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Ireland flanker Peter O'Mahony will be monitored for selection before Munster's final European Pool match as he continues his recovery from a calf injury.
Munster travel to Northampton Saints, who have already qualified, in the final round of Pool Three fixtures in the Investec Champions Cup.
The Irish province say O'Mahony, 35, will "increase his training load" and a decision on his availability will be made "later in the week".
The potential return of O'Mahony will be a boost to Ireland interim head coach Simon Easterby, who names his Six Nations squad on Wednesday.
However, Munster will be without wing Shane Daly, who is following return to play protocols after failing a head injury assessment during Saturday's win over Saracens.
Scrum-half Conor Murray, back row Jack O'Donoghue and hooker Diarmuid Barron are all available for selection after returning to action in the 17-12 win over the English side, which put Munster into second place in the Pool.
Wing Diarmuid Kilgallen has also returned to full training following a wrist injury and prop Mark Donnelly has recovered from an ankle injury sustained on Emerging Ireland duty in September.
Victory over Northampton would secure a place in the knock-out stages and a home last-16 tie.

Former Scotland rugby union captain Peter Brown has died aged 83 following a long illness.
Born in Troon to a sporting family, Brown played at club level for West of Scotland and Gala, making his international debut in a home win against France on 4 January 1964.
Brown's father Jock was a football goalkeeper who won the Scottish Cup with Clyde in 1939, his uncle Jim played for the United States at the 1930 World Cup and his younger brother Gordon was a fellow Scotland rugby international, who also represented the British and Irish Lions on eight occasions.
A versatile forward, Brown split his 27 caps between lock and number eight and was an effective goal-kicker - his 66 points for Scotland remains a record for a member of the pack.
He remained heavily involved with Gala after retiring from playing, and also had a successful career in accountancy.
In a statement, Brown's family said: "Peter underwent several years of chemotherapy treatment for myeloma, supported wonderfully by the haematology team at the Western General.
"Earlier this week, he was admitted to the Royal Infirmary following a fall at home. Peter passed away peacefully surrounded by family on Sunday 12 January.
"The family would like to express their gratitude to the Acute Medical Unit for their care and compassion."

AL DUWADIMI, Saudi Arabia Argentine Luciano Benavides was a big mover during Mondays Dakar Rally Stage Eight as he won by over two minutes, while also stopping to check on Pablo Quintanilla who crashed 133km into the stage.
Thankfully, after calling for medical assistance, the Chileans injuries did not appear too serious and Benavides was given the time back.
I was riding with Adrien (Van Beveren) and we saw Pablo on the ground, so immediately we called the helicopter, Benavides said. We stayed with Pablo for 30 minutes. It looks like he has nothing broken, but he does have a concussion.
With the route to Saudi Arabias capital city of Riyadh featuring a timed special stage of over 480 kilometers, Benavides now moves up to fourth overall 30 minutes, 48 seconds behind bike leader Daniel Sanders with Spanish rookie Edgar Canet the latest recruit to Red Bull KTM Factory Racing leading the Rally2 category by 31 minutes, 11 seconds from Austrian rider Tobias Ebster.
I started second and, after 90km, we caught Daniel and Tosha (Schareina) also joined us, Ebster said. We then spent the rest of the day riding as a group and making good navigation all the way.
In the Challenger class, Spaniard Pau Navarro earned his first 2025 Dakar stage win at the wheel of his Taurus T3 Max to move 1hr40m35s behind class leader Nicolas Cavigliasso. With Portuguese driver Gonçalo Guerreiro sitting 25 minutes, 49 seconds behind Cavigliasso.
We talked before the stage and decided to go for the win today, Navarro said. It was a different strategy for us, and we pushed and pushed and pushed.
In the Ultimate class, Swede Mattias Ekströms bid to cut the gap further to leader Henk Lategan was hamstrung by a long stretch of opening the road in his Ford Raptor T1+ that leaves him 28m55s back now.
We were opening from 50km to 350km and that was difficult, the former two-time DTM champion said. Im doing everything I can and the plan is to keep doing on that for four more stages.
Five-time winner Nasser Al-Attiyah and Stage Seven victor Lucas Moraes also struggled, while Belgian Guillaume De Mévius suffered an early stoppage in his MINI during a difficult day that saw him concede over three hours.
It was a really tough stage for us, De Mévius said. We got a technical problem after 100km of the stage, so we had to stop to repair it.
After that, we were in the dust of everybody and we only had traction from the front wheels. In the dunes that was tough.
In the SSV class, Francisco Chaleco López lies over two hours back from leader Brock Heger.
It was a tricky start for us, López said. An early puncture and the first 100km all in the dust. So much traffic at the beginning, but the final kilometers on the dunes were fun.
A relatively short hop from Riyadh to Haradh awaits on Tuesdays Stage Nine, with a timed section measuring 357km, as starting positions become crucial in the final Empty Quarter desert stages.

