ULSTER MADE HARD work of the visiting Dragons in Belfast, requiring Paddy Jackson’s 78th-minute penalty to carry them over the line in a high-impact encounter which saw two Welshmen yellow-carded and four Ulstermen injured.
A Sean Reidy try, penalty try and seven points from the boot squeezed out the visitors and elevated the Irish province to top spot in the Guinness Pro12, a single point above chasers the Scarlets and Connacht.
With Rory Best, Jared Payne and Andrew Trimble the only three Ulster representatives retained in Joe Schmidt’s Six Nations squad for the test against Wales, Rob Herring started at captain and hooker while both Jackson and Stuart McCloskey – fancied by many to feature in green on Sunday – took a place on the bench.
Ulster's Stuart McCloskey is tackled by Dragons' Nic Cudd and Carl Meyer Presseye / Darren Kidd/INPHO
Presseye / Darren Kidd/INPHO / Darren Kidd/INPHO
Dragons belied their lowly Pro12 standing – 10th going into the tie with only Zebre and Treviso beneath them – with a strong start, capped by Angus O’Brien’s fifth minute penalty. In their turn when Ulster got going from the restart they were electric, with Stuart Olding and full debutant Jacob Stockdale contributing powerful line breaks.
However it was Dragons wing Ashton Hewitt who lit up Kingspan Stadium on 16 minutes, his virtuoso run from his own half evading five Ulster tacklers before Adam Hughes slid over from Carl Meyer’s flagwards kick.
No sooner had O’Brien converted than Ulster pounded downfield from the restart, a rolling maul then five-metre scrum paving the way for Olding then Ian Humphreys to almost breach the whitewash within seconds of each other.
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Resolute Dragons defending kept the two backs at bay, but there was no stopping Reidy in the very next attack as the flanker brushed aside three tackles to run in at the corner for his third try in as many successive outings.
Presseye / Darren Kidd/INPHO
Presseye / Darren Kidd/INPHO / Darren Kidd/INPHO
Humphreys converted and was soon celebrating what he thought was the self-same achievement as he intercepted a loose pass and sprinted to the line, only for referee Nigel Owens to call play back to half-way for an Ulster knock-on which had conceded possession seconds before, without the Dragons’ advantage being served.
Jackson and McCloskey entered the fray for the second half in place of Humphreys, victim of a knock just after his disallowed try, and Louis Ludik; soon to be joined by Nick Williams as Robbie Diack took a heavy impact.
Dragons were next on the scoresheet, however, as Meyer touched down on 46 minutes after good work from his forwards, but a high tackle on Pienaar from Ben White got Ulster the close-range lineout, and another well-bossed driving maul – with Reidy once again at the helm – forced the penalty try as Matthew Screech collapsed the melee metres from the line.
Dragons' Ben White gets to grips with Ulster's Ruan Pienaar in what proved an uncompromising affair in Belfast. Presseye / Darren Kidd/INPHO
Presseye / Darren Kidd/INPHO / Darren Kidd/INPHO
Jackson’s conversion and the sin-binning of Screech heralded the definitive turning of the tide in Ulster’s favour – their cause helped further still by the yellow-carding of White for his second high tackle in five minutes, this time putting Peter Browne out of the game.
The breakthrough looked to have come on 65 minutes, Wilson grounding right in the corner off Jackson’s pass for a try initially validated by Mr Owens, then scrubbed off for an earlier knock-on after much deliberation from the TMO.
A nasty blow to the head for Olding spelled an early end to the match for the luckless centre, and with Ulster still trailing by a solitary point as the game entered its final 10 minutes, Kingspan looked on is disbelief as a long-range Jackson penalty landed on the Dragons’ crossbar and rebounded back into Welsh hands.
Jackson's late penalty won the game for Ulster. Presseye / Darren Kidd/INPHO
Presseye / Darren Kidd/INPHO / Darren Kidd/INPHO
The out-half got another chance from closer range with two minutes to go, and this time applied just the right power to dip his kick over the bar and seal the victory.
Ulster scorers:
Tries: Sean Reidy, Penalty Try Conversions: Ian Humphreys, Paddy Jackson Penalties: Paddy Jackson
Dragons scorers: Tries: Adam Hughes, Carl Meyer Conversions: Angus O’Brien Penalties: Angus O’Brien
ULSTER: Louis Ludik; Craig Gilroy, Darren Cave, Stuart Olding, Jacob Stockdale; Ian Humphreys, Ruan Pienaar; Callum Black, Rob Herring (c), Ricky Lutton, Alan O’Connor, Pete Browne, Robbie Diack, Sean Reidy, Roger Wilson
Replacements: John Andrew, Kyle McCall, Bronson Ross, Clive Ross, Nick Williams, Paul Marshall, Paddy Jackson, Rory Scholes
DRAGONS: Carl Meyer; Ashton Hewitt, Adam Hughes, Adam Warren, Hallam Amos; Angus O’Brien, Charlie Davies; Phil Price, Elliot Dee, Brok Harris, Matthew Screech, Rynard Landman (c), Ben White, Nic Cudd, Ed Jackson
Replacements: Rhys Buckley, Boris Stankovich, Shaun Knight, Cory Hill, James Benjamin, Sarel Pretorius, Geraint Rhys Jones, Nick Scott
A bruiser in Belfast as Paddy Jackson's late, late show gets Ulster the win
Ulster 17
Newport-Gwent Dragons 15
ULSTER MADE HARD work of the visiting Dragons in Belfast, requiring Paddy Jackson’s 78th-minute penalty to carry them over the line in a high-impact encounter which saw two Welshmen yellow-carded and four Ulstermen injured.
