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Leo Cullen will use lessons he learned at Leicester to help dismantle Tigers

about 5 hours ago
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Leicester v Leinster fixtures have become common recently – the fifth since 2022 takes place on Friday night – but the history between the sides runs far deeper.Leo Cullen, head coach of the Dublin-based province, spent a couple of seasons at Welford Road in the mid-2000s, winning the Premiership in 2006-07 and losing a Heineken Cup final against Wasps in the same season.Since 2022 the former second‑row has overseen four Champions Cup victories against his former club, including two in 2023-24.Three and a half years ago, there was a masterful quarter-final dismantling of what was then Steve Borthwick’s side.Leinster will now shoot for a hat-trick of Welford Road victories this decade, and the presence of the New Zealand international Rieko Ioane, on full debut, is sure to help.

The respect between the clubs was illustrated by Cullen in his pre‑match media briefing: he opened by appealing for support for Lewis Moody after his former teammate was diagnosed recently with motor neurone disease,Then he explained how his stay at Leicester had been formative,“It was based on hard work,” he said,“There’s no secret to success, is there? Preparation and hard work play a huge part,That’s the bit that will always be with me.

It was tough going but I loved my time there.Cockers [Richard Cockerill] was starting off on his [coaching] journey.He was a hard taskmaster and he had attention to detail.There was great camaraderie, people coming together, an expectation with who you were representing.People used to queue outside, before the gates opened, to get their spot on the terrace.

”Since Leinster first won Europe’s top club competition under Michael Cheika – defeating none other than Leicester at Murrayfield in 2008-09 – expectation in Dublin has risen.They have won four titles but been runners-up four times, including a hat-trick of consecutive final defeats in 2022, 2023 and 2024.There is a growing feeling that another title is overdue, and pressure is something Cullen learned about at Leicester.“There’s an expectation there, a positive expectation, a positive pressure,“ he says.“I loved it, couldn’t speak highly enough of it.

Did it shape me? Yeah, it shaped me in many different ways.”On Friday Cullen will go up against Geoff Parling, another Tigers playing alumnus, who joined Leicester as head coach during the summer after five years as Australia’s forwards coach.Cullen revealed that Parling visited Dublin last November, in his role with the Wallabies, to learn about Leinster’s coaching methods.“He came in for a day and lo and behold, now look where he is – coaching against us,” Cullen said, laughing.“There’s always a bit of a risk they [visiting coaches] might find a bit too much information.

We’ll know more at 10 o’clock on Friday night.”Cullen added that Leicester’s game under Parling is based on “strong fundamentals … set piece, lineout, maul”.“They will kick a lot from No 9,” Cullen said.“Very strong aerial game.Both wingers, they’re quick fellas, and there’s plenty of commentary about that at the moment.

We expect an aerial bombardment.”Ioane, who has scored 38 tries in 88 All Blacks appearances, made his debut off the bench in the opening Champions Cup win against Harlequins last Saturday.He lines up at outside-centre alongside Robbie Henshaw at No 12.Tadhg Furlong and Rónan Kelleher return among seven changes made by Cullen, with Dan Sheehan’s presence on the bench demonstrating the squad’s depth and power.Joe McCarthy and James Ryan, winning his 99th cap for the province and back from suspension, pair up in the second row supported by a world-class back row of Jack Conan, Josh van der Flier and Caelan Doris.

Leicester are without the injured Ollie Chessum, as well as Emeka Ilione and Jack van Poortvliet, but are able to welcome back five Test players: England’s Freddie Steward, Joe Heyes and Jamie Blamire return alongside Tommy Reffell and Nicky Smith of Wales.Reffell, whose partner, Annabel, gave birth to a daughter, Nancy, this week, is captain.George Martin, whose impending departure to Saracens was announced this week, remains out with a shoulder injury.The injured Chessum revealed he will soon need to find new motivation when facing the Leinster players he befriended on the British & Irish Lions tour to Australia.“I’d not come across a lot of the Irish boys before, and I got on very well with them,” Chessum said.