The Philadelphia 76ers will partner with Comcast Spectacor, their current landlord, to build a new arena in South Philadelphia and abandon a deal with the city to move downtown.
The stunning reversal comes as a relief to critics of the plan to put a $1.3 billion arena near City Hall at the edge of Chinatown. Mayor Cherelle Parker, on Monday, called the proposal "a win, win, win, win for Philadelphia."
"Philly, this is a lot. This is a curveball that none of us saw coming, but nevertheless, we are here," Parker said at a midday news conference.
But some critics and City Council members felt betrayed after two years of fraught negotiations over the downtown plan. City Council member Jim Harrity told a news station he felt "completely bamboozled."
Parker was joined Monday by NBA commissioner Adam Silver, who appeared remotely, and team and Comcast leaders who promised the new plan would bring vibrancy and a new vision to both locations. The parties also pledged to work with the city to try to bring a WNBA team to Philadelphia.
"Though plans have changed, the one thing that has not changed is our commitment to do something good for the Sixers, our fans and most importantly, our city," said David Adelman, a partner in the 76ers ownership group, Harris Blitzer Sports & Entertainment.
The City Council had voted only weeks ago to approve the team's plan to open its proposed 76 Place downtown by 2031, despite opposition from residents of the city's nearby Chinatown and others. The team, which shares space with the Philadelphia Flyers of the NHL in an arena owned by Comcast, had said it wanted to own its own facility when its lease expired.
But the rival sides started talking two weeks ago before looping in city leaders in the high-stakes talks over the past three days.
The team, whose ownership group is led by investor Josh Harris, said it had formed a 50-50 joint venture with Comcast to replace its arena in the South Philadelphia stadium district by 2031. Comcast will also take a minority stake in the team and work together on the WNBA bid, the parties said in a joint statement Monday.
And they pledged to invest in the abandoned site, Market East, a once-bustling downtown retail corridor that has struggled for many years despite repeated attempts to revive it.
The partners, who also own the NHL's New Jersey Devils and have a controlling interest in the NFL's Washington Commanders, had vowed not to seek any city subsidies for the downtown project, which they said would reap $2 billion in economic growth for Center City. They did not immediately disclose financial terms of the new project.
Chinatown activist Vivian Chang said the community was cautiously optimistic but troubled that "our city was held captive by the developers" and lost time it could have spent on other pressing issues.
"We have been saying all along that they were playing people," Chang told The Associated Press. "These billionaire developers didn't have anyone's interests in mind, in terms of the community. They just had their profits in mind."
Economist Victor Matheson, a Holy Cross professor who studies stadium financing issues, said it's not unusual for team owners to change course as they hunt for the best deal. Last year, in Washington, the NBA's Wizards and the NHL's Capitals decided to stay in the city after a deal to move to the northern Virginia suburbs, with $515 million in public financing, imploded.
"This happens all the time," Matheson said, noting that the 76ers "played New Jersey against Philadelphia" in the hunt for public subsidies.
He says he believes the team planned to "pick up some subsidies along the way, and then when that didn't happen, they ended up of course back where they started."
Supporters of the downtown plan had hoped a glitzy, 18,500-seat arena would be the catalyst to revive Market East, which runs for eight blocks from City Hall to the Liberty Bell. "The way they reached this decision reflects a profound lack of respect for city leaders, stakeholders, and residents," council members Jamie Gauthier and Rue Landau said in a statement. "It was shameful for 76DevCo to pit working-class Philadelphians against one another and pressure city council to consider a half-baked proposal on an artificially rushed timeline."

