YESTERDAY’S MATCH PROGRAMME at Allianz Park included Saracens chairman Nigel Wray’s welcome for the “hordes of Munster,” whom the millionaire was certain would arrive in their thousands.
Indeed the Red Army did turn out in impressive numbers at the north London stadium, although Wray wrote that they would be “clad in that familiar orange.”
Source: James Crombie/INPHO
A case of mistaken identity, colour blindness or whatever it was, Wray appeared not to know exactly which band of supporters was heading his way.
Meanwhile, the Munster team that turned up on the pitch could have been mistaken as imposters such was the weakness of their performance on the biggest day of their 2014/15 season.
Pre-match, we felt that Munster would at least push Sarries in defeat, even without the vital playmaking and defensive influence of injured scrum-half Conor Murray. As it transpired, a 23-point winning margin was entirely a reflection of the game itself.
Mark McCall’s side were impressive in mixing their game up; combining direct ball carries with clever tip-on passes, screen plays and a broad approach to kicking.
In contrast, Munster served up a huge error count; dropping the pill under pressure, kicking poorly, missing one-on-one tackles and having a number of set-piece issues.
Munster insisted their preparation had been clean and positive, underlining that they had come into this game with confidence in their ability to upset the odds at Allianz Park.
But nothing they tried worked, even if their brief forays into wider channels appeared to suggest that Saracens could be breached in those areas of the pitch, particularly when the likes of Felix Jones and Andrew Conway could be sent into one-on-one contests.