“It was quite easy to motivate yourself by creating a narrative around what they’re like as people.Now I’ve met them, I know that’s not always the case.”The Leinster contingent may wonder about the qualification of “always”, but strong new friendships have clearly formed among players on each side.This will be just another chapter in a historic, and largely friendly, rivalry.
politicsSee all
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US engaging in ‘extreme rightwing tropes’ reminiscent of 1930s, British MPs warn

The US is engaging in “extreme rightwing tropes” with echoes of the 1930s and threatening “chilling” interference in European democracies, British MPs warned ministers on Thursday.The House of Commons rounded on Donald Trump’s national security strategy, which stated that Europe was facing “civilisational erasure” and vowed to help the continent “correct its current trajectory and promote patriotic European parties”.Matt Western, a Labour MP and chair of parliament’s joint committee on the UK government’s national security strategy, said: “The United States consensus that has led the western world since the second world war appears shattered.“The prospect of United States interference in the democratic politics of Europe, I believe, is chilling … The absence of condemnation for Russia is extraordinary, though not surprising.” He said the US pivot left the UK “especially vulnerable”

about 8 hours ago
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UK denies Milei’s claim of talks over Falklands-era ban on Argentina arms sales

The British government has denied it is engaged in negotiations to lift a ban on selling arms to Argentina that has been in place since the Falklands war.Javier Milei, the president of Argentina, told the Daily Telegraph his government had begun speaking to the UK about the restrictions.Argentina briefly invaded the Falklands Islands, which are British territory, in 1982. The war lasted 10 weeks, costing 255 British lives and 649 Argentinian before the invaders surrendered.Subsequently the policy of the British government has been that it will not allow weapons to be exported to Argentina if they are judged to “enhance Argentine military capability”

about 15 hours ago
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Sajid Javid told Boris Johnson he was Dominic Cummings’ ‘puppet’

Sajid Javid told Boris Johnson he was a “puppet” of Dominic Cummings before he resigned as chancellor rather than accept a Cummings-led takeover of his Treasury, he has said in an interview about his experiences as a minister.Speaking to the Institute for Government (IfG), Javid also said that his other departure from Johnson’s government, shortly before it collapsed in 2022, was because he had lost confidence in the prime minister after being assured that allegations about lockdown-breaking parties in No 10 were “bullshit”.Asked to assess the three prime ministers he served under, Javid, who ran six different government departments in eight years, described Johnson as “the least well briefed”, compared with David Cameron and Theresa May.In his first resignation under Johnson, in February 2020, Javid quit after being told by Johnson that he would have to fire his team of Treasury special advisers, known as spads, and work with new advisers selected by Cummings, Johnson’s chief adviser.“I found that unacceptable – both firing my spads and then also how they would be replaced, because I thought I’d just be chancellor in name anyway,” Javid told the IfG as part of their ongoing series of discussions with former ministers

about 16 hours ago
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Keir’s performance in PMQs panto sets bar low enough for Kemi to stay as Tory leader | John Crace

With little more than a week to go until the Christmas recess, the Commons is in festive overdrive. Demob happy. A few minutes in to the year’s penultimate prime minister’s questions with MPs from both sides shouting and cheering, the speaker interrupted proceedings to say: “We don’t need the panto auditions any more.” To which the natural response was: “Ooh yes we do.” Because that’s pretty much the whole purpose of PMQs at the best of times

1 day ago
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Keir Starmer appoints 25 Labour peers to strengthen support in House of Lords

Keir Starmer has appointed 25 Labour peers including a number of former senior government and party aides in an attempt to strengthen his hand in the House of Lords.Matthew Doyle, a former No 10 director of communications, and Katie Martin, a former chief of staff to Rachel Reeves, will be among those appointed to the upper house in a move first reported by the Guardian.Carol Linforth, a former Labour party chief of staff for operations, and Richard Walker, the executive chair of Iceland who switched from supporting the Conservatives before the 2024 election, will also receive peerages.Others on Labour’s list include Michael Barber, a Whitehall veteran who led Tony Blair’s delivery unit and now advises Starmer, and Len Duvall, the chair of the London assembly.The move brings the number of peers appointed by Starmer to 62

1 day ago
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No 10 publishes list of 34 new political peerages including 25 Labour, five Liberal Democrats and three Conservatives – as it happened

Downing Street has published a list of political peerages.There are 25 new Labour peers on the list, five new Lib Dem peers, three new Tory ones.Three of the peers on the list are hereditary peers who are getting an upgrade to a life peerage, so they can stay in the Lords when the legislation to remove hereditary peers finally gets passed. One of these is a crossbencher, the Earl of Kinnoull.Keir Starmer has appointed 25 Labour peers including a number of former senior government and party aides in a bid to strengthen his hand in the House of Lords

1 day ago
societySee all
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NHS ‘facing worst-case scenario’ as hospital flu cases jump 55% in a week

about 5 hours ago
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‘This country’s divided’: how a Sunderland charity is changing that – one house, park and shop at a time

about 12 hours ago
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Online child sexual abuse surges by 26% in year as police say tech firms must act

about 22 hours ago
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Britain slipping down global league table for youth employment, says report

about 22 hours ago
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Homelessness minister promises to end use of B&Bs as emergency housing

about 23 hours ago
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Ruth Johns obituary

1 day ago