Leicester moved to within touching distance of the Heineken Cup quarter-finals
after a stunning late show shattered French giants Stade Francais at Welford
Road.
Lock Louis Deacon and centre Dan Hipkiss scored tries during the final seven
minutes to leave Tigers just one point away from reaching the last-eight.
Their final Pool Three game is away against Clermont Auvergne next Friday
night - Leicester coach Pat Howard's former club - while Stade finish off
against Paris visitors the Ospreys.
A losing bonus will be enough from Leicester's trip to central France, but for
so much of a Welford Road classic it looked as though the Tigers would be left
fighting for Heineken Cup survival.
Stade appeared to have done enough when substitute Mirco Bergamasco claimed a
second-half interception try, but Deacon and the Hipkiss - Leicester's late
match-winner against the Ospreys a week before Christmas - struck gold.
Victory for the 2001 and 2002 Heineken Cup winners over Clermont would make
Stade's result against the Ospreys academic.
But Irish challengers Munster and Leinster are also well-placed to progress as
a best runner-up, so Howard's men will look to finish the job in style.
Andy Goode kicked 19 points for the home side, who trailed 22-12 after 63
minutes, while Stade centre David Skrela slotted three penalties and there were
drop-goals from Juan Martin Hernandez and Ignacio Corleto.
Tigers head coach Pat Howard made a solitary change following last weekend's
Guinness Premiership victory over London Irish, replacing flanker Brett Deacon
with Will Johnson, while Austin Healey was preferred to England scrum-half Harry
Ellis and flanker Shane Jennings passed a late fitness test.
Leicester and England skipper Martin Corry made his 200th start for Tigers,
but Stade were determined to repeat their Welford Road victory of two seasons
ago as they paraded a side containing 13 internationals under the captaincy of
lock David Auradou.
Corry's men knew the ball was in their court, but Stade settled quickly as
good driving work from hooker Dimitri Szarzewski and flanker Remy Martin put
Leicester under pressure.
Tigers needed to release the stranglehold, and they almost managed it in
spectacular fashion on six minutes when centre Hipkiss broke clear from his own
22, sending wing Geordan Murphy sprinting clear before he was denied by some
last-ditch Stade defence.
Murphy's fellow wing Leon Lloyd the exploited space barely 60 seconds later,
and after he was bundled late into touch by Szarzewski, Goode booted the
resulting penalty for a 3-0 lead.
Stade suffered an injury blow midway through the half when wing Lucas Borges
limped off to be replaced by Bergamasco, and before the French side could
regroup, Goode doubled Leicester's advantage through a 30-metre penalty.
The Tigers were up and running, but Stade responded with six points in three
minutes via a Skrela penalty and Hernandez drop-goal as dominant defences
severely restricted try-scoring chances.
Goode and Skrela exchanged penalties as half-time approached, and Leicestet
stayed in touch despite a double injury setback that saw Lloyd - a legacy of the
Szarzewski challenge - and Jennings go off to be replaced by Tom Varndell and
Luke Abraham, respectively.
Irish referee Alan Lewis increasingly antagonised the majority of a 16,815
capacity crowd with his eagerness to punish any technical indiscretion, and
their frustration was compounded when he punished Corry for not rolling away
after tackling Stade scrum-half Jerome Fillol, handing Skrela another
three-pointer.
Leicester almost wiped out a 12-9 interval deficit within three minutes of the
restart. Stade though, just did enough to thwart Healey's blindside break and
clear their lines before Goode sent a 50-metre penalty attempt drifting wide.
Goode's accuracy let him down again two minutes later, this time from 10
metres nearer the Stade posts, and with the visitors appearing increasingly
fluent in attack, Howard made his first tactical change, sending on Ellis for
Healey.
The game, inevitably with so much at stake, developed into a nervous war of
attrition as both sides struggled to carve out gilt-edged opportunities, but
Leicester had no answer when Corleto rifled over a mighty 50-metre drop-goal.
It was a brilliant strike by the Argentine star, yet Stade still couldn't move
clear on the scoreboard as Goode set up a tense final quarter through landing
his fourth successful penalty.
But they didn't have to wait long, as Leicester were brutally made to pay for
Goode's ambitious midfield pass.
Instead of finding a fellow Leicester attacker, Goode could only look on
helplessly as Bergamasco gathered the ball and sprinted almost 60 metres
unopposed for a try that Skrela improved to give Stade an imposing 22-12
advantage.
Goode added a fifth penalty, and the closing stages grew increasingly dramatic
when Murphy's angled line of attack transfixed the Stade defence and a tireless
Deacon crossed wide out for a stunning try.
Goode converted from the touchline, levelling a gripping game at 22-22 before
Leicester laid siege inside the Stade 22 in pursuit of a winning score and
Hipkiss came up trumps.