Inter Miami on Monday completed the second training session of the 2025 campaign with Lionel Messi present and under new head coach Javier Mascherano on Monday in Ft. Lauderdale, giving players a taste of what's to come under the new leadership.
Players underwent the medical examinations on Jan. 11 before officially reporting for training on Jan. 13.
"We started on Saturday with the tests and from yesterday we started training with the squad. The feelings are very good," he said. "We are happy with how they have returned from the holidays. We know that it is not easy to be so long standing, beyond that everyone can do their specific work. When you reincorporate and do the group work, they have returned very well from the holidays and that has allowed us to demand a little more from the first day. So we are very happy."
Mascherano and his coaching staff will work towards getting the roster in shape for the preseason tour across North, South and Central America.
"I'm very quiet. Obviously, I like to work with intensity in the training sessions," said Mascherano. "I like my teams to play with intensity and courage but we know what we are starting now and we need to be calm so we are happy with the guys. They are working a lot and they are working really well so we keep going forward."
Though the team has only been together a few days, Yannick Bright admits the roster can already begin to feel the impact of Mascherano's leadership.
"He's an experienced coach and obviously was an experienced player, he knows what he's doing, he played in the best spotlights and best games possible. He definitely knows football, I am excited to start working and learning," Bright said. "I did see flashes of intensity here and there during training, but I love it. It's what I am about, I want to embrace it and learn."
Inter Miami will not be complete for the first preseason friendly against Club América on Jan. 18 in Las Vegas, Nevada, as goalkeeper Drake Callender and midfielder Benjamin Cremaschi join the United States men's national team for the January camp.
The USMNT is currently training at Inter Miami's facilities in Ft. Lauderdale, offering Argentina countrymen Messi, Mascherano and USMNT coach Mauricio Pochettino the chance to meet.
Minn. in 1st women's poll since 2019, UCLA No. 1

Minnesota is off to its best start in 17 games and earned its first ranking since 2019 on Monday, entering the Associated Press women's basketball poll at No. 24.
The Golden Gophers have won 16 of their first 17 contests, with the loss coming against Nebraska last month. They are ranked for the first time since Dec. 30, 2019. Next up is a matchup at No. 8 Maryland on Tuesday.
UCLA, South Carolina, Notre Dame and the USC Trojans kept rolling, holding the top four spots again in the AP Top 25. The Bruins received 29 of the 31 first-place votes from a national media panel. The Fighting Irish, who were missing All-America guard Hannah Hidalgo in their most recent game because of a foot injury, got the other two top votes.
Undefeated LSU moved up one spot to fifth. The Tigers, along with the Bruins and No. 9 Ohio State, are the only three unbeaten teams left in Division I women's basketball.
UConn was sixth, with Texas falling two places to seventh after a 67-50 loss at South Carolina on Sunday.
TCU moved up one spot to 10th.
Dropping out
Iowa and Michigan fell out of the poll this week. The two Big Ten schools suffered losses last week. The Wolverines had a difficult stretch over the past few weeks, with games against No. 1 UCLA, No. 4 USC and No. 9 Ohio State that were all losses. Michigan did beat Purdue on Saturday. Iowa lost to Illinois and Indiana last week.
Ranked Cowgirls
No. 24 Oklahoma State entered the poll for the first time since 2018 after knocking off then-No. 17 West Virginia on Saturday. The Cowgirls have gone 14-2 this season and are on the road at Houston and UCF this week before hosting the No. 10 TCU Horned Frogs on Jan. 22.
Rising Bears
California moved up six spots to No. 18 after beating No. 21 NC State and Florida State last week. The Bears have their highest ranking since they were 18th on Dec. 31, 2018.
Conference breakdown
The SEC has seven teams ranked this week, with the Big Ten and ACC right behind with six each. The Big 12 has five and the Big East one.
Games of the week
No. 23 Utah at No. 10 TCU, Friday. The Utes stumbled in their first game this season as a ranked team, getting routed by then-No. 12 Kansas State. Now Utah will face another tall task, this one against Sedona Prince and the Horned Frogs.
No. 13 Oklahoma at No. 2 South Carolina, Sunday. The Gamecocks continue their stretch of facing five ranked opponents in a row with a game at No. 19 Alabama on Thursday before hosting the Sooners this weekend.
Penn State RBs Allen, Singleton returning for '25

