Scott Penny hat tricks earns Leinster bonus point win over Edinburgh

Whereas the Blues were without their sizable international contingent Edinburgh were bolstered by the release of Duhan van der Merwe, Freddy Douglas and Magnus Bradbury from Scotland’s Six Nations squad for this game
Scott Penny hat tricks earns Leinster bonus point win over Edinburgh

Scott Penny of Leinster is tackled by Glen Young, left, and Charlie Shiel of Edinburgh. Pic: Tyler Miller/Sportsfile

URC: Leinster 28 Edinburgh 20

The impressive Scott Penny grabbed a hat-trick of tries at the Aviva Stadium this evening as an experimental Leinster side moved to second place in the United Rugby Championship table with a hard-earned bonus point triumph over Edinburgh.

Whereas the Blues were without their sizable international contingent – and also had a number of others missing through injury – Edinburgh were bolstered by the release of Duhan van der Merwe, Freddy Douglas and Magnus Bradbury from Scotland’s Six Nations Championship squad for this contest.

Leo Cullen’s men breathed a sigh of relief when an early penalty from Ross Thompson drifted past the target, but the hosts subsequently gained a temporary numerical advantage when Edinburgh lock Callum Hunter-Hill was sent to the sin bin on 10 minutes for a high tackle on Andrew Osborne.

Before an off-field review determined that Hunter-Hill’s indiscretion would remain a yellow card, Leinster opened the scoring when an extended period of pressure ended with Max Deegan driving over for a 13th minute try. This five-pointer was supplemented by a conversion from the versatile Charlie Tector – who was selected at out-half for this fixture in the absence of Sam Prendergast, Harry Byrne and Ciaran Frawley.

Tector looked set to substantially increase his personal tally moments later when he raced over the whitewash from a fast-paced attack, but this score was ultimately ruled out for a forward pass by Leinster hooker John McKee in an earlier part of the move.

This was a let-off for Sean Everitt’s visitors, but a strong carry out of a resulting scrum by flanker Ben Muncaster set them on the way to a try of their own just shy of the first-quarter mark. After he was picked out on the run by Muncaster, scrum-half Ben Vellacott released van der Merwe for a typically ruthless finish on the left-wing.

Charlie Tector of Leinster kicks a conversion. Pic: Tyler Miller/Sportsfile
Charlie Tector of Leinster kicks a conversion. Pic: Tyler Miller/Sportsfile

While Thompson fired his bonus strike in the wake of this effort past the target, the fly-half later knocked over a 23rd minute penalty to edge Edinburgh in front for the first time. The former Glasgow Warriors player then joined his fellow number 10 Tector in having an opening period try disallowed, but he also produced an excellent interception when Leinster looked set to pounce inside their ‘22’ with the clock approaching 30 minutes.

The hosts suffered a blow towards the end of the first half when Joshua Kenny was withdrawn for a head injury assessment and with right-winger Malelili Satala sprinting past a Deegan tackle to bag a converted try in the 39th minute, Edinburgh brought a 15-7 cushion into the interval.

Although momentum appeared to be with the away side at this point, the half-time break offered Leinster an opportunity to regroup and consider the task that was ahead of them. They certainly emerged as a rejuvenated force and following another extended attack close to the Edinburgh line, Penny powered over for his 37th try in the blue of Leinster.

Tector added the extras to leave the bare minimum between the teams, but a wayward penalty from the Wexford native on 52 minutes kept Edinburgh in the ascendancy moving into the final-quarter at Irish Rugby HQ.

Despite introducing fresh legs in the form of front-rows Gus McCarthy, Alex Usanov and Niall Smyth – Hugo McLaughlin and the Connacht-bound Will Connors were also brought on prior to Penny’s first try – Leinster were finding it difficult to grind down their stubborn Celtic rivals.

Penny celebrates the win. Pic: Seb Daly/Sportsfile
Penny celebrates the win. Pic: Seb Daly/Sportsfile

Nevertheless, the eastern province persisted with their challenge and ultimately regained the lead with 12 minutes left in the action. Openside flanker Penny has always proven to be a valuable asset in the absence of frontline internationals and he once again displayed a clinical edge by dotting down under a slew of Edinburgh bodies for his second try of the game.

This suddenly left Leinster within sight of a bonus point victory and the home team duly secured the maximum reward from this tie when Penny completed his hat-trick with yet another close-range finish just six minutes from the end of the proceedings.

There was enough time for Edinburgh to finally open their second half account with a Charlie Shiel try right at the death, but a miscued conversion attempt from replacement out-half Cammy Scott ensured they came away empty-handed from this encounter.

Scorers for Leinster: Tries: S Penny 3, M Deegan; Cons: C Tector 4. 

Scorers for Edinburgh: Tries: D van der Merwe, M Satala, C Shiel; Cons: R Thompson; Pens: R Thompson. 

LEINSTER: A Osborne; J Kenny (H McLaughlin 37), R Ioane, C Mangan, R Moloney; C Tector, L McGrath (F Gunne 77); J Cahir (A Usanov 54), J McKee (G McCarthy 54), A Sparrow (N Smyth 54); RG Snyman, B Deeny (C O’Tighearnaigh 77); M Deegan, S Penny, D Mangan (W Connors 43 (J Ericson 77)).

EDINBURGH: H Paterson; M Satala, W Goosen, J Lang (P O’Conor 61), D van der Merwe; R Thompson (C Scott 75), B Vellacott (C Shiel 52); B Venter (M Jones 71), J Blyth-Lafferty (H Morris 57), P Hill (O Blyth-Lafferty 43); C Hunter-Hill, G Young; B Muncaster (T Dodd 41-43 & 67), F Douglas (C Boyle 61), M Bradbury.

Referee: A Piardi (FIR).

More in this section

Sport

Newsletter

Latest news from the world of sport, along with the best in opinion from our outstanding team of sports writers. and reporters

Cookie Policy Privacy Policy Brand Safety FAQ Help Contact Us Terms and Conditions

© Examiner Echo Group Limited