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Ulster and Exiles both crash out

For both London Irish and Ulster, a win, a bonus point and a prayer or two were required on Friday night.

When Ulster reached the first two captain David Humphries summed up the necessity for the third.

He said: “We’re still alive but if Llanelli win in Toulouse it’s over.”

The Welsh side’s miraculous comeback and resulting 41-34 victory in France was the damning result Humphries feared. By maintaining their 100 per cent record The Scarlets killed off all other Pool 5 contenders’ hopes of qualification in the process.

But in truth it’s no more than both Ulster’s disastrous away form and London Irish’s inconsistencies deserved. The fact that Friday’s 29-13 win was the exact reverse of the scoreline when the two met a week before sums up their propensity to cancel one another out.

And it may get worse because on Monday London Irish director of rugby Brian Smith lodged an official complaint that full-back Delon Armitage was racially abused by an Ulster player.

After the game Smith said: “One or two things have happened at the end of each of the games that we will be formally taking forward and do whatever we need to in terms of putting those issues in writing.

“There’s no room for some of the nonsense that one of our players has had to put up with for two weeks in a row.”

Ulster chief executive Michael Reid replied that he was “comfortable that the allegation is unfounded” but it’s clear no love was lost between the sides. Smith also claimed that his captain Mike Catt was “taken out by Neil Best”.

Catt, so influential a week earlier, was clearly worse for wear after the bruising but legal tackle. And his half-time exit when Irish led by two Shane Geraghty penalties to a solitary Andrew Trimble try precipitated their downfall.

And it was a spectacular one. Humphries edged Ulster in front with the cheekiest of tries. The away side assumed a 46th minute penalty would be kicked and duly retreated under their posts to allow Humphries to tap and run to the unguarded corner.

A further try from yet another impressive young Ulster forward, Neil McMillan, set a packed Ravenhill up for a bonus point clambering finale. Paul Steinmetz obliged touching down with two minutes remaining.

The joy was short lived as news of Llanelli’s win filtered through on Saturday afternoon. Ulster’s seven-year wait for a knock-out stage place becomes eight.

 
 
 
 
 
 
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