan wasted an overlap with an attempted chip through, but Leinster did make
their attacking foray count and fly-half David Holwell, the leading points
scorer in the competition, slotted an 18th-minute penalty.
Leinster barely had time to draw breath as Leicester forced them onto the back
foot once again. Dempsey produced a try-saving tackle on Sam Vesty and Geordan
Murphy was then halted just shy of the line after cutting off the right wing
onto Harry Ellis' pass.
Leicester, quicker to the breakdown and dominant at the set-piece, were
decamped deep inside the Leinster 22. Leinster captain Reggie Corrigan was in
constant, frustrated dialogue with referee Joel Jutge and twice Leicester kicked
penalties to touch.
They failed each time to capitalise on line-outs five metres from the Leinster
try line and eventually, with 31 minutes on the clock, Leicester had to accept
three points and Goode slotted a second penalty.
From the restart Leinster poured forward but Holwell hit the woodwork with a
penalty and finally Leicester, having given Leinster a good working over, scored
the try they had been threatening all afternoon.
Leicester attacked the short side from the back of a ruck and Smith sold a
simple dummy to glide through the line and score.
Goode converted and two minutes later - after blindside Ciaran Potts had
tested referee Jutge's patience one time too often and was sent to the sin-bin -
the Leicester fly-half landed the penalty to open the Tigers a deserved lead at
the interval.
Leinster did not concede again while Potts was in the sin-bin and the
22-year-old did not return as Victor Costello was charged with making an impact
off the bench.
Gordon D'Arcy, recovered from the hamstring injury that wrecked his Six
Nations, slotted into midfield and Leinster, with more ball and better
territorial position, looked a more dangerous prospect.
But it did not last. Holwell landed a second penalty but Leicester swarmed
forward straight from the restart and Daryl Gibson burst over to open Leicester
a 23-6 lead just before the hour.
Leinster still pressed forward but turnovers, dropped balls and wayward passes
cost them. With five minutes remaining Horgan used his upper-body strength to
stretch over and score a consolation try for Leinster but it was no more than
that.