Penn State junior standout running backs Kaytron Allen and Nicholas Singleton both announced Monday that they will be returning to the Nittany Lions for the 2025 season.
"We still have goals we want to reach as a team, and I want to be alongside my teammates as we reach those goals," Singleton wrote in his announcement.
Allen, meanwhile, said that "it's clear that we still have a lot more to accomplish."
ESPN's Mel Kiper Jr. had ranked Allen and Singleton as the Nos. 5 and 6 running backs available in the upcoming NFL draft.
This past season, the two teamed up to give Penn State one of college football's top rushing duos -- Allen rushed for 1,108 yards and eight touchdowns while averaging 5.0 yards per carry; Singleton rushed for 1,099 yards with 12 touchdowns and ranked fourth in the Big Ten with 6.4 yards per carry.
Singleton also led Big Ten running backs with 375 receiving yards on 41 receptions.
Singleton ran for three touchdowns in Penn State's 27-24 loss to Notre Dame in the College Football Playoff semifinals Thursday. Allen rushed for 134 yards in the Nittany Lions' quarterfinal victory over Boise State on Dec. 31.
Penn State quarterback Drew Allar previously announced he was coming back. With Allen and Singleton joining him, the Nittany Lions will enter next season with one of the country's most prolific and experienced backfields.
Auburn No. 1 in AP men's Top 25 after Vols lose

Auburn has climbed to No. 1 in The Associated Press men's basketball poll for its second stint at the top in program history, while fellow Southeastern Conference program Georgia is in the rankings for the first time in 14 years.
Bruce Pearl's Tigers (15-1) claimed 60 of 62 first-place votes to rise one spot Monday after previous No. 1 Tennessee suffered its first loss of the season, falling at Florida, to end a five-week reign at the top. Auburn has been No. 1 only once before in the AP Top 25, during a three-week stint in January and February of 2022, and is the third team to sit atop the poll this season.
Auburn's only loss came at Duke in early December and the Tigers have won eight straight games, though there is no word on when star forward Johni Broome might be ready to play after suffering an ankle injury in Saturday's win over South Carolina.
The Tigers' rise made them the headliner in another SEC-heavy poll, with the league having nine teams in the AP Top 25 -- including three of the top five and five of the top 10.
Iowa State rose one spot to No. 2, reaching its highest ranking in program history, followed by Duke, Alabama and Florida. The Blue Devils and Gators each claimed a first-place vote.
The top tier
The Volunteers (15-1) had been No. 1 since Dec. 9 and stood as Division I's last unbeaten team before a 30-point loss to Florida. They recovered by beating Texas but still tumbled five spots to No. 6.
Marquette was next at No. 7 as the only team to stay at the same spot from last week, followed by Kentucky, preseason No. 1 Kansas and Houston to round out the top 10.
Rising
No. 12 Michigan State and No. 20 Michigan had the week's biggest jumps, both rising four spots. Florida and No. 17 Purdue were next by climbing three positions.
In all, 15 teams that were ranked last week moved up in the latest poll.
Falling
While Tennessee's tumble was notable, No. 19 Illinois had the week's biggest slide by falling six spots after a weekend home loss to USC.
Two-time reigning national champion UConn matched the Volunteers' five-spot decline, checking in at No. 14 after last week's loss at Villanova.
Six teams that were ranked last week moved down in Monday's poll.
Welcome
No. 23 Georgia Bulldogs, No. 24 Wisconsin and No. 25 Baylor were the week's additions. And for Georgia, it has been a while.
Mike White's Bulldogs (14-2) have their first AP Top 25 ranking since spending a week at No. 24 in January 2011. That lone appearance had stood as the program's only time being ranked since the 2002-03 season, but the Bulldogs are coming off a week that featured wins against then-No. 6 Kentucky and then-No. 17 Oklahoma for the program's first back-to-back victories against ranked opponents since the 2006-07 season.
Both the Badgers and Bears have spent multiple weeks in the poll this season.
Farewell (for now)
West Virginia (No. 21) and UCLA (No. 22) joined the Sooners in falling out of this week's poll.
Conference watch
The SEC -- which had 10 ranked teams Dec. 23 and Dec. 30 -- had nine ranked teams for the fifth time this season, including No. 11 Texas A&M, No. 15 Mississippi State and No. 21 Mississippi.
The Big Ten was next with six, followed by the Big 12 with four. The Big East had two, followed by the Atlantic Coast, West Coast, American Athletic and Mountain West conferences with one each.

