ULSTER LEGEND STEPHEN Ferris is doing his best to believe in his former team-mates’ chances of victory over Leinster tonight (kick-off 19.45).
The retired blindside has tied himself up in knots thinking about the variety of probabilities that may or may not unfold at the RDS, but there’s plenty of evidence to support either an argument for either side.
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“We made (Garry) Ringrose and (Ben) Te’o look very amateur up in Belfast. Hopefully the weather holds up because if it does, we can get good set-piece ball and hopefully we can get over the line,” Ferris said at Wednesday night’s Ulster Bank League awards.
“I think the last game is a pretty big deal because we went out and gave them a hammering. And, to be honest, the Leinster boys would have felt pretty embarrassed after it. You can’t mask it, they were absolutely hockeyed. It could have been a lot more.
Matches of this magnitude, of course, require far more than just Stuart McCloskey and Luke Marshall gaining the upper hand. Before that resounding inter-provincial win that has shaped the approach to this semi-final, Ferris was massively critical of Ulster’s style of play with limited carrying options outside of Iain Henderson.
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The performance that followed, albeit against an off-colour Leinster on a dry track, quietened his unrest and he believes the combination stumbled on that day can again do a job in Dublin.
“Sean Reidy came in at number eight against Leinster, I didn’t really expect it but he came in and played really well. He’s a really good dynamic ball-carrier. He isn’t someone who looks for the contact, he uses his feet and gets offloads away. Chris Henry’s started to find form over the last couple of weeks and Hendy just does what he does.
As kick-off draws near, Ferris describes Leinster as ‘stuttering’ and his home province as ‘the form team’ on the back of four straight wins. And yet, there’s still that nagging doubt he shares with so many Ulstermen who will stand around TVs and the RDS tonight.
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It’s Leinster after all. The knock-out blows they have inflicted on Ulster in both the league and European Cup across 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2014 still sting.