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O’Gara out for Munster’s Thomond test

Ronan O’Gara will miss Munster’s Heineken Cup game with Edinburgh on Sunday (Thomond Park, 12.45pm).

O’Gara suffered a hamstring injury in the province’s opening round defeat to Racing Metro at Stade de France on Saturday and was replaced after half an hour.

The Munster camp yesterday confirmed the international out half is highly unlikely to be fit for the weekend.

The Munster medical team will also assess Donncha O’Callaghan (hamstring strain) and Niall Ronan (groin) throughout the week with both players in contention for the clash against Michael Bradley’s side.

Paul O’Connell showed no ill effects from the game in Paris — his first competitive outing in five months — while both Felix Jones and Ian Nagle came through the province’s British and Irish Cup victory over Plymouth Albion unscathed. Luke O’Dea and Johne Murphy are also fit for selection while James Coughlan (groin), Ivan Dineen (groin), Keith Earls (groin), Sean Scanlon (back) remain on the treatment table.

Meanwhile former England international, Sky television rugby pundit Stuart Barnes has expressed surprise at the manner of Munster’s defeat and fears it could cost Rob Penney’s men qualification to the knockout stages.

“Sometimes you can lose games in the space of a few minutes and Munster did that. They had the control in the first half when they were playing what people would regard as old Munster rugby, but they got too ambitious in the conditions at 10-0 up and they opened the door to Racing. You saw nothing from Racing Metro except opportunism, Munster tempted fate and Racing took it.

“It isn’t the real Munster to go 17-16 up away from home with a few minutes left on the clock and then blow it; I suppose they were just about the second best team in the second half but they scored a cracking try and a brilliant conversion only to find themselves kicked out of the game quite easily again.

“In nine minutes, Racing Metro did what Munster used to do to teams; they knuckled down, took the attitude that they could get back into it, Olly Barkley kicked very well tactically, they put numbers to the breakdown and they forced penalties. Really, Munster will be kicking themselves to have lost that game and it could cost them down the line.”

Racing skipper Jacques Cronje described the victory as a reward for persistence: “It was about never giving up and having belief, even when we conceded that try in the closing stages. It was really important for us to get a good start; last year we lost narrowly to Cardiff Blues in our first game and that pretty much finished us off.”

The South African back rower conceded there was an element of good fortune about the victory, specifically O’Connell’s failure to score a try in the first half: “Yes, I suppose if Munster had scored then it could have been a different game. The fact that they didn’t score and that we got a score quickly afterwards put a different perspective on the match; it brought us back into it, we had to cope with a lot of pressure at times in the first half and perhaps we were a bit fortunate to be leading at half-time. However, games are often won and lost on small issues and at this level, and in difficult conditions, you’ve got to take every chance that comes.”

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