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Van Graan thrilled after Munster's Champions Cup win at Castres

By PA
(Photo by Piaras Ó Mídheach/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

Head coach Johann van Graan was proud of his Munster side after they came from behind to make it three wins from three in the Heineken Champions Cup with a hard-fought 16-13 win at Top 14 side Castres.

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Gavin Coombes crashed over in the 78th minute to snatch the win that ensured qualification to the knockout phase of the competition for the Irish side.

“You don’t just come here and win,” Van Graan said. “We spoke about an 80-minute performance and we certainly got that.

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“Everybody gave it their all and we’re very happy with the four points.”

Despite being an 80-minute performance, it was not a perfect one, Van Graan admitted. He said: “We had one or two uncharacteristic errors with the lineout five metres from their line – one in the first half and one after 70 minutes.

“You have to give credit to Castres’ defensive lineout as well. They took a chance – not a lot of teams contest five metres out … and one or two balls went to ground in the 22, but I thought from a performance point of view it was impressive stuff.”

And he heaped praise on match-winner Coombes, describing him as “a massive part of our group”.

He said: “I thought he was phenomenal tonight.”

Now qualification is assured, the focus shifts to next weekend’s final pool match against Wasps at Thomond Park.

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“We only had our focus on Castres tonight – this was a really good result for us. We are three from three in Europe,” Van Graan said.

“We play next Sunday, which gives us a nine-day turnaround, so we’ll take the three days and recover – it was a short, six-day turnaround from our previous game against Ulster.

“We’ll regroup and look at our resources – obviously, in this competition, if you’re good enough to go further, home advantage is crucial.

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“We’ve put ourselves in a really good space, so it’s a massive game for us against Wasps next Sunday.”

Castres coach Pierre-Henry Broncan admitted: “This defeat against Munster is hard, but we will go back to work on Monday to prepare for the trip to Harlequins.”

Despite the defeat, he had nothing but praise for his squad, adding: “I take my hat off to my players. I congratulated hooker Brice Humbert in front of the group.

“A few months ago, he was on the verge of signing for a Federale 1 side and today he played 60 minutes against Munster.

“We also had two medical jokers on the pitch – in Jack Whetton and Mateaki Kafatolu – and it looked like they had been playing for Castres for 10 years. We may change our squads [but] they are always fighters and that’s a great thing.”

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RedWarriors 2 hours ago
'Ulster, though no one wants to admit it, isn't much more than a development province right now.'

I actually think Ulster are showing a few green shoots this year. The fact that they ahve the second biggest Provincial population of 2.3 million is misleading. Half the population are unlikely to play due to background. The other half have seen a fall off in private school attendance preferring to school in GB esp Scotland and lost to the system. That will reverse in time.

The solution to the thorny issue of participation based on political background can be solved by breaking Rugby as a truly mainstream sport in the rest of Ireland and thus a sport for all no matter what background.

The QF defeat to NZ in 2023 was a devastating blow to that potential but the IRFU must truly put a lot of resources into this via coaching in ‘regular’ schools and pathways though AIL league etc.

The URC standings of Irish provinces needs a little mitigation. Each club in URC plays their home clubs twice. As Leinster have decided the best strategy to win the URC and challenge in Champions Cup is to decisively have the league phase in the bag so resources can be spared later and home matches in all KOs assured. That means Munster, Ulster and Connaught will score a combined total of zero points against Leinster. Compare that to Welsh teams who will score a combined total of 30 points against Dragons.

There is no weak Irish team so no easy points on offer. The standard has dipped a little but Connaught are good as their European campaign shows and all three will improve next year including Ulster.

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