South Africans turn Champions Cup ‘upside down’ for Toulouse coach Mola

Sharks, Stormers and Pretoria-based Bulls have reached the knockout stage in their first participation in the competition previously contested only by European teams.

The Stormers score a try against Clermont in their Champions Cup match on 21 January 2023. Picture: @THESTORMERS/Twitter

PARIS – Toulouse head coach Ugo Mola said on Sunday that South African sides “have turned things upside down” in the Champions Cup after his French club secured a last 16 home tie against the Bulls with a 20-16 win over Munster.

Sharks, Stormers and Pretoria-based Bulls have reached the knockout stage in their first participation in the competition previously contested only by European teams.

Record five-time winners Toulouse needed just a bonus point in the re-run of the 2008 final to make sure of home ground advantage with the next round being played at the start of April, when they will play the Bulls.

“South Africans teams have turned things upside down,” Mola told reporters.

“You may as well play them as they’re here. I can’t wait,” he added.

Munster could have claimed a home tie for themselves with a bonus-point victory against the Top 14 leaders.

Nine of the 11 Toulouse’s players named in France’s squad for the Six Nations were part of Sunday’s matchday 23.

Fly-half Joey Carbery started for the away side days after being omitted from Ireland’s Six Nations set-up, while Jack Crowley, picked for the national squad, was at inside centre.

The home side led 11-8 at half-time as flanker John Hodnett responded for the visitors after Argentina’s Juan Cruz Mallia dived over early on for Toulouse.

Ireland lock Tadhg Beirne silenced the sold-out home crowd eight minutes after the break as he found a way through the defence although Carbery missed a second conversion.

Munster led 13-11 with half an hour left but still needed to collect a bonus point to claim a home last-16 tie.

SARACENS AT HOME

Toulouse camped inside Munster’s 22m and Melvyn Jaminet added a fifth three-pointer with six minutes left to clinch the home spot.

Later, in the Scottish capital, Edinburgh held on to beat Saracens, who won the last of their three titles in 2019.

Despite the 20-14 loss, the English side still claimed a knockout game on their own turf.

Earlier, Montpellier’s South Africa scrum-half Cobus Reinach knocked London Irish out of the Champions Cup as well as Challenge Cup contention with a try that secured a 21-21 draw.

The French club had already qualified for the top-tier’s next stage.

By the end of Saturday’s action the teams in the last 16 were all known, including Leinster who hammered Racing 92 36-10 at Lansdowne Road, the venue of May 20’s final to claim top seeding in Pool A.

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