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Filed under: Magners League

Shane Jennings facing World Cup fitness battle

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Leinster flanker Shane Jennings has undergone surgery on a broken arm, leaving his hopes of making Ireland's Rugby World Cup squad in the balance.

The 29-year-old, capped nine times by his country, was injured in last weekend's Magners League Grand Final loss to Munster at Thomond Park.

Early reports suggest a lay-off of eight weeks, giving the former Leicester openside a chance of playing a part in Ireland's World Cup warm-up games in August.

Declan Kidney's men will play Scotland, France (twice) and England prior to the tournament in New Zealand, with Ulster flanker Stephen Ferris another currently on the injured list.

Munster's David Wallaces is the current holder of the Ireland No.7 jersey, with Jennings' Leinster team-mate, Sean O'Brien, also comfortable in the position.

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Munster power to Magners title

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Leinster head coach Joe Schmidt admitted that fatigue was a factor after his side fell to a 19-9 defeat to Munster in the Magners League Grand Final.

Seven days on from their Heineken Cup triumph, the European kingpins eventually ran out of steam as their quest for an unprecedented double came unhinged at Thomond Park. Outscored three tries to none, Leinster appeared to be out on their feet during the final quarter and Schmidt agreed that it was one bridge too far for his tired troops.

"I think fatigue was obviously a factor," said Schmidt. "We made a few changes because guys were out on their feet. That was something which we planned for, and felt was probably going to happen.

"To be honest, I kind of felt that Munster needed it more than we wanted it. They showed a lot of character, and that made it difficult for us to really keep our tempo, and play the game that we wanted to play. Even when we did have a little bit of momentum, we didn't quite have the sharpness that has allowed us to become successful so far."

The view from the Munster camp, by contrast, was one of complete satisfaction. Having gone six games without scoring a try against Leinster, the men in red redressed the balance with three touchdowns en route to a thoroughly deserved victory.

Wingers Doug Howlett and Keith Earls scored a try apiece whilst a late penalty try put the icing on the cake for the home side. Ronan O'Gara converted twice. Leinster could only manage three penalties from the boot of Jonathan Sexton.

Munster boss Tony McGahan was effusive in his praise of the players, and also paid tribute to the Munster fans who finally have something to boast about.

"They can walk around with a smile on their faces, knowing that we have done something very important in the context of the Magners League season," he said.

The province's captain Paul O'Connell, meanwhile, said the whole occasion was testament to the rude health of the game in Ireland at present.

"I think today was a very good thing for Irish rugby. Leinster and Munster have always made each other better, and we have made the Irish team better by driving on standards," he said. "Both sides have a lot of leadership, and no little skill. People talk about this being a good era for Ireland, and when you look at some of the young players coming through, you would be very confident for the future."

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Munster 19 v 9 Leinster

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Leinster fell to a 10-point defeat to Munster in their final match of the season, missing out on a potential Magners League and Heineken Cup double...

Leinster had their periods of dominance in the league decider at Thomond Park, but their failure to convert pressure into points came back to haunt them in the end.

Jonathan Sexton kicked three penalties from four attempts for the visitors, while Sean O'Brien, Richardt Strauss, Fergus McFadden, Kevin McLaughlin and Nathan Hines all went close to scoring tries.

Munster managed to soak up the pressure in both halves and keep their try-line intact, with Doug Howlett's 12th-minute touchdown setting them on the way to their second Magners League title in three years.

Joe Schmidt's men travelled to Limerick in buoyant mood, just seven days after their heroic Heineken Cup final victory over Northampton Saints.

Gordon D'Arcy's ankle injury saw McFadden join Brian O'Driscoll in the centre for Leinster, who reintroduced Heinke van der Merwe and Shane Jennings in the pack.

It was a win apiece earlier in the campaign - Leinster were 13-9 winners at the Aviva Stadium and a Ronan O'Gara-inspired Munster claimed a 24-23 triumph in Limerick last month - and there was a typically bruising opening to the grand final.

Sexton miscued a long range penalty with the wind behind him, six minutes in, and although Leinster won a series of early turnovers, Munster were first on the scoreboard.

The Munster pack laid the groundwork before Lifeimi Mafi got away from Eoin Reddan and laid the ball off for former All Black Howlett to score in the corner.

O'Gara read the wind superbly to stab the conversion over, rewarding his forwards for a solid start. Paul O'Connell and man-of-the-match David Wallace were both to the fore, the latter keen to impress in his 200th outing for Munster.

