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Leinster player ratings vs Sharks | 2024/25 URC

Max Deegan of Leinster during the United Rugby Championship match between Hollywoodbets Sharks and Leinster at Hollywoodbets Kings Park in Durban, South Africa. (Photo By Shaun Roy/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

Leinster player ratings: A Leinster side that could be accurately described as a B team have beaten the Springbok-laden Sharks 10-7 in a tense affair at King’s Park.

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A remarkable win for Leo Cullen’s heavy underdogs. Here’s how we rated the players.

1. Cian Healy – 6.5
The Ireland veteran rolled out every dark art in the scrum to keep Springbok tighthead Vincent Koch at bay. Not the prettiest of outings, but when is it ever for the veteran loosehead? Survived. Enough said.

2. John McKee – 6.5
Discipline-wise, he tiptoed along the edge, giving away a couple of needless infractions. On the plus side, he tackled like a caffeinated gerbil, swarming Sharks carriers and proving a right nuisance in the tight.

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      3. Thomas Clarkson – 6
      The Ireland rookie just about weathered Ox Nche in the early scrums but eventually got roasted, a late 54th-minute penalty concession just metres from the Sharks’ line standing out. Showed plenty of street smarts at the breakdown against a mixed set-piece.

      Attack

      148
      Passes
      101
      110
      Ball Carries
      97
      196m
      Post Contact Metres
      140m
      4
      Line Breaks
      4

      4. Diarmuid Mangan – 8
      A big physical presence who relished the Shark-infested waters. Threw himself into collisions like a man absolutely convinced he’s bulletproof. Won some important collisions and never stopped grafting.

      5. Brian Deeny – 7.5
      Carried well, making dents in the Sharks’ defensive line. Nearly got folded in half in one meaty collision in the 67th minute, but soldiered on. A thoroughly decent shift from the Wexford native.

      6. Alex Soroka – 7.5
      Full of endeavour and aggression, even if the ref had his number early for discipline. Bounced back well and finished the game looking like he’d been through several rounds with the entire Sharks back row. Gave it absolutely everything.

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      7. Will Connors – 5
      Had the ignominy of giving away an early penalty and then departed after just 25 minutes with a painful-looking injury. Hard to judge, but his cameo didn’t scream ‘start me next week.’

      8. Max Deegan – 8
      Maybe Leinster’s stand out up front. His 30-metre gallop early on caught the Sharks napping and he never let up. Anchored the pack brilliantly and gave the Durban faithful plenty to worry about every time he had ball in hand.

      9. Fintan Gunne – 8.5
      Box kicks? On point. Passing? Sublime, including the bullet to put Henry McErlean away for Leinster’s first try. And just when Sharks fans thought his boot might waver, he pinned them back in their own half late on. By the end, he’d turned them into fresh chum.

      10. Ciaran Frawley – 4
      Oh, Ciaran. Nine months ago, he drop-goaled Ireland to a win in this very stadium. This time, the kicking fairies didn’t get the memo. Missed a sitter in front of the sticks and threw in a few iffy passes. Redeemed himself slightly with a crucial try-saver on 56 minutes, but still a day to forget for the Ratoath man.

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      11. Andrew Osborne – 3.5
      Largely anonymous. Struggled to hang on to the ball – knocking on repeatedly – and never truly got going. A forgettable outing for a player who’s otherwise impressed of late.

      12. Charlie Tector – 5.5
      The Kilkenny College product was a useful foil outside Frawley in terms of distribution, but missing five tackles is a stat that won’t be clipped for the highlight reel. Showed glimpses of spark that might placate the coaches, but he’ll know there’s more to come.

      13. Liam Turner – 6
      Spent most of the match trying to coral Jurenzo Julius, and it turned into a real cat-and-mouse affair. Did enough to keep the Sharks centre from running riot, but not without the odd scare. Honest shift.

      14. Tommy O’Brien – 7
      Full of industry on both sides of the ball, even if his body took a pounding in the process. Headed for an HIA after one crunching tackle but returned undeterred. Showed little respect for the many Boks in Sharks colours and was tireless in defence.

      15. Jimmy O’Brien – 8
      Had hardly any room to work with, and when he did get the ball, a wall of black jerseys met him. Still, he was rock-solid under the high ball and seemed to thrive in the swirling coastal breeze. Resilient display in tricky conditions.

