/ Rugby

Schmidt admits Leinster lacked accuracy

Updated: Monday, 12 Dec 2011 10:22

Sean O'Brien on the break - The back-rower held on to the ball to waste one of Leinster's second half chances
Sean O'Brien on the break - The back-rower held on to the ball to waste one of Leinster's second half chances

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Leinster coach Joe Schmidt has admitted his team were guilty of wasting some clear opportunities but said that he was delighted with their victory against Bath on Sunday.

Ireland fly-half Jonathan Sexton kicked six penalties - two during the last seven minutes - to give Pool Three leaders Leinster a tense 18-13 triumph.

Bath's England wing Matt Banahan scored the only try of an attritional battle after 65 minutes – Leinster had wasted several clear try scoring chances before that but recovered to take the lead back inside the final 10 minutes.

Schmidt said: "The frustration was that we couldn't get the ball over their line. We appeared to have a couple of gilt-edged chances.

"We want to be a lot more accurate to make sure we finish opportunities that we create, but I am delighted with the result.

"Against a quality team it's hard to create opportunities, and the last thing you want to do is butcher them like we did today. We almost suffocated ourselves at times."

Leinster are in a strong position in the Pool after a draw and two wins and face Bath in Dublin next week. Glasgow are currently second, three points behind, and face a trip to Montpellier next. They beat the French Top 14 side 20-15 at home on Sunday.

Bath director of rugby Ian McGeechan praised his team, who must now beat Leinster at Aviva Stadium to have a chance of progressing.

He said: "I am very proud of the players - their attitude was superb. We defended tremendously well, restricting them to penalties, and it is about the small margins.

"We made one or two errors. They got the ball into the right areas quickly and put the pressure on. They kicked the penalties. We probably didn't have quite that same amount of extended pressure, but we scored a very well-executed try, and that showed the attitude was really positive.

"The work-rate when we didn't have the ball was superb, and our attacking play was very encouraging. We just need to have a bit of composure at key times, but it is a relatively new team with new combinations, and that is what you grow towards.

"I think it took Leinster probably three or four years to get to that point. You don't get there overnight.

"Leinster have got huge experience and they have got good players in key positions. When you win Europeans Cups, that's what you get. You know how to do it, you've been there before, and so it grows.

"They bided their time very well, and that is experience. That is a good team with good players reading the situation well."

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