MAGNERS LEAGUE
Venue: Sportsground, Galway
Date: Friday, 24 October Kick-off: 1830 BST
Coverage: Live on Galway Bay FM & BBC Radio Scotland & BBC Online
Michael Bradley has made four changes to his Connacht side ahead of their Magners League clash with Edinburgh at the Sportsground on Friday, kick-off 6.30pm. While his counterpart Andy Robinson names an unchanged side from their excellent HEC victory in Castres.
For Connacht Mel Deane has recovered from a hamstring injury to take the inside centre berth beside Gavin Duffy.
In the forwards, there are two changes in the front row with John Lyne starting at loosehead prop alongside Sean Cronin at hooker, while in the back row Colm Rigney comes in at number eight.
David Gannon is named on the bench for the first time this season having recovered from a calf injury which had kept him out of contention since the new season began.
Amongst the players that are unavailable to the province due to injury are backs Liam Bibo (hamstring), Keith Matthews (calf), Conor O'Loughlin (hip) and Mike Roberts (calf), as well as flanker Ray Ofisa (hamstring).
Meanwhile Edinburgh will start tomorrow night's game with a strong side, with a total of eleven Scottish internationals starting against the western province at the Sportsground, as they bid to win their first game in Galway in three seasons.
Andy Robinson has stuck with the starting line up which beat Castres last week in the Heineken Cup in the South of France and will be hoping for more of the same from his first 15.
Eleven Of that side have already represented Scotland at full international level: Chris Patterson, Ben Cairns, David Callam, Nick de Luca, Ross Ford, Phil Godman, Craig Hamilton, Jim Hamilton, Allister Hogg, Allan Jabobson and Simon Webster.
Comments:
Gavin Duffy (Connacht): "This is a huge game for us and that has to be the focus of attention just now (ahead of the Ireland squad selection).
"In many ways it is bigger than the match against London Irish in the Challenge Cup last weekend and it would be great to go into the break (for the autumn internationals) on the back of another win.
"It is important for us that we follow our win over Leinster by putting more pressure on Ulster and Edinburgh and the other teams around us."
Andy Robinson (Edinburgh): "This is the last game before the autumn international break and we want to go in with some real confidence.
"I think Connacht are a really good side, they're highly underrated. They have some quality players and having turned over Glasgow and turned over Leinster, they'll be confident that they can make it three-in-a-row.
"But we feel we can build on the win in Castres. The lads know they can really take come confidence. They deserved to be picked again in the same team this week.
"Everybody's working hard and focused to achieve the best that they can. It's a young squad but we've got to make sure we've got the concentration and attitude for every play we have."
Planet Rugby Form:
Connacht have won three of their last five games in all competitions including their 19-18 defeat of reigning Magners League champions Leinster in the last round. Connacht are going for a third straight Magners League win at the Galway Sportsground - to equal their best home run set in 2005/06. Just one Scottish side has won at the Sportsground since May 2006: Glasgow 40-23 on 13 April 2007. Edinburgh's 13-6 victory in Castres in the European Cup ended a three game losing run in all competitions. In the Magners League the Scotsmen have won just one of their last five encounters: 32-15 over the Scarlets at Murrayfield on 19 September. Edinburgh have lost their last four games against Irish teams and have not won in Galway since 5 May 2006. Connacht's last win over Edinburgh was 16-13 at Murrayfield on 4 March 2005.
Planet Rugby Prediction: Even with injury worries Edinburgh should be able to win this one. Edinburgh by seven.
ICRSC Prediction: After a good effort against a very strong London Irish side, good form and home advantage to give Connacht the win by five.
Ref Watch: Mr Jones is one of the best young referees in the game at the moment, strong background in reffing sevens rugby which mean he likes to see games flow. Yet can surprisingly be prone to pedantic games on occasion.
Connacht:
15 Fionn Carr; 14 Aidan Wynne; 13 Gavin Duffy; 12 Mel Deane; 11 John Hearty; 10 Ian Keatley; 9 Frank Murphy; 1 John Lyne; 2 Sean Cronin; 3 Robbie Morris; 4 Mike Swift; 5 Andrew Farley; 6 John Muldoon (C); 7 Johny O'Connor; 8 Colm Rigney.
Replacements: 16 Adrian Flavin, 17 Ronan Loughney, 18 Andrew Browne, 19 David Gannon, 20 Kieran Campbell, 21 Andy Dunne, 22 Troy Nathan.
Edinburgh:
15 Chris Paterson; 14 Mark Robertson; 13 Ben Cairns; 12 Nick De Luca; 11 Simon Webster; 10 Phil Godman; 9 Mike Blair (captain); 1 Allan Jacobsen; 2 Ross Ford; 3 Geoff Cross; 4 Craig Hamilton; 5 Jim Hamilton; 6 Scott Newlands; 7 Alan MacDonald; 8 Allister Hogg
Replacements: (seven from 11 players that travel): Andrew Kelly; Gavin Kerr; Kyle Traynor; Matt Mustchin; Ben Gissing; Simon Cross; Ross Rennie; Greig Laidlaw; David Blair; Hugo Southwell; John Houston.
Referee: James Jones (Wales)
Touch judges: George Clancy (Ireland), Peter Roche (Ireland)
Assessor: John Sheehan (Ireland)
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Quote:RogueXV
Ouch! 0-27 at half time. I'm glad I messed up the start time by an hour and wasn't subjected to the first half. I know the lads must be tired from the recent string of games, but would have expected a better battle out of them at home. I hope things can get turned around in the second half otherwise we're looking at another Cardiff game.

