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Overview
Season so far
Tournament record
The Ospreys know they probably have to go to France and beat Toulouse on their home turf if they are to stand any chance of achieving qualification for the knock-out stages of the Heineken Cup this season.
The reigning Pro12 champions will want to bounce back from their disappointing 39-22 defeat to Leicester Tigers at Welford Road but know the back-to-back clashes with mastermind Guy Noves' star-studded Toulouse will define their European campaign.
The Welsh side’s task looks even more daunting with a host of Welsh internationals, like skipper Alun Wyn Jones, props Adam Jones and Aaron Jarvis, all ruled out with injury.
The Ospreys will have to create their own piece of history at the Stade Ernest Wallon by grinding out their first ever win over the most successful side in the history of the Heineken Cup.
But the Ospreys, who have played Toulouse twice before and lost both games, have won only one of their 11 games in France in the Heineken Cup when the Welsh region recorded a 28-21 victory over Bourgoin back in 2008.
Welsh sides do not have a good record against the four-times Heineken Cup winners on home soil, with only the Llanelli Scarlets managing a victory over Toulouse back in 2006.
Toulouse have lost just one of their 15 homes games against Welsh sides in Europe and will be favourites to get a victory and to qualify for the last eight of this year’s tournament.
Match Facts
• Toulouse have lost just one of 15 home games against Welsh opposition in this competition, losing to Llanelli Scarlets back in 2006.
• Conversely Ospreys have won just one of 11 trips to France in the Heineken Cup, a 28-21 victory over Bourgoin in 2008.
• Ospreys are one of just two teams (with Scarlets) yet to steal an opposition lineout in the Heineken Cup this season.
• Alun Wyn Jones has won a competition joint-high 14 line-outs for Ospreys this season.
Toulouse cruised to a comfortable bonus-point victory over Pro12 champions the Ospreys to keep their unbeaten record and their position as pool leaders after three games.
The four-times champions and most successful side in the tournament proved their undeniable credentials at this level to keep themselves in the hunt for a quarter-final place.
An Ospreys side who were without the injured Wales and Lions stars Adam Jones and Alun Wyn Jones and Welsh internationals Richard Hibbard, Aaron Jarvis and Ian Evans were always going to find it tough in France.
But they didn’t help themselves when some sloppy defence allowed the hosts to cross for two early tries in the first twenty minutes of the contest as centre Florian Fritz and skipper Yannick Nyanga made it 12-0.
The Welsh side did manage to score a try of their own after some quick-thinking saw their Samoan scrum-half Kahn Fotualii take a tap penalty to himself before dancing around two defenders to cross for a try under the posts to make it 12-7 at half-time.
The French giants resumed normal service after the break, despite some stubborn defence by the visitors, and managed their third try with wing Vincent Clerc diving in at the corner.
Toulouse’s power came to the fore in the second half against a young Ospreys outfit and the home side’s pack really turned the screw as they dominated up front and prop Census Johnston crashed over from short-range.
Full back Yoann Huget added to the Ospreys’ woes when he ran in Toulouse’s fifth try but the Welsh side did manage their second score by prop Ryan Bevington in the closing moments.
Defeat means the Ospreys face an uphill task to progress in the tournament ahead of next weekend’s reverse fixture at the Liberty Stadium, although their two tournament defeats so far have come away from home against former competition winners Toulouse and Leicester.
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