![]() ![]() ![]() None of that will prey too heavily on Leinster’s approach to a rivalry that has been distinctly one-sided this past decade, their last league defeat on home soil to their southern neighbours having come in October 2014. ![]() “They’ve been brilliant the last couple of weeks, even in South Africa you could see a sea of red and hear the Fields of Athenry being sung around the stadium and it’s going to be no different this weekend, I’ve no doubt.” “It is a tough place to go when you’re playing Leinster, they love playing there,” Tadhg Beirne told the Irish Examiner this week before adding: “I’ve no doubt the Munster crowd are going to come down in their droves and I do think we’ll need every bit of it. Yet the sight of a sea of red amongst the blue in this crowd expected to be close to the stadium’s reduced 29,000 capacity will be just as important to them as the players on the field when Rowntree’s men bid to upset the URC seedings and their own recent fragile history in Dublin. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |