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PREVIEW: Henderson predicts intriguing fly-half battle

Thursday 13th October 2016

12:00 am (GMT)

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Two Irish international fly-halves are set to go head to head in a key battle when Bordeaux-Begles and Ulster begin their European Champions Cup campaigns this weekend. - 13/10/2016 10:51

Two Irish international fly-halves are set to go head to head in a key battle when Bordeaux-Begles and Ulster begin their European Champions Cup campaigns this weekend. - 13/10/2016 10:51

Two Irish international fly-halves are set to go head to head in a key battle when Bordeaux-Begles and Ulster begin their European Champions Cup campaigns this weekend.

The sides have been drawn in a fiendishly difficult Pool 5, which also includes Clermont Auvergne and Exeter Chiefs, and know there is little margin for error.

Ulster will know picking up a win on the road first up will give their quarter-final aspirations an immediate boost as they look to bounce back from the disappointment of missing out last term after suffering two defeats at the hands of eventual champions Saracens.

Bordeaux also suffered heartache as they missed out on the last eight after a bonus-point win over Clermont proved not quite enough to advance.

This weekend’s clash is set to see two in-form number 10s have a big say in the final outcome, with Bordeaux’s Ian Madigan and Ulster’s Paddy Jackson in fine form and vying to impress Ireland coach Joe Schmidt ahead of the autumn internationals.

Ulster flanker Iain Henderson believes it could be a battle to savour.

“It is going to be interesting because Paddy is going so well,” he said.

“Ian is one of the most competitive people I know and I am sure he will be going out there to show he is better than Paddy and Paddy will be looking to show he is better than Ian. It makes for a very interesting battle I think.”

Ulster boss Les Kiss is another man predicting a fascinating confrontation, but has warned his men discipline will be key to keep Madigan’s reliable boot quiet.

“There are plenty of subplots for sure. There has been a massive advancement from Paddy and, if you look at a lot of Bordeaux games, Mads is playing lovely stuff too,” he said.

“There are some similarities in their game, they can take the ball to the line, thy can play with width. I think it is going to be a compelling challenge in that area for sure. 

“Ian is kicking goals from everywhere, he’s pretty dead-eyed at the moment. It could come down to a kick here or there and it is going to be a massive challenge for us.”

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REPORT: Bordeaux-Begles break brave Ulster

Sunday 16th October 2016

12:00 am (GMT)

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Bordeaux-Begles left it late to breakdown a brave Ulster defence and claim a 28-13 European Rugby Champions Cup triumph. - 16/10/2016 15:16

Bordeaux-Begles left it late to breakdown a brave Ulster defence and claim a 28-13 European Rugby Champions Cup triumph. - 16/10/2016 15:16

Bordeaux-Begles left it late to breakdown a brave Ulster defence and claim a 28-13 European Rugby Champions Cup triumph.

An Andrew Trimble try and eight points from the boot of Paddy Jackson gave Ulster a commanding 13-9 lead with less than 10 minutes remaining. But The hosts stages a late show to steal the spoils and get their Pool 5 campaign of to a flying start.

Sébastien Taofifenua barged over at the corner before a searing break from Metuisela Talebulamaijaina earned a penalty try. And Blair Connor broke free to put the gloss on the hard-fought victory.

Ian Madigan capitalised on some early dominance to kick Bordeaux into a 3-0 lead after just two minutes. But the early scare sparked Les Kiss’s side into life. Ulster battled their way downfield, and made the most of their first foray into enemy territory.

The Ulster pack drove the hosts back at a scrum before Stuart Olding charged into midfield. Scrum-half Ruan Pienaar switched the play to blind-side and found Trimble running a devestating angle to cut-through and score. Jackson converted to give the Irish province a 7-3 lead.

Ulster had two chances to put themselves even further on the front foot but twice knocked on close to the try-line. They had to settle for a Jackson penalty late in the first-half to make it 10-3 at the break.

It was Madigan who struck first in the second period with a penalty to rein Ulster’s lead back to within four points. Lionel Beauxis replaced the Ireland outside-half and his first act was to land a penalty to cut the gap to a single point. But Jackson was on-hand to reply two minutes later with a long-range strike.

Ulster looked to be on their way to a famous Champions Cup win with some heroic defence, but their resolve was finally broken with five minutes remaining. Giant forward Taofifenua rumbled over the Ulster defence and squeezed the ball down at the corner to give the hosts the lead.

Talebulamaijaina then broke clear and charged downfield from the kickoff. He offloaded to Serin, who was tackled early by Sean Reidy, preventing a try. JP Doyle sin-binned Reidy and awarded a penalty try, before Connor streaked home from a turnover.

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