Ulster head coach Dan McFarland is remaining hopeful about his side's chances of causing an upset against Leinster in the Guinness Pro14 final next Saturday.
His team booked their place in the decider in dramatic style after clawing back a 12-point deficit with just 23 minutes remaining against Edinburgh, capping off the comeback with the final kick of the game as Ian Madigan converted a penalty to seal victory.
Leinster will provide imposing opposition in Ulster's first final in seven years but while McFarland admits his side are underdogs, he hopes to lean on a gameplan that reduces the perceived gap between the sides.
"It doesn't matter who we are. No one will give us a chance against Leinster but we will prepare properly, we'll come up with a game plan we hope will work and we'll give it a shot," he said.
McFarland credited his side for turning the game around after disappointing for significant stretches at Murrayfield.
"I wouldn't say I was confident at 12 points down, not the way we were playing up until that point," he said.
"We had made a lot of mistakes. We hadn't played particularly well.
"But the effort was there and we also demonstrated that with a little bit of ambition in our play we could do damage. That showed in the second half."
His Edinburgh counterpart Richard Cockerill admitted that the Scottish side got what they deserved after throwing away a final place, having looked set to reach the Dublin showdown with Leinster.
"It's disappointing when you are 19-7 ahead. We didn't control the game," he said.
"All credit to Ulster, it's all of our own making, we should have made better decisions and we should have executed better. It's not good enough from us.
"We got exactly what we deserved and they got exactly what they deserved.
"In these games it's the little things which make the difference and some of our players clearly don't understand what that looks like.
"We've got international Test players with Scotland and they should know better.
"We've had enough opportunities about learning and we didn't deliver and it's got to improve and quickly.
"We have a good group of players and we put ourselves into a good position but what they need to learn is to stay in games the whole time.
"We are going to have a good hard look at ourselves but we need to be better."