The turnover rate was high as the sides scrapped for every ball, with O'Brien, Jennings and Jamie Heaslip putting their bodies on the line. Leinster patiently worked themselves into the game amid a series of attacks from deep.

One such counter led to a cynical shoulder charge by Marcus Horan on O'Driscoll which was missed by the match officials. However, a subsequent scrum infringement saw Sexton convert his first penalty goal from a central position.

There was little to chose between the sides coming up to half-time and given the balance of play, Leinster would have been pleased to go in just 7-3 behind at the break.

A sparkling run and pass from O'Driscoll got Leinster immediately into scoring range early in the second half. Their forwards battered away at Munster's defensive line until Donncha O'Callaghan was sin-binned for not rolling away in front of his posts.

Sexton took the three points on offer and Munster staved off Leinster's next assault on their line - Strauss, who almost got over from a lineout move, and McFadden, tackled brilliantly by Wallace and James Coughlan, were both thwarted.

A looping pass from Sexton was mishandled by McFadden as Munster were caught for numbers out wide, but the Leinster out-half was successful with a right-sided penalty soon after for a 9-7 lead.

With just 20 minutes remaining, it was anybody's game. After such an absorbing game in Cardiff last Saturday, tiredness seemed to become a factor for the men in blue as Munster got on the front foot again.

They barged back to within metres of the Leinster line, a thunderous tackle from Luke Fitzgerald knocking Howlett to the ground just when a try looked on.

But Munster turned the screw when O'Gara lofted a cross-field kick over to Earls who avoided Isa Nacewa's initial challenge and scored despite the best efforts of Shane Horgan and O'Driscoll.

O'Gara was narrowly wide with the conversion and watched his 48-metre penalty miss the target, with nine minutes remaining.

However, Leinster's hopes were extinguished by the concession of a third try. Munster drove them back in two successive scrums close to their line and referee Nigel Owens signalled for a penalty try after the second one.

O'Gara's conversion took the lead to 10 points and although the game was now beyond them, Leinster, with the departing Paul O'Donohoe now on the pitch, were inches away from grabbing an injury-time try. Kevin McLaughlin and Nathan Hines both went close in the dying minutes.

MUNSTER SCORERS: D. Howlett (1 try), K. Earls (1 try), Penalty try, R. O'Gara (2 conversions)

LEINSTER SCORERS: J. Sexton (3 penalties)

MUNSTER: F Jones; D Howlett, D Barnes, L Mafi, K Earls; R O'Gara, C Murray; M Horan, D Varley, J Hayes, D O'Callaghan, P O'Connell CAPTAIN, D Ryan, D Wallace, J Coughlan

REPLACEMENTS: M Sherry, W du Preez, S Archer, D Leamy, N Ronan, P Stringer, P Warwick, J Murphy

LEINSTER:

15: Isa Nacewa
14: Shane Horgan
13: Brian O'Driscoll
12: Fergus McFadden
11: Luke Fitzgerald
10: Jonathan Sexton
9: Eoin Reddan (Paul O'Donohoe, 77)

1: Heinke van der Merwe (Cian Healy, 59)
2: Richardt Strauss
3: Mike Ross (Stan Wright, 71)
4: Leo Cullen CAPTAIN
5: Nathan Hines
6: Sean O'Brien (Kevin McLaughlin, 59)
7: Shane Jennings (Aaron Dundon, 71)
8: Jamie Heaslip

REPLACEMENTS NOT USED: Devin Toner, Ian Madigan, Eoin O'Malley

REFEREE: Nigel Owens (WRU), ASSISTANT REFEREES: Tim Hayes, David Jones (both WRU), 4th OFFICIAL: Alan Rogan (IRFU), 5th OFFICIAL: Trevor Collins (IRFU), TMO: Nigel Whitehouse (WRU)

Magners League Grand final: Who dares wins

BASKING in the glory of last weekend's remarkable triumph, the jokes have been flying around Leinster this week ahead of this evening's Magners League Grand Final clash with Munster at a sold-out Thomond Park (5.05).

One particularly cruel one involved the Drug Squad being called to Thomond Park yesterday only for the crisis to be averted when it was established that the suspicious white powder on the pitch was in fact the Leinster tryline.

The most remarkable statistic heading into this latest instalment in one of the most compelling rivalries in rugby is that Munster have not managed to cross the Leinster line in their last six meetings, failing to score a try since Denis Fogarty managed the feat back in April 2009. Not to be sniffed at.