A Sean Reidy try, penalty try and seven points from the boot squeezed out the visitors and elevated the Irish province to top spot in the Guinness Pro12, a single point above chasers the Scarlets and Connacht.
With Rory Best, Jared Payne and Andrew Trimble the only three Ulster representatives retained in Joe Schmidt’s Six Nations squad for the test against Wales, Rob Herring started at captain and hooker while both Jackson and Stuart McCloskey – fancied by many to feature in green on Sunday – took a place on the bench.
Ulster's Stuart McCloskey is tackled by Dragons' Nic Cudd and Carl Meyer Presseye / Darren Kidd/INPHO Presseye / Darren Kidd/INPHO / Darren Kidd/INPHO
Dragons belied their lowly Pro12 standing – 10th going into the tie with only Zebre and Treviso beneath them – with a strong start, capped by Angus O’Brien’s fifth minute penalty. In their turn when Ulster got going from the restart they were electric, with Stuart Olding and full debutant Jacob Stockdale contributing powerful line breaks.
However it was Dragons wing Ashton Hewitt who lit up Kingspan Stadium on 16 minutes, his virtuoso run from his own half evading five Ulster tacklers before Adam Hughes slid over from Carl Meyer’s flagwards kick.
No sooner had O’Brien converted than Ulster pounded downfield from the restart, a rolling maul then five-metre scrum paving the way for Olding then Ian Humphreys to almost breach the whitewash within seconds of each other.
Resolute Dragons defending kept the two backs at bay, but there was no stopping Reidy in the very next attack as the flanker brushed aside three tackles to run in at the corner for his third try in as many successive outings.
Presseye / Darren Kidd/INPHO Presseye / Darren Kidd/INPHO / Darren Kidd/INPHO
Humphreys converted and was soon celebrating what he thought was the self-same achievement as he intercepted a loose pass and sprinted to the line, only for referee Nigel Owens to call play back to half-way for an Ulster knock-on which had conceded possession seconds before, without the Dragons’ advantage being served.
Jackson and McCloskey entered the fray for the second half in place of Humphreys, victim of a knock just after his disallowed try, and Louis Ludik; soon to be joined by Nick Williams as Robbie Diack took a heavy impact.
Dragons were next on the scoresheet, however, as Meyer touched down on 46 minutes after good work from his forwards, but a high tackle on Pienaar from Ben White got Ulster the close-range lineout, and another well-bossed driving maul – with Reidy once again at the helm – forced the penalty try as Matthew Screech collapsed the melee metres from the line.
Dragons' Ben White gets to grips with Ulster's Ruan Pienaar in what proved an uncompromising affair in Belfast. Presseye / Darren Kidd/INPHO Presseye / Darren Kidd/INPHO / Darren Kidd/INPHO
Jackson’s conversion and the sin-binning of Screech heralded the definitive turning of the tide in Ulster’s favour – their cause helped further still by the yellow-carding of White for his second high tackle in five minutes, this time putting Peter Browne out of the game.
The breakthrough looked to have come on 65 minutes, Wilson grounding right in the corner off Jackson’s pass for a try initially validated by Mr Owens, then scrubbed off for an earlier knock-on after much deliberation from the TMO.
A nasty blow to the head for Olding spelled an early end to the match for the luckless centre, and with Ulster still trailing by a solitary point as the game entered its final 10 minutes, Kingspan looked on is disbelief as a long-range Jackson penalty landed on the Dragons’ crossbar and rebounded back into Welsh hands.
Jackson's late penalty won the game for Ulster. Presseye / Darren Kidd/INPHO Presseye / Darren Kidd/INPHO / Darren Kidd/INPHO
The out-half got another chance from closer range with two minutes to go, and this time applied just the right power to dip his kick over the bar and seal the victory.
ULSTER: Louis Ludik; Craig Gilroy, Darren Cave, Stuart Olding, Jacob Stockdale; Ian Humphreys, Ruan Pienaar; Callum Black, Rob Herring (c), Ricky Lutton, Alan O’Connor, Pete Browne, Robbie Diack, Sean Reidy, Roger Wilson
Replacements: John Andrew, Kyle McCall, Bronson Ross, Clive Ross, Nick Williams, Paul Marshall, Paddy Jackson, Rory Scholes
DRAGONS: Carl Meyer; Ashton Hewitt, Adam Hughes, Adam Warren, Hallam Amos; Angus O’Brien, Charlie Davies; Phil Price, Elliot Dee, Brok Harris, Matthew Screech, Rynard Landman (c), Ben White, Nic Cudd, Ed Jackson
Replacements: Rhys Buckley, Boris Stankovich, Shaun Knight, Cory Hill, James Benjamin, Sarel Pretorius, Geraint Rhys Jones, Nick Scott
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