Ulster secured their place in the EPCR Challenge Cup final with a dominant 29-12 victory over Exeter Chiefs in Belfast
Ulster secured their spot in the EPCR Challenge Cup final following a commanding 29-12 victory over Exeter in Belfast.
They will now face either Montpellier or the Dragons in Bilbao on May 22, with the Chiefs having little cause for grievance.
They proved unable to penetrate a disciplined and well-drilled Ulster outfit, clearly second-best throughout as their hosts capitalised on playing in front of their own supporters.
Former Northampton number eight Juarno Augustus, fly-half Jack Murphy, flanker Dave McCann and hooker Tom Stewart crossed the whitewash, while scrum-half Nathan Doak contributed a penalty and three conversions.
Exeter responded with tries from number eight Ross Vintcent and wing Campbell Ridl, alongside one Henry Slade conversion, but Ulster comfortably pulled clear during the second half.
Doak pushed a 10th-minute penalty attempt wide of the posts, and while Ulster maintained their attacking pressure, they then had a try chalked off after full-back Mike Lowry went over, with foul play detected earlier in the passage of play.
Exeter ought to have been trailing by 10 points, such was Ulster’s wastefulness, though the Chiefs then squandered their opening scoring opportunity as a Slade penalty drifted wide, concluding a goalless first quarter.
Ulster kept up the pressure, and the stalemate was finally broken 12 minutes before the interval when their forwards’ persistence paid dividends, with Augustus grounding the ball and Doak adding the extras.
Exeter struggled to establish any rhythm in attack, before Ulster were reduced to 14 men when winger Jacob Stockdale received a yellow card for head-on-head contact with Chiefs’ England international Immanuel Feyi-Waboso.
Feyi-Waboso left the field for a head injury assessment, and Exeter wasted no time capitalising on their one-man advantage, levelling the scores as Ulster reorganised through a Vintcent try converted by Slade.
However, Exeter’s opportunity to inflict further damage before half-time evaporated, with Doak edging Ulster into a 10-7 lead at the interval via a close-range penalty.
Feyi-Waboso remained absent for the second period, with Chiefs soon falling further adrift following some incisive attacking play from Ulster near the try line that produced a score for Murphy.
Doak’s conversion extended the lead to 10 points, placing pressure squarely on Exeter to respond, yet Ulster maintained their dominance in both possession and field position.
Their control was rewarded after impressive work from substitute winger Ethan McIlroy, whose speed exposed gaps in Exeter’s defensive line and created a try for McCann.
This left Exeter trailing by 15 points heading into the final quarter, but Ulster showed no signs of easing up as Stewart crossed for try number four following a powerful driving maul close to the line.
Exeter’s dismal evening reached an appropriately bleak conclusion when full-back Ben Hammersley was shown a yellow card, leaving them comprehensively beaten.
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