Champions Cup lowdown: Irish pools broken down, players to watch and betting guide

Leinster and Ulster both face two French sides in pool stages

Louis Picamoles and Johnny Sexton wil meet again when Leinster take on Nortahmpton in Pool 4 of the Champions Cup. Photograph:   Loic Venance/AFP/Getty Images)
Louis Picamoles and Johnny Sexton wil meet again when Leinster take on Nortahmpton in Pool 4 of the Champions Cup. Photograph: Loic Venance/AFP/Getty Images)

There is no obvious ‘Pool of Death’, but the four Irish provinces face a tall order to qualify

It is four years since Leinster won the then Heineken Cup when they beat Ulster in the final at Twickenham in 2012 and the bookmakers are suggesting that they won’t bring that run to an end in next season’s Champions Cup final, which will take place at Murrayfield, following yesterday’s pool draw for the tournament.

The 20 teams have been split into five pools of four teams with the pool winners and the three best runners-up going on to dispute the quarter-finals.

The fixtures, which take place over two weekends in each of October, December and January (2017), will be decided later in the summer after the clubs, the organisers and the television companies sit down to thrash out the schedule.

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Leinster and Ulster are both in pools containing two French clubs, Connacht have Zebre, while Munster find themselves alongside French champions, Racing 92, Glasgow Warriors and Leicester Tigers.

Paddy Power are offering odds of 12-1 for there to be an Irish winner in next season's Champions Cup following the draw.

The bookie makes holders Saracens their 11-4 favourites with Toulon and Racing 92 considered their closest rivals at odds of 4-1 and 5-1 respectively.

Leinster are the shortest priced Irish team at 33-1 followed by Ulster at 40-1 and Munster at 50-1. Connacht, who upset the odds to win last year’s Pro 12, have been handed chunky odds of 100-1 to add the Champions Cup to their trophy cabinet.

Winning Nationality
5-6 France
6-5 England
12-1 Ireland
66-1 Scotland
200-1 Wales
500-1 Italy

European Champions Cup 2017
11-4 Saracens
4-1 Toulon
5-1 Racing 92
7-1 Wasps
9-1 Clermont Auvergne
14-1 Montpellier
14/1 Toulouse
25-1 Exeter Chiefs
33-1 Northampton
33-1 Leicester
33-1 Leinster
40-1 Ulster
50-1 Munster

66-1 Glasgow Warriors
66-1 Bordeaux Begles
100-1 Castres
100-1 Connacht
200-1 Scarlets
200-1 Sale Sharks
500-1 Zebre

Pool 1: Racing 92, Glasgow Warriors, Leicester Tigers, Munster

Overview: Munster faced the Leicester Tigers twice during the pool stages last season and were beaten 31-19 at Thomond Park and 17-6 at Welford Road while the English club were the first to beat them at their Limerick citadel during the 2006-2007 season. The Tigers also beat Munster in the 2002 final at Twickenham.

Leicester have made a couple of high-profile signings in Springbok wing JP Pietersen and Australian centre Matt Toomua, while also agreeing terms with former Ireland underage international hooker George McGuigan.

The last time Munster faced the current French champions Racing 92 was in the 2012-2013 season, beating the French side at Thomond Park 29-6 but losing 22-17 in Paris.

Ronan O’Gara’s return to his native province as Racing defence coach will be eagerly awaited.

Outrageously gifted Fijian secondrow Leone Nakawara and Samoan Viliami Afatia are moving to Paris.

Glasgow defeated Munster in the 2015 Pro12 final and they have bolstered their squad with former All Black hooker Corey Flynn, compatriot Jarrod Firth, South African Tjiuee Uanivi and Italian Leonardo Sarto.

It'll be a tough first season for Munster's new director of rugby Rassie Erasmus. To date Munster have signed centre Sam Arnold, prop John Andress and secondrow Darren O'Shea.

Pool 1 Winner
8-11 Racing 92
9-4 Leicester
6-1 Glasgow Warriors
8-1 Munster

Pool 2: Connacht, Wasps, Toulouse, Zebre

Overview: The newly crowned Pro12 champions Connacht famously beat Toulouse 16-14 in the Pink city two years ago before losing 37-9 at home the following week. Ugo Mola will be in his second season as Toulouse coach.

The four time European champions' recruitment hasn't been stellar so far. Scotland and Lions second secondrow Richie Gray moves from Castres, wing Sofiane Guitoune has been recruited from Bordeaux while the other new faces include Italian hooker Leonardo Ghiraldini and for all you Leinster rugby buffs out there, Maks van Dyk, the South African-born prop who enjoyed a short-term contract with the Irish province.

Dai Youngs's Wasps, twice Heineken Cup winners, are formidable opposition as they showed in the competition last season, twice skinning Leinster. Although they've said goodbye to Charles Piutau (Ulster), George Smith, Ruaidhri Jackson, Bradley Davies, Carlos Festuccia, Lorenzo Cittadini and James Downey (retired) amongst others, the recruitment side of things has been decent with Leinster's Marty Moore, Kurtley Beale and Danny Cipriani joining the roster.

Zebre will be targeted by the pool sharks.

Pat Lam's Connacht welcome Marnitz Boshoff, Cian Kelleher, Eoin Griffin, Conor Carey and Dominic Robertson-McCoy to the Sportsground. Robbie Henshaw, Rodney Ah You, Aly Muldowney and AJ MacGinty are leaving Galway. They'll fancy this pool.

Pool 2 Winner
4-6 Wasps
6-4 Toulouse
8-1 Connacht
200-1 Zebre

Pool 4: Leinster, Montpellier, Northampton Saints, Castres Olympique

Leinster and Northampton Saints have met on numerous occasions including the 2013-2014 season when the Irish province thumped Saints 40-7 in a pool match at Franklin’s Gardens only for the English club to prevail 18-9 at the Aviva stadium the following weekend. Leinster famously beat the Saints in the 2011 Heineken Cup final.

Northampton have signed French colossus Louis Picamoles – he has a little previous history with Jonathan Sexton – from Toulouse, Nic Groom from the Stormers and Campese Ma'afu from Provence. Alex Corbisiero has taken a year out from rugby while Kahn Fotuali'i has left.

Leinster played Montpellier the last time they won