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Leinster edge Bordeaux in our combined Investec Champions Cup Final XV

Caelan Doris
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Dynastic rights will be on the line tomorrow afternoon under the searing Basque sun at the iconic San Mamés Stadium.

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In the burgundy corner, the reigning champions, Union Bordeaux-Bègles, emerge as firm favourites to secure back-to-back titles, marking a sixth successive French victory in club rugby’s greatest competition.

Staring down the champions in the blue corner are Leinster Rugby, a side who know all too well what victory in Bilbao would mean after becoming the ultimate bridesmaids in the latter stages of the knockout rounds in recent seasons.

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Yet, for all of their heartbreak, Leinster will no doubt relish the opportunity to enter a finals match-up as underdogs for the first time since their 2019 final loss to Saracens.

Since then, the mounting pressure to add a fifth star to their jersey has, at times, appeared to be an anvil-like load of expectancy, which ultimately crushed them in the key moments.

Conversely, for all of their brilliance, of which there is enough to fill three squads over, Bordeaux will approach this final in a manner that belies the expectancy building within their fanbase that now is their time to mirror the dynasties of Leinster, Toulouse, Toulon and Saracens of yesteryear.

Built around key personnel, in particular Mathieu Jalibert, Damian Penaud and Louis Bielle-Biarrey, Bordeaux’s beguiling play, the brainchild of Clare native Noel McNamara, will face its sternest test yet against the Jacques Nienaber-inspired blitz defence and ruck-warzone approach.

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Far from a David vs Goliath clash, this match-up of opposing philosophies is the ultimate acid test of whether an all-out attack can overcome a defensive philosophy that has yielded two Rugby World Cups.

Thus, as the eyes of the rugby world focus on Bilbao with an eye to what style might decide next year’s Rugby World Cup, two of professional club rugby’s best-run operations will be more concerned about their own burgeoning dynasty ambitions.

Bordeaux arrive in Bilbao as the reigning Investec Champions Cup champions, but this final offers them the chance to secure something bigger than another trophy.

A second successive European title would move UBB into an altogether different category. One victory can announce a club at the top level. Back-to-back titles, however, would place Bordeaux among the dominant sides in European rugby history, the kind of teams whose success begins to define an era rather than just a single season.

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Leinster know that level better than most. The Irish province has won four European titles, but their last came in 2018. Since then, they have remained one of the most talented and consistent squads in the club game, yet the Champions Cup has repeatedly delivered heartbreak for the men in blue.

In 2019, a final loss to Saracens set in motion their run of late-season misery. Falling to the same side in the 2020 quarterfinal closed a chapter that would be defined by the Londoners, even if their Premiership rivals, Exeter, would ultimately win the 2020 title.

Just as Saracens were bowing out courtesy of a salary cap scandal domestically, an old foe would emerge as Leinster’s next great challenge. Former Munster kingpin Ronan O’Gara and his band of brothers at La Rochelle then became the next great European obstacle. Ultimately, O’Gara’s side would beat Leo Cullen’s side in the 2021 semifinal and again in the 2022 and 2023 finals.

Continuing the trend of facing the best sides from different eras, fellow four-time winners Toulouse added to the pain in the 2024 final, before Northampton ended Leinster’s latest campaign at the semifinal stage in 2025.

That history gives this head-to-head comparison a sharper edge. Bordeaux are the champions with the chance to prove their reign is becoming something more permanent. Leinster are the four-time winners still searching for the title that would finally end one of the most painful near-miss runs in not just European rugby, but dare we say professional sport.

With both matchday squads now named, we pick a combined starting XV between the two sides, weighing individual quality, recent form, European pedigree and positional balance.

The final selection includes nine Leinster players and six from Bordeaux, a split that reflects Leinster’s enduring depth of individual talent while still recognising the authority Bordeaux carry as reigning champions.

On paper, Leinster may still have more of the standout names. In the biggest moments, Bordeaux have already shown they know how to finish the job.

1. Andrew Porter
One of the game’s elite looseheads of the past decade is back fit just in time for his side’s pursuit of glory. Around the park, Porter is utterly central to Leinster’s ability to dominate the gainline, make a mess of the breakdown and compete at scrum time.

