IT WAS TIGHT, tense, hard-fought, gripping and hard to call for 54 minutes.
But then the game was blown open by a fluid passage of Leinster attack that reminded you that there is a big gap between themselves and Munster.
It started with a thunderous maul up the right touchline, bringing an advantage that encouraged Leinster to play.
Leinster were the better team at the RDS. Source: James Crombie/INPHO
Ross Byrne threw a skip pass, Garry Ringrose’s catch-pass allowed Jordan Larmour to send James Lowe barrelling up the left wing.
Jack Conan picked a hole off that ruck to make 10 more metres, then Lowe got back on the ball to send Dave Kearney into another gap. Munster were now on the ropes and it was Byrne and Ringrose who sent the ball wide right.
This time, props Cian Healy and Tadhg Furlong did a superb job of catching, drawing and passing to leave hooker Sean Cronin in position to step back inside the exposed Jean Kleyn and dive through Peter O’Mahony’s despairing tackle attempt to seal a sublime score.
It’s important to note that Munster were down to 14 players with Niall Scannell in the sin bin at the time but it was a wondrous score to break the game open.
“The front row do incredibly well the way they interlinked, one to three to two to score, which is always good,” said Leinster head coach Leo Cullen, while pointing out that it was a brilliant break from Cronin on a set-piece strike 10 minutes before that had resulted in Scannell being yellow-carded.
Leinster added a second try in the final minute of the game, James Lowe putting the icing on the cake, as they deservedly advanced into the Guinness Pro14 final, where they will face Glasgow Warriors at Celtic Park next Saturday.
That the Warriors have home city advantage could be a decisive factor and Dave Rennie’s side have certainly given the impression in recent weeks that they are a team on a mission.
Leinster, though, have an opportunity to retain their Pro14 crown, which would go some way towards dampening the dejection that accompanied last weekend’s defeat to Saracens in the Heineken Champions Cup final.
Glasgow were superb against Ulster. Source: James Crombie/INPHO
Cullen knows his team weren’t at their best yesterday against Munster, but they leave themselves in position to finish this season with silverware.
Johann van Graan’s side, meanwhile, remain unable to leap the semi-final hurdle that brought them crashing to ground in the Champions Cup against Saracens this season too.
They had few complaints after coming out on the wrong end of the 24-9 scoreline in the RDS yesterday.