It is rendered all the more puzzling by Munster's average of two tries per game during their regular season league campaign (44 in 22 matches) as they worked their way impressively to a record 13-point margin at the head of the table.

Leinster's defensive surety has been the bedrock upon which this season's success has been constructed, with last Saturday's three-try collapse in the first half of the Heineken Cup final against Northampton an aberration, swiftly put to bed in the second half when they did not concede a single point.

However, those events could provide a clue as to how things will unfold in Limerick a week later. Northampton profited from Leinster not being at the races in that first period, seemingly unnerved by the big-day pressure and their status as overwhelming favourites. They take to the pitch today as the stronger side seeking to become the first team to complete a Magners-Heineken double.

The question marks centre on their psychological state for, no matter how hard they try to maintain their mental focus for the final chapter of a long season, getting to the same level of intensity they had in the second half against Northampton is a major challenge. Cardiff is a hard act to follow.

For Munster, the psychological test is far simpler. Conclude the season with a trophy which recognises both their league consistency and determination to remain a major force in European rugby regardless of their Heineken and Challenge Cup disappointments this season.

It is safe to assume that, with two weeks of solitary focus behind them, Tony McGahan's men will be at full tilt this evening, just as they were when willpower drove them to victory in their April meeting with Leinster at the same venue.

The problem is that, even if Leinster are at 75pc, the visitors still have the capacity to produce spells of rugby that can leave any team clutching at air and, in keeping with his selections all season, Joe Schmidt has picked a clever side for his last outing in a stunning debut season.

Gordon D'Arcy was not available to start in any case, but Fergus McFadden's selection at inside-centre provides him with the ideal opportunity to send out a powerful message to Ireland coach Declan Kidney as the clock ticks down to the World Cup.

Similarly, Shane Jennings is rewarded for his critical contributions to Leinster's victories in the semi-final and final of the Heineken Cup and if he manages to help effect superiority at the breakdown against Ireland's incumbent No 7, David Wallace, it will give Kidney further food for thought.

Heinke van der Merwe is of no use to Kidney, but, while the South African is not as dynamic as Cian Healy in the loose, he is an accomplished scrummager and his performance could provide an insight to John Hayes' capacity to play a role at New Zealand 2011.

McGahan has stuck with the side that ground its way past the Ospreys in the semi-final, which means Danny Barnes, the two-try hero that day, suddenly finds himself marking Brian O'Driscoll, the best centre of his generation.

Barnes and Lifeimi Mafi face a massive defensive test against the Leinster midfield and the tackles need to go in hard and, in Mafi's case, low enough to prevent yellow cards.

There is talent in the Munster backline, and the back-three play since the return of Felix Jones from injury has shown what can be done with the right combination of belief and attacking brio.

However, Schmidt is among the foremost backline innovators in the game and Munster do not have his coaching equivalent, making it harder to end the try-scoring famine that has hindered them in this fixture.

If Marcus Horan and Hayes can provide a steady scrum and Damien Varley takes advantage of Munster's extra height at line-out time, then it is game on.

The Final Trial element to the clash provides extra incentive for both teams and, if McFadden and Jennings will be bulling for Leinster, then it is safe to say Wallace, James Coughlan, Donnacha Ryan, Conor Murray and Jones will be equally ferocious for the hosts.

Then there is the Ronan O'Gara factor. The out-half will have watched Jonathan Sexton's tour de force in Cardiff with a wry smile for it used to be O'Gara doing the Roy Of the Rovers bit in the Heineken Cup (he was voted the best player of the first 15 years of the competition) and garnering the plaudits afterwards.

Predictions are hazardous in the extreme. Leinster are the better side, but face the greater mental challenge, Munster have last-chance-saloon intensity and a stronger bench, but not the capacity to cope if Schmidt's men hit battle speed.

Expect a furious contest, O'Gara and Coughlan to play key roles for the home side, along with McFadden and Jennings for the guests and very little in it come the final whistle, which may just herald a narrow Leinster win.

Of course, if Munster do manage it, the joke is on Leinster's fans as their red counterparts can revel in the glory of beating the best team in Europe. We'll see.

Verdict: Leinster

- Hugh Farrelly

Irish Independent

Perfect stage for cullen to show world Cup worth

If you could have scripted a fixture to crown the season, this would most definitely have been it. And if anyone out there thinks that there is a single member of the new European champions dreading the trek to Limerick, then think again.

