Rugby · Heineken Cup Leinster

Leinster 27-10 Brive

Brian O'Driscoll bagged a last-minute bonus point for an off-colour Leinster as they overcame a stubborn Brive side at the RDS.

A lack of game-time over the festive period, with their two Magners League fixtures being postponed, left the reigning Heineken Cup champions with a far from ideal run-in to this Pool Six tie.

But despite obvious rustiness and a scrappy all-round display, Michael Cheika's men showed enough glimpses of class - including Shane Horgan's sublime offload for O'Driscoll's score - to seal a deserved fourth pool win.

The result moved the champions five points clear at the top of Pool Six, putting the pressure back on their nearest rivals London Irish who are away to the Scarlets tomorrow before hosting Leinster in a likely pool decider at Twickenham.

Back after a spell out with a hand injury, Jonathan Sexton kicked a penalty and two conversions - the first of which came after a penalty try.

Isa Nacewa and Gordon D'Arcy were Leinster's other try scorers, while Brive's commitment and spirit saw them deservedly cross the whitewash twice through Retief Uys and Scott Spedding.

When these sides met in France in October, Leinster ran out comfortable 36-13 winners but this time around, with captain Antoine Claassen and Wales' Alix Popham setting the physical tone, Brive were altogether more competitive.

Their Italian fly-half Luciano Orquera missed a third-minute penalty but Leinster's line was never truly tested in a sloppy opening quarter and a lovely show-and-go got the returning Sexton into the groove.

The vast majority of the 17,836-strong crowd breathed a sigh of relief on 26 minutes when referee Andrew Small awarded the hosts a penalty try.

The Brive forwards gave way for a second time as Leinster's bulky eight got the nudge on at a five-metre scrum, and Sexton slotted the simple conversion.

The score came off the home side's first incisive bit of attacking play. Winger Nacewa's dinked kick was gathered by the advancing D'Arcy, who was held up just short.

Sexton and man of the match Jamie Heaslip almost followed up with a second try before the break but, on the resumption, Leinster quickly built on their 7-0 half-time buffer.

Sexton slammed over a penalty before an incisive run from full-back Rob Kearney, a change of direction by flanker Kevin McLaughlin and a well-timed pass by O'Driscoll sent Nacewa over in the left corner.

Brive hit back on the hour mark when athletic lock Uys showed great strength and feet to swivel his way over after breaking loose from a lineout maul.

The try went unconverted and Leinster responded seven minutes later when D'Arcy slipped out of a tackle and dotted down to the right of the posts, with Sexton adding the extras.

With four minutes to go and the game becoming looser and looser, Leinster were almost through for a fourth try when Nacewa kicked through - only for the bouncing ball to elude the advancing Kearney.

The moment was made all the worse when replacement Viliame Waqaseduadua blazed forward on the counter and some excellent continuity was finished off by full-back Spedding whose brilliant step left the Leinster cover for dead.

Nonetheless, Leinster engineered a final attacking platform off a midfield scrum and they struck devastatingly for the bonus point.

Kearney raced onto a Shaun Berne pass, Horgan swerved off his right in support and a deft behind-the-back offload out of the tackle teed up for O'Driscoll for a darting run to the corner.

 
RTÉ.ie Sport: Isa Nacewa goes over for his try
Isa Nacewa goes over for his try
Related Stories
Sport Headlines

WEB-ONLY: France U20 v Ireland U20

Live WEB-ONLY coverage of the RBS Under-20 6 Nations meeting of France and Ireland on Saturday 11 February Read

RBS 6 Nations 2012

Visit our Six Nations website for all the latest news, views and interviews as the 2012 edition kicks into gear Read

Against the Head

Rugby magazine series featuring all the news from the game, including a look ahead to the Six Nations championship. Read

Life As An Irish Club Rugby Player

Tadhg Peavoy talks to Old Belvedere centre John Kennedy about life as an Irish club rugby player in the Ulster Bank League Read

 
Inpho.ie