Ruthless Leinster overcome injuries to beat Edinburgh
Written by I Dig SportsThey started well, Schoeman blasting over and new boy Ross Thompson making it 7-0 with the boot. And then, old failings appeared.
Leinster's attack was slick when putting Tommy O'Brien away up the left, but the home defence wasn't exactly rapid in response.
It was positively comatose when young centre Charlie Tector scored not long after.
Ali Price's clearing kick from his own 22 was fielded by Tector - above Jamie Ritchie, Ben Muncaster and Van der Merwe - and the 22-year-old, playing wonderfully on his first start, ran away, dummied the last defender and scored at his leisure.
Sam Prendergast made it 12-7 to the visitors, then Matt Currie was forced off injured and replaced by Scott, back up the road again from England.
Edinburgh needed a spark and they found it when Thompson put them on the front foot with a break that took him past two defenders.
Wes Goosen took it on and when Ritchie brilliantly took contact and spun around to hit Van der Merwe, there was only going to be one outcome.
It was 12-12 at the break but only after Edinburgh survived heavy fire on their line.
When Cherry rumbled over off a driven lineout three minutes into the new half, things were looking encouraging at 19-12, but Everitt's team were over-run from there. Same old, same old as Leinster layered on the power.
Edinburgh got sucked in deep in their own 22 and then done out wide when Jordan Larmour scored. Tector was excellent again in the build-up. Prendergast's conversion levelled it at 19-19.
Jamison Gibson-Park, as dominant as ever on his comeback from injury, then easily swatted aside Price, and others, at the side of a ruck for the bonus-point try.
A routine lineout maul saw Jack Conan pile over for a fifth. Prendergast's extras made it 33-19
Van der Merwe struck again just after the hour to make it a nine-point game - a lineout on one side of pitch finished off on the other.
Byrne took out a subdued Darcy Graham in the air and got binned with time ticking away. Healy had a crack from the resultant penalty from halfway, but his effort was way off target.
There was another score to come. Replacement Ben Vellacott manufactured the Scott try and ensured Edinburgh would take two points from an otherwise disappointing night.