Categories: Main News Munster Provincial URC

Try Scorer Daly Catches The Eye In Munster’s Runaway Victory

Munster sewed up an opening 39-9 GUINNESS PRO14 win over the Dragons without too much difficulty at a wet and windy Thomond Park.

Dean Ryan’s first competitive outing as the Dragons director of rugby started well but Munster cranked it in the second quarter, scoring two of their three first half tries while experienced hooker Richard Hibbard was in the sin-bin.

Scores from Arno Botha, Jack O’Donoghue and man-of-the-match Shane Daly made it 22-9 for half-time, with Dragons debutant Sam Davies kicking three penalties. Tyler Bleyendaal bagged a 60th-minute bonus point try and young replacement hooker Diarmuid Barron also crossed from a late maul. JJ Hanrahan finished with 14 points from the tee.

New out-half Davies opened the scoring in the second minute, the Welsh region having the benefit of the elements behind them. However, Mike Haley’s regathering of his own kick on the quarter-hour mark got the Munster attack firing and O’Donoghue and Kevin O’Byrne, on his 50th appearance, gained ground closer in.

The Munster pack forced the issue with successive penalties won and number 8 Botha was able to plunge over from a close-in ruck, 16 minutes in. Hanrahan converted and also added a well-struck penalty in response to a long-range miss by Davies.

The former Osprey was soon back on target from the right wing, closing the gap to 10-6, but Hibbard’s 32nd-minute shoulder charge on O’Donoghue left the visitors down a man. Munster responded with two tries in five minutes, O’Donoghue firstly burrowing in under the posts for Hanrahan to convert.

Winger Daly then cleverly chipped ahead and won the race to the touchdown in the left corner, although Botha was punished for not rolling away before the interval as Davies fired over his third successful penalty. His opposite number cancelled out that kick with a 42nd-minute penalty, pushing the margin out to 16 points.

Dragons failed to profit from Haley’s yellow card for a tackle around Owen Jenkins’ neck, their best opportunity foiled by Munster captain Billy Holland and Tommy O’Donnell who forced turnover possession from a maul just a few metres out.

Daly threatened to score from his own charge-down – the ball beat him over the end-line – but there was no denying Bleyendaal from close range following a Rory Scannell break and an inviting short pass from influential hooker O’Byrne.

Hanrahan converted and also added the extras to Barron’s 78th-minute effort, which was his first senior try for Munster. Academy duo Keynan Knox and Jack O’Sullivan joined ex-Leinster scrum half Nick McCarthy in making their competitive bows for the province.

Johann van Graan’s men depart for South Africa on Sunday for away games against the Isuzu Southern Kings and the Toyota Cheetahs. The province’s next home game takes place at Irish Independent Park on Friday, October 25 when the Ospreys visit the Cork venue for a 7.35pm kick-off.

Giving his post-match reaction, Munster boss van Graan commented: “I thought it was quite a clinical performance. The first 10 minutes, played the conditions very well and put the ball in behind us. We adjusted our plan a little it because the ball was so slippy.

“We then started to get some ascendancy and our forwards got control. The process went very well. I thought some of our plays went really well. Our defence went really well and that’s what we build on. There is a lot of talk about the attack, but we didn’t concede a try. The way we defended our line, that’s what I want to see – that killer instinct.”

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Published by
Dave Mervyn

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