They could well lose this afternoon, but every single Leinster player will be licking his lips at the prospect of this Magners League Grand Final showdown at Thomond Park.

This is tribal rivalry at its very best -- a fixture where form is meaningless, where passion rules.

For Tony McGahan and Munster, it is a heaven-sent opportunity to turn over the top team in Europe and take the Magners League crown they clearly deserve, given that they finished 13 points clear in the table.

For Leinster coach Joe Schmidt, opportunity knocks to create history and complete the fairytale double in his first season in charge.

And then there is Ireland coach Declan Kidney, for whom the most perfect unofficial final trial unfolds before a full house, with a no-holds-barred encounter set to shed light on some World Cup selections.

Schmidt is right when he calls the Celtic final a much "tougher test" than the Heineken Cup decider. That is no slight on Northampton, just a statement of fact, given the ingredients.

Jealous

Munster are fresh, hungry and jealous -- as well as high on confidence, given their one-point win (24-23) in the home league fixture six weeks ago.

The fact that they didn't score a try and haven't in half a dozen attempts against their old rivals (an extraordinary statistic) may rankle, but they won't care a jot if Ronan O'Gara kicks them to victory this evening.

The Heineken Cup final was a classic, the best I have witnessed, but this evening's Celtic encounter also has all the right ingredients for a monumental encounter. It should replicate Cardiff for thrills and spills, with an intensity that is absolutely guaranteed.

The one-try game back in April was pure theatre and, irrespective of the outcome, I would settle for that again. One way or the other, we won't be disappointed -- take that as read.

So, what exactly can we expect?

A Leinster side that wants to win is coming to Limerick with the intention of ransacking a Munster side that has to win. With 19 victories from 22 games in the regular league, the best team over the course of the marathon campaign is desperate to complete the job now.

I have mixed views on the play-off formula. When it was first introduced to the All-Ireland League, I felt it was unfair that the team that had proven it was the best, by finishing top of the table, had to win it again -- to be sure, to be sure.

The play-off system is now part and parcel of the professional game. It is not so much a necessary evil as an extension to the long-term planning when the initial team goals are set.

To draw comparison with long-distance running, it's about pacing, about planning for the season and selecting teams throughout the campaign (in regular league and play-offs) accordingly.

What is beyond dispute is that the two best teams in the competition by a mile (those finishing first and second in the table) have made it through to today's finale, with Munster deserving of home advantage.

The attendance would have been doubled if the final had been switched to the Aviva Stadium, but that would have been unfair in the extreme -- unless the decision is made that the Grand Final should always be held in a predetermined venue (much like the Heineken).

We won't bother going through all the obvious unit and individual match-ups -- they are old hat at this stage. But, for some, the stakes are extremely high, given the switch in focus after today to New Zealand 2011.

Marcus Horan, Damien Varley, James Coughlan and Felix Jones all have a chance to lay down a World Cup marker.

For Leinster captain Leo Cullen, the stage is set to take on Donncha O'Callaghan and make it a case of either/or to partner Paul O'Connell in the second-row against the US Eagles in the World Cup opener.

Shane Horgan, Luke Fitzgerald and Fergus McFadden (who edges closer by the game) can all further their case for a place on the plane. So, too, Shane Jennings, whose half-time introduction at the Millennium Stadium last week certainly played a part in Leinster's remarkable turnaround.

He and Denis Leamy have so much to play for beyond the 'mere' result this afternoon. But make no mistake, the result is the be all and end all to putting the cap on this fulfilling Irish rugby season.

And please may we be spared the hype of heaping more pressure on the relatively young shoulders of Jonathan Sexton in advocating him for future captaincy.

He has enough on his plate, as O'Gara will be reminding him again, without this pressure at a still premature stage in his burgeoning career. In a sense, current Ireland skipper Brian O'Driscoll did him few favours with his throwaway line in the post-match interview last week about half-time speakers.

Sexton's focus is on copper-fastening his hold on the Ireland No 10 jersey and that's what he will do in ensuring a steady Leinster course by deeds not words today. It is his way and I doubt he will deviate one iota.

As to the outcome? Both teams will turn up with equal mindsets. If each delivers to form, then Leinster's greater creativity could see them home.

It should be something special. Bring it on.