Quote:RogueXV
Well, they won the second half and put a bit of respectability onto the scoreline. Muldoon's yellow card looks to come at the wrong time(is there a right time?). Another converted try and it's a tense finish and at least a bonus point. There's little hope of that when Connacht are down to 14 men.


Quote:Irish Times
Connacht's Cup hopes take another hammering
Sat, Oct 25, 2008
Connacht 14 Edinburgh 27:
CONNACHT'S CREDENTIALS for Heineken Cup rugby via the Magners League route took a bruising in the Sportsground last evening.
After a series of rewarding results against Glasgow, Leinster, and Dax, Connacht simply could not retain that standard to bag a third home win on the trot.
And had Edinburgh not been more than a touch casual in the second half after bolting to a 27-0 lead at half-time, it could well have been Connacht's poorest league result in several seasons.
Instead Connacht added some respectability with two tries in the second half and went close to pushing Edinburgh for a bonus point - perhaps if they had kicked a penalty opportunity - but that only masked a dispiriting display from a side that only a few weeks ago were celebrating a rare win over Leinster at the venue.
Connacht could point to a tough three weeks of action that had stretched resources, but this fixture was certainly one too far; they were unable to deal with the physicality of this Scots, who until last evening were on the same number of points on the league table.
Up against that 27-point deficit at the break, Connacht were facing their first whitewash at home this season. Edinburgh used the wind intelligently, kicking into the Connacht half continually and forcing the home side to attack from deep in the hopes they would eventually cough up possession.
They did with increasing regularly as Edinburgh won the crucial battle at the breakdown, and Connacht only once broke through to their opponents' 22 in the opening half.
With Edinburgh's superior pace out wide - Connacht in essence had two centres playing in those positions - they made the telling breakthrough after seven minutes.
It initially came through an unfortunate ricochet off a Connacht player, but flanker Alan MacDonald was lightning quick to break through from halfway with prop Allan Jacobsen adding a few extra yards before wing Simon Webster strode in, rounding three tacklers in the in-goal area to touch down under the posts within eight minutes.
Webster, Mark Robertson - son of the legendary Keith - and the three-quarters were eager to get involved, and with the pack on top in the scrums and the loose, they were given plenty of opportunity.
Fullback Chris Paterson added two penalties and three conversions - the second when Edinburgh took a quick penalty after Carr was harshly pinged for not releasing, and when Paterson hacked ahead, he won the race for the second try.
With Connacht pinned back on the heels, and Edinburgh making all the running, the third try came just before the break when captain Mike Blair sold a dummy and waltzed through for an easy score.
Certainly there looked no way back for Connacht unless they dramatically picked up the tempo and they certainly looked more creative, particularly after Fionn Carr had found a gap through the defence before the hooker Seán Cronin was stopped just short.
Replacement scrumhalf Kieran Campbell followed suit but was penalised for crossing with the line in sight, but on 59 minutes Connacht got on the scoreboard when Gavin Duffy intercepted on halfway and raced in untouched.
It certainly gave the home side some momentum, and four minutes later Edinburgh, camped on the Connacht line, gave away possession through an intercept.
Andy Dunne did the damage before Carr cut inside to make it 14-27 after 63 minutes. Suddenly there seemed the possibility of salvaging something from the game.
With the wind behind them replacement Troy Nathan nailed a kick to the 22; David Gannon got his hand to an Edinburgh lineout, and a when the penalty was won Connacht opted to kick for touch.
Eventually the move broke down with a knock-on in midfield from Ronan Loughney, and with that went the possibility of a bonus point.
CONNACHT:F Carr; A Wynne, G Duffy, M Deane, J Hearty; I Keatley, F Murphy; J Lyne, S Cronin, R Morris; M Swift, A Farley; J Muldoon (capt), J O'Connor, C Rigney. Replacements: A Browne for Swift (20m), D Gannon for Farley (ht), T Nathan for Hearty (49m), A Flavin for Cronin (51m), K Campbell for Murphy (54m), A Dunne for Deane (58m).
EDINBURGH:C Paterson; M Robertson, B Cairns, N De Luca, S Webster; P Godman, M Blair (capt); A Jacobsen, R Ford, G Cross; C Hamilton, J Hamilton; S Newlands, A MacDonald, A Hogg. Replacements: M Mustchin for Hamilton (58m), G Kerr for Cross (67m), J Houston for Webster (67m), R Rennie for MacDonald (67m).
Referee:James Jones (Wales).

Quote:seanin4711
bradley should be called the tinker man as i cannot remember the last time we had the same starting XV one game to the next?!?
need consistency on selections!
how can we expect results any other way?
worried seanin