      REPLACEMENTS

      16. Lee Barron – 5
      Athletic for a hooker but let his enthusiasm run wild, conceding a crucial penalty in the 71st minute that he’ll want back. Too many errors overshadowed his bright moments.

      17. Michael Milne – 6.5
      The Burr man did what he could in a scrum that felt like cliffhanger cinema for most of the game. Did earn one vital penalty, showing that not all sets ended in pain. A decent contribution off the bench.

      18. Rory McGuire – N/A
      Not on long enough to show much of anything. No rating.

      19. Alan Spicer – N/A
      All 6’10 and 138kg of him got a cameo, but not nearly enough to warrant a rating. We wait with bated breath for the big man’s extended run.

      20. Scott Penny – 8
      Tackled like a badger in heat (whatever that means) and nabbed a brilliantly taken try off a slick Leinster move. Another cameo that underlined his knack for popping up where it matters.

      21. Oliver Coffey – N/A
      Another player who didn’t get the minutes to warrant a rating.

      22. Ross Byrne – 7
      Steadied the ship with his typical calmness. No fireworks, but more than enough assurance to see out the dying stages and keep the Sharks from nipping back in.

      23. Henry McErlean – 7.5
      Showed real attacking energy in his cameo, finishing off Leinster’s first try after that gem of a pass from Gunne. A lively cameo from the youngster that helped swing momentum.

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      Comments

      4 Comments
      C
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      R
      RedWarriors 5 days ago

      Credit to the Leinster development and to Cullen with the ‘grit’ of a Nienaber team starting to show. Deegan was immense, and Cian Healy was worth a little more in that front row than a 6.5 suggests. He controlled the pace of the scrums and communicated in conversation with the ref. Must have been a special win for him.

      Gunne had a super debut. Its not an academy team, they have been blooded and are hardened from two previous SA tours and many Leinster caps between. Some inexperienced players but that wouldn’t count as the system makes that less relevant.

      Leinster now have an experienced deep squad of 35-40 who each can come on and play without a big drop in standard. The team 2 years ago was academy in that sense. Not now.


      All that said and as hard as Leinster made it, the Sharks should have been able to put them away. The reactions to some of the mistakes seemed to indicate that there is an ongoing issue of inaccuracy. Even at start of this season Sharks were blowing teams away and looked completely different.

      P
      PR 5 days ago

      Sharks players not accurate but a far bigger problem is the useless coaching set up. Tactically so naive. Running the ball from all quarters against a rush defence in humid conditions is just dumb. Simon Zebo said yesterday that if Rassie Erasmus coached the Sharks they would be the best team in Europe. They have a huge talent pool but terrible coaches.


      Leinster were quite brilliant - especially on defence. They remind me very much of the 2019 Boks - kick, chase, defend like demons, force opponents into mistakes and strike off turnover ball. Will be intriguing to see how they go the rest of the season, especially against the French giants in the Champions Cup. They have the best defence in Europe but has that come at the expense of a cutting edge on attack? Having a Nienaber-esque defensive mindset against Toulouse and Bordeaux Begles won’t work.

      L
      LK 5 days ago

      More like Leinster C Team..

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      Comments on RugbyPass

      I
      IkeaBoy 5 hours ago
      Why Les Kiss and Stuart Lancaster can lead Australia to glory

      “Why are you so insistent on being wrong? Man United won in 2008 (beating Chelsea in the final). In 2009 Barcelona won, beating United.”

      Good lad, just checking. So you’re not a bot! Chelsea bombed the 2008 final more than United won it. John Terry… couldn’t happen to a nicer fella.


      “The gap between wins ignores the finals contested. 2 in 2 years with his City Triumph. The most recent put him in the elite company of managers to have won it with multiple clubs. Yet more late career success and history.”

      Again - you’re not correct. City won the CL in 2023, and made the final in 2021. Those are the only two CL finals they have made.”

      So the difference between 2021 and 2023 would of course be TWO YEARS. 24 months would account for 3 different seasons. They contested ECL finals twice in two years. The first in 2021 - which they lost - was still the first elite European final in the clubs then 141 year history. Explain clearly how that’s not an achievement? Guess what age he was then…


      “I think your take on Gatland is pretty silly. Gatland was without Edwards in the 2013 and 2017 Lions tours and managed to do alright.”