- Tony Ward

Irish Independent

Bowe named Irish Rugby Writers' Player of the Year

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Bowe, who was also named Irish and Welsh players' player and Magners League Rugby Writers' Player of the year at the end of last season, collected the award at a function at the Aviva Stadium in Dublin last night (Monday).

The 26-year-old has been in terrific form for his region and on the International stage and was highly praised by the organising committee.

"Tommy Bowe had an exceptional year winning nearly every award available to him both at home and abroad", said a committee spokesperson.

"A former Monaghan minor Gaelic footballer, Bowe became the first man from the Farney county to play for Ireland in 80 years when he lined out against the USA in November 2004.

"Since then Bowe has established himself as one of Ireland's most consistent performers and was duly rewarded with a call-up to the British & Irish Lions tour to South Africa in the summer of 2009. He has scored five tries in his last six Tests for Ireland.

Bowe has scored an impressive 18 tries in just 38 European appearances and it is this strike ratio that has earned him the accolade as one of rugby's most lethal wingers.

He became the first Irish international try scorer at the Aviva Stadium when he touched down against South Africa on Saturday and follows in the footstep of Brian O'Driscoll, Ronan O'Gara and Felipe Contepomi in winning the award.

Heaslip relishing home advantage

Stephen Ferris hugging Jamie Heaslip

Heaslip: Looking to impress

Ireland number eight Jamie Heaslip believes home ground advantage will play a big part in Saturday's clash against South Africa.

Declan Kidney's men will host the Springboks in their first international match at the new Aviva Stadium.

Heaslip, who has been in outstanding form for club side Leinster, expects the overwhelming home support to inspire Ireland to victory over the current World champions.

"I think we can do a job," he told the Belfast Telegraph.

"The new stadium is unbelievable. I played there a few weeks ago against Munster in the Magners League and it was incredible.

"That was a 60-40 split, but in an Ireland home game you're going to be getting 80-20 if not 90-10 and believe me, that will be intimidating.

"I think people are going to be surprised at just how loud it is. In that match against Munster it was hard to hear the referee call the scrum.

"The crowd are right on top of you so there's no escape. It's a great ampitheatre. As well as the atmosphere the pitch is superb and the facilities are the best I have ever been in."

Ireland face gruelling encounters against Samoa, New Zealand and Argentina following the Springbok clash and Heaslip is hoping to get as much game time as possible.

"We've got four tough games ahead of us and inevitably there will be knocks and bangs. You can't have the same 15 guys going through all four games given the physicality of the game," he said.

"A player wants to play so maybe sometimes you have to protect him from himself."

Leinster edge out Edinburgh

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Edinburgh's Tim Visser scored a try in Dublin but it was not enough to earn his side a victory
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Leinster made it three wins on the bounce in the Magners League by battling their way to a 19-18victory over Edinburgh at the RDS in Dublin on Saturday night.

Edinburgh scored tries in each half from Tim Visser and Chris Paterson, but Leinster fullback Isa Nacewa kicked four penalties and converted Andrew Conway's first Magners League try to secure the narrow win.

Leinster were missing most of their internationals due to Ireland's training camp this week, their much-changed starting XV including half-backs Ian Madigan and Paul O'Donohoe. Edinburgh coach Rob Moffat gave Alex Blair, the youngest of the Blair brothers, his debut at outside-half, while Argentinian lock Esteban Lozada was a late inclusion for Fraser McKenzie.

Leinster saw plenty of ball in the opening half but Edinburgh carried more of a try-scoring threat. After Nacewa had booted the hosts in front, some quick thinking from Mike Blair opened the way for Visser to strike.

Leinster lost possession at a midfield ruck and, noticing a mismatch on the left wing, scrum-half Blair dinked a kick over the top for Visser to chase. Visser got to it ahead of the covering Richard Strauss, tapped it on and scored in the corner. Paterson missed the conversion and Edinburgh captain Roddy Grant was punished by Nacewa for coming in at the side of a ruck, briefly restoring Leinster's lead.

Another gap appeared out wide when Edinburgh's Alex Grove broke through a hole and almost linked with Jim Thompson for a try. The Scots had to settle for a penalty, Paterson doing the necessary after Mike Ross infringed at a scrum.

A darting run from Madigan, with Conway on his shoulder, saw Leinster click into gear. Their forwards were held up over the line, but with a penalty advantage Nacewa kicked them into a 9-8 lead at half-time.