2. Dan Sheehan
Fans of Malcolm Marx will argue otherwise, but in our opinion, Sheehan is the best hooker in professional rugby in 2026. Blessed with freakish athleticism, elite rugby intelligence and top-quality leadership skills, Sheehan operates as a fourth back row for the Leinster pack.

3. Carlü Sadie
Edging the in-form Thomas Clarkson, the big Springbok tighthead is among the best scrummagers in world rugby. Tipping the scales at 136kg, Sadie is an immovable force and will no doubt relish his head-to-head with Porter.

4. Joe McCarthy
Fast becoming one of Irish Rugby’s most important players, Big Joe’s big moments have, at times, swung the pendulum in Leinster’s favour this season. Bagging three tries last time out against the Ospreys, McCarthy comes into the final in red-hot form.

5. Adam Coleman
One of UBB’s unsung heroes, the big Tongan international gets through the grunt work that allows his side’s flashy players to do their thing. Against Bath in the semifinal, he topped the tackle charts with 20, won three lineouts and claimed a key turnover.

6. Jack Conan
If it weren’t for Caelan Doris, Conan would go down as an all-time Irish great in the number eight shirt. Starting back-to-back British and Irish Lions Test series at number eight says it all. Still playing his best rugby at 33, Conan is the link player in the Leinster back row, possessing a deft passing game, elite work rate and elite strength at the point of contact.

7. Cameron Woki
The form back row in this year’s competition, the former Racing 92 utility forward has gone to another level since his move south. Scoring 12 tries this season, the 27-year-old has become a key cog in the UBB machine. At set-piece time, he has become the go-to option at lineout time, while defensively, he is routinely near the top of the tackle charts.

8. Caelan Doris
Ireland’s captain for a reason, Doris has returned from a devastating shoulder injury in last season’s semifinal to get right back to his very best. Whether it is a midfield rumble from a lineout, battering an opposition breakdown or putting in a dominant hit, Doris does it all for his side.

9. Jamison Gibson-Park
The tightest of calls in this head-to-head, Gibson-Park is the key to Leinster’s chances in the final. Where Sexton left a void as the general who dictates proceedings, Gibson-Park filled it. His battle with Maxime Lucu will be worth the admission alone, and given his body of work at the highest level, JGP just edges this call.

10. Mathieu Jalibert
Alongside Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu as the best attacking ten in the world at the moment, Jalibert will no doubt have a big moment or two in the final. Playing with a level of consistency without losing his attacking spark, it is little surprise that UBB are now the best attacking outfit in club rugby.

11. Louis Bielle-Biarrey
A World Player of the Year nominee, need we say more? Heading into the final, the 22-year-old has already scored 32 tries in his 30 matches this season. Should Leinster’s blitz defence be caught then expect Bielle-Biarrey to ruthlessly punish the Irish side.

12. Yoram Moefana
In a backline that is accustomed to evasion, Moefana brings a directness to proceedings. This ability to straighten the attack keeps defences guessing, which ensures that the dangerous wide players have space to operate in.

13. Garry Ringrose
If this were a head-to-head on the wings, then we would have gone with Damian Penaud. In the deep, dark waters of the midfield, the Irish veteran has a clear advantage over his French rival. Such is the difference in experience in this channel, we feel it could prove crucial should Ringrose and co expose Penaud’s defensive inexperience. On the other side of the action, expect Ringrose’s hard blitz to cause the UBB attack some problems.

14. Tommy O’Brien
Among a cohort of new faces in the Irish Six Nations squad who took their chance a year out from the World Cup, O’Brien’s top-end pace has brought a new dimension to the Leinster attack. Certainly, he is not at the level of Bielle-Biarrey in a foot race, but in the air, O’Brien is elite.

15. Hugo Keenan
Another tight call given the form of Salesi Rayasi, but across the board, Keenan’s experience at the highest level is the difference. Covering the backfield to an elite level, Keenan uses his pace and fitness to cover every blade of grass behind the hard-rushing Leinster defensive line. Given the danger the UBB backline pose, this solidity could be match-defining.

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2 Comments
y
yL 33 mins ago

I have a question : why Ollie Hodges(IRFU) has been chosen as TMO for that game ?

N
Neily08 27 mins ago

To help us win it of course, DUH 😜

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