Cardiff Blues 19 Leinster 23:Leinster will travel to Glasgow and the resumption of the Heineken Cup next weekend with the wind well and truly in their sails after the Cardiff Blues became the latest victims of Joe Schmidt's side at the City Stadium in the Welsh capital this evening. The result stretches Leinster's lead at the top of the Pro12 standings to nine points.
Injuries to Jonathan Sexton and Gordon D’Arcy will give Schmidt cause for concern but, by and large, the coach can reflect happily on a 10th successive win although they were hanging on in the closing stages and can thank their well organised defence, rather than their renowned attack, for seeing the game out.
The Blues, already without Lions centre Jamie Roberts, suffered a pre-match blow when Gavin Henson was ruled out with a calf strain and then made a disastrous start as they conceded two early tries. Leinster ran a free-kick, skipper Jamie Heaslip burst past a static defence and back row colleague Sean O’Brien was at his shoulder to score.
Minutes later a move from the training ground saw full-back Rob Kearney take an inside pass and knife through to touch down under the posts. Jonathan Sexton converted both to leave Leinster 14-0 ahead and seemingly in total control.
But the Blues, with Dan Parks abandoning his usual kicking game to spread the ball wide, hit back with two penalties from Leigh Halfpenny before Parks, reverting to his usual script, dropped a goal.
Halfpenny was just short with an ambitious attempt from wide on the halfway line, but Sexton made no mistake with a much easier effort to end the first half with the visitors holding a 17-9 lead.
The Blues shot themselves in the foot on the restart, first by allowing Sexton’s kick off to bounce into touch inside their 22 and then having the line-out stolen by the alert O’Brien, but stout tackling meant Leinster had to settle for another Sexton penalty.
A further massive kick from Halfpenny took the Welsh region into double figures and the lively full-back then forced Leinster wing Dave Kearney to concede a five metre scrum.
Leinster pushed too soon, yielding a free-kick, from which prop Gethin Jenkins forced his way over for a try eventually confirmed by the TV official. Halfpenny converted to reduce the deficit to just one point at 20-19.
A 60 metre kick by Halfpenny fell beneath the crossbar, but the Blues were causing all sorts of problems for the European champions, who had lost key men D’Arcy and Sexton to injury. But they missed a chance to take the lead when Halfpenny fluffed a straightforward penalty and Leinster nerves were settled when Fergus McFadden slotted over a similar kick to confirm their victory.