      I thought you don’t care what certain managers did 10 years ago…

      Why would I address Eddie Jones? Why would he be deserving of a single sentence?


      “I am aware Les Kiss has achieved great things in his career, but I don’t care what he did over ten years ago. Rugby was a different sport back then.”

      So you haven’t watched even a minute of Super Rugby this year?


      “lol u really need to chill out”

      Simply frightful! If you’re not a bot you’re at least Gen-Z?

      171 Go to comments
      f
      fl 5 hours ago
      Why Les Kiss and Stuart Lancaster can lead Australia to glory

      “Pep didn’t win the ECL in 2009. It was 2008 with Barca”

      Why are you so insistent on being wrong? Man United won in 2008 (beating Chelsea in the final). In 2009 Barcelona won, beating United.


      “The gap between wins ignores the finals contested. 2 in 2 years with his City Triumph. The most recent put him in the elite company of managers to have won it with multiple clubs. Yet more late career success and history.”

      Again - you’re not correct. City won the CL in 2023, and made the final in 2021. Those are the only two CL finals they have made. With Barcelona, Pep made the semi final four consecutive times - with City he’s managed only 3 in 8 years. This year they didn’t even make the round of 16.


      To re-cap, you wrote that Pep “has gotten better with age. By every measure.” There are some measures that support what you’re saying, but the vast majority of the measures that you have highlighted actually show the opposite.


      I am aware Les Kiss has achieved great things in his career, but I don’t care what he did over ten years ago. Rugby was a different sport back then.


      I think your take on Gatland is pretty silly. Gatland was without Edwards in the 2013 and 2017 Lions tours and managed to do alright. You’ve also not addressed Eddie Jones.


      I agree wrt Schmidt. He would ideally be retained, but it wouldn’t work to have a remote head coach. He should definitely be hired as a consultant/analyst/selector though.


      “Look at the talent that would be discarded in Schmidt and Kiss if your age Nazism was applied.”

      lol u really need to chill out lad. Kiss and Schmidt would both be great members of the coaching set up in 2025, but it would be ridiculous to bank on either to retain the head coach role until 2031.

      171 Go to comments
      I
      IkeaBoy 6 hours ago
      Why Les Kiss and Stuart Lancaster can lead Australia to glory

      Pep didn’t win the ECL in 2009. It was 2008 with Barca. The gap between wins ignores the finals contested. 2 in 2 years with his City Triumph. The most recent put him in the elite company of managers to have won it with multiple clubs. Yet more late career success and history.


      His time with City - a lower win ratio compared to Bayern Munich as you say - includes a 100 PT season. A feat that will likely never be surpassed. I appreciate you don’t follow soccer too closely but even casual fans refer to the sport in ‘pre and post Pep’ terms and all because of what he has achieved and is continuing to achieve, late career. There is a reason that even U10’s play out from the back now at every level of the game. That’s also a fairly recent development.


      How refreshing to return to rugby on a rugby forum.


      Ireland won a long over due slam in 2009. The last embers of a golden generation was kicked on by a handful of young new players and a new senior coach. Kiss was brought in as defence coach and was the reason they won it. They’d the best defence in the game at the time. He all but invented the choke tackle. Fittingly they backed it up in the next world cup in their 2011 pool match against… Australia. The instantly iconic image of Will Genia getting rag-dolled by Stephen Ferris.


      His career since has even included director of rugby positions. He would have an extremely good idea of where the game is at and where it is going in addition to governance experience and dealings. Not least in Oz were many of the players will have come via or across Rugby League pathways.


      Gatland isn’t a valid coach to compare too. He only ever over-achieved and was barely schools level without Shaun Edwards at club or test level. His return to Wales simply exposed his limitations and a chaotic union. It wasn’t age.


      Schmidt is open to staying involved in a remote capacity which I think deserves more attention. It would be a brain drain to lose him. He stepped in to coach the ABs in the first 2022 test against Ireland when Foster was laid out with Covid. They mullered Ireland 42-19. He was still heavily involved in the RWC 2023 quarter final. Same story.


      Look at the talent that would be discarded in Schmidt and Kiss if your age Nazism was applied.

      171 Go to comments
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