LiAngelo Ball has signed a deal with Def Jam and Universal Music Group, a representative from his label Born2Ball Music Group says.
Sources told ESPN the deal is worth as much as $13 million, with $8 million guaranteed, and gives Ball full ownership of music and his own record label. Ball has a second song to follow the debut of "Tweaker" in the near future as well.
Ball, the middle brother of Chicago Bulls guard Lonzo Ball and Charlotte Hornets guard LaMelo Ball, went unselected in the 2018 NBA draft. He signed training camp deals in 2020 (Detroit Pistons), 2021 (Hornets) and 2022 (Hornets) but never made a regular-season roster. He averaged 4.4 points, 1.1 rebounds and 13.1 minutes in 31 NBA G League games for the Greensboro Swarm from 2021-23.
But he has since refocused his career path to being an artist and musician. The song is described as having an early 2000s rap and modern hip-hop feel and was released Jan. 3 on the WorldstarHipHop YouTube page and has earned nearly 8 million views as of Jan. 13.
The Ball family isn't new to rap. Lonzo has already released a few songs, including "Zo2," which was used to promote his Big Baller Brand signature shoe. LiAngelo's track, though, is getting a lot more attention, with Lonzo already proclaiming 2025 the "year of G[elo]."
Aside from the brotherly love, the song is drawing big-time attention from some pretty famous rappers as well. According to Chart Data, the song entered the top 10 streaming chart for the U.S. on Spotify on Jan. 8. As of Thursday, the song sat at No. 4 -- bypassing Tyler, the Creator's "Sticky" featuring GloRilla, Sexyy Red and Lil Wayne, and Kendrick Lamar's "tv off" featuring Lefty Gunplay -- with 1,398,725 plays, according to Spotify.

Cleared of wrongdoing by the International Tennis Integrity Agency (ITIA), Sinner's case will be heard at Cas following an appeal by the World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada), which is seeking a ban of up to two years.
Sinner successfully argued that he was inadvertently contaminated by his physiotherapist after he twice tested positive for the steroid clostebol.
Since the doping test was made public, Sinner has gone on to win the US Open and season-ending ATP Finals in a stellar 2024 season.
However, some players have criticised the handling of Sinner's case - and that of former world number one Iga Swiatek - with Australia's Nick Kyrgios describing them as "disgusting" for tennis.
Sinner's first-round opponent in Melbourne, Jarry, was banned for 11 months after testing positive for anabolic agents in 2020.
The Chilean said he wished he had received the same support from the tennis authorities as Sinner has following his own failed tests.
"What I can say is that I would have liked the same treatment as the things that I went through," said world number 36 Jarry.
"I don't think it was the same, so that's all. What I can say is that it's tough for me to play against him."