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Ulster power past ill-disciplined Montpellier to reach Challenge Cup quarter-final

Nick Timoney of Ulster is tackled by Gregory Fichten of Montpellier
Nick Timoney of Ulster is tackled by Gregory Fichten of Montpellier

Ulster are through to the quarter-finals of the Challenge Cup, after an emphatic second half display saw them come from behind to hammer French strugglers Montpellier at the GGL Stadium.

It's a first win for interim head coach Richie Murphy, whose side came from 14-0 down at one stage in the opening half, eventually running out 40-17 winners to secure a return trip to France next week, where they face Clermont Auvergne in the quarter-final.

A Will Addison try was all Ulster could manage in the opening half as they trailed 17-7 at the break, but the game flipped on a red card for Montpellier lock Paul Willemse just after half time.

The second row, who was also red-carded against Ireland during the Six Nations, connected with the head of Addison as referee Ben Whitehouse issued him with a red card, while the French side's discipline fell apart.

At one stage, the hosts were down to 12 players when Florian Verhaeghe and Vano Karkadze followed Willemse off the pitch with quick-fire yellow cards, while Gabriel N'Gandebe was also sent to the sin-bin with the final play of the game.

Willemse's try on nine minutes gave Montpellier the ideal start, before Aubin Eymeri's gorgeous chip and chase down the touchline was also finished for a try, to make it 14-0 after 23 minutes.

Ulster's spark came in the form of Rob Baloucoune on 27 minutes. The winger went on a weaving, diagonal run on 27 minutes which looked certain to be a try, and while he was tackled just short, he had the presence of mind to release the ball back for Addison, who dotted it down to get his side on the board.

John Cooney's conversion made it 14-7, but the home side did extend their lead before the break, with Louis Foursans-Bourdette's penalty nudging his side 17-7 in front.

It's a first win in charge for interim coach Richie Murphy

The second half was barely a minute old when Willemse's high shot on Addison led to the second row being red carded, and Ulster punished it instantly as Baloucoune got in for a try to reduce the gap to 17-12.

The third quarter was evenly matched, but just after the hour mark academy prop Scott Wilson continued his impressive debut season with a try, which Cooney converted to nudge his side ahead, 19-17.

The home side had shown some good composure for 20 minutes after the card, but all of that went out the window after Wilson's try. Verhaeghe and Karkadze were both yellow-carded within a minute of each other for foul play incidents, and with Montpellier down to 12 men, Ulster made hay.

Player of the Match David McCann extended their lead on 67 minutes with a well-deserved try, as Cooney's conversion made it 26-17, while Stuart McCloskey made sure of the win with his side's fifth try, three minutes from full-time.

There was still one more try in Ulster, and one more card in the hosts, as N'Gandebe's deliberate knock-on with the final play of the game gave Ulster a penalty try, to round off a confidence-boosting win in the south of France.


Montpellier: Alexandre de Nardi; Gabriel N'Gandebe, George Bridge, Auguste Cadot, Ben Lam; Louis Foursans-Bourdette, Aubin Eymeri; Gregory Fichten, Christopher Tolofua, Harry Williams; Florian Verhaeghe, Paul Willemse (capt); Alex Becognee, Clement Doumenc, Sam Simmonds.

Replacements: Vano Karkadze, Baptiste Erdocio, Lasha Macharashvili, Tyler DuGuid, Yacouba Camara, Louis Carbonel, Masi Dakuwaqa, Pierre Lucas.

Ulster: Stewart Moore; Rob Baloucoune, James Hume, Stuart McCloskey, Ethan McIlroy; Nathan Doak, John Cooney; Steven Kitshoff, Rob Herring, Tom O'Toole; Alan O'Connor, Iain Henderson (capt); Matty Rea, David McCann, Nick Timoney.

Replacements: Tom Stewart, Andy Warwick, Scott Wilson, Harry Sheridan, Cormac Izuchukwu, Jake Flannery, Jacob Stockdale, Dave Ewers.

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