Nacewa missed a long-range penalty just before the break, but it was his counter- attack which drove Leinster on for their only try, six minutes into the second half. A quick lineout and series of rucks followed before ex-Edinburgh lock Nathan Hines popped the ball to the onrushing Conway who beat Alex Blair's tackle to cruise over to the left of the posts.

Nacewa's conversion was cancelled out by a penalty from Paterson but the game opened up for Leinster again when replacement prop David Young was sin-binned for hands in the ruck, just seconds after being introduced.

Replays showed the culprit was actually hooker Ross Ford, but it did not matter as Nacewa landed the penalty for a 19-11 lead and the hosts looked primed to take further advantage.

To their credit, Edinburgh's defence held firm and they even snaffled a try while Young was off. Ford muscled past the otherwise excellent Strauss and Mike Blair's swift pass from the subsequent ruck sent Paterson cantering in under the posts.

Paterson converted his own try to make it a one-point game with a full quarter left to play. However, Edinburgh could not get back into scoring range and their best chance was spoilt by a ruck offence from replacement Mark Robertson.

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Rob rueing a full stop

THERE’S a restlessness about Rob Kearney that can be hard to explain. Ask him about his own form and he delicately deflects any praise to the wider team dynamic.

Talk to the Leinster and Ireland full-back about the province’s improved good run of form and he looks to the future. Mention the word ‘drive’ and he pinpoints the ongoing quest for excellence.

So, in sporting terms, he’s never happy. Which is why, when earlier this week reflecting on Leinster’s win in the Sportsground, he found holes in the performance with only the faintest hint of praise.

In his six appearances to date this season he has grown immeasurably with each passing moment.

STRIDES

He acknowledges the strides that Leinster have made in recent weeks and though he is unlikely to be involved in tomorrow night’s clash, he believes the Leinster squad have the strength to get a winning result against a high-flying Edinburgh.

“When you win a tight game like last weekend, you know that you’re in a better position than we had been in the earlier weeks, but we’re nowhere near the level we want to be at,” the 24-year-old maintained.

“I think last Saturday was a really important win for us because we could have slipped down the table a little bit further, so to get the four points away from home keeps us kicking along nicely towards the top four.”

How would he assess the previous month given the difficulties experienced in the opening rounds of the Magners League? “Pleasing,” he says with a gush of delight mixed with relief.

“It was a fantastic few weeks kick-started by the victory over Munster in the Aviva Stadium and we built on that form into two really difficult opening rounds in the Heineken Cup.

CHARACTER

“Having come through those three games the Connacht match was a massive test of our character because in the past we might have taken the foot off the gas.

But we backed up the previous weeks with a hard fought win in Galway, which is always a tough place to come to and win.

“The start of the season didn’t go exactly to plan, but we have shown character to turn it around.”

This week’s focus shifted for Kearney to the Ireland training camp in Limerick ahead of the start of the Guinness Series. With the Springboks arriving in Dublin next week, Ireland will need to hit the ground running.

Before that Kearney will be an interested, albeit frustrated, spectator when he takes his place in the stands alongside some of his international colleagues.

In a strange circumstance, those who have been selected for next week’s Ireland squad are neither injured, suspended nor out of favour but yet are unavailable for selection.

Opportunity will knock once more for some of the younger guns who, along with a handful of experienced players, will attempt to temper the capabilities of what is sure to be a full strength Edinburgh side.

Seven-Week Ban For Mafi

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An Irish Rugby Football Union disciplinary panel held a hearing to consider a citing complaint against Munster centre Lifeimi Mafi from the Leinster v Munster Magners League game last Saturday.

 

Munster's Lifeimi Mafi was cited under both law 10.4 (e) for an alleged dangerous tackle and law 10.4 (a) for allegedly punching or striking in the same incident with Leinster centre Gordon D'Arcy in the 19th minute of the game.

The hearing took place in the Ulster Branch offices in Ravenhill, Belfast at 4pm today (Tuesday). The hearing was chaired by Hugh Logan and he was assisted by Stephen Hilditch and Ian McIlrath.

Having studied the match footage and heard all available evidence, the disciplinary panel found Mafi guilty under law 10.4 (e) for a dangerous tackle and decided that it was at the top end of entry for such an offence.

The panel took into account the player's previous good disciplinary record before they imposed a sanction of seven weeks' suspension, up to and including Sunday, November 21.

The ban rules Mafi out of Munster's opening two Heineken Cup games against London Irish and Toulon, as well as their next three Magners League fixtures.

The player is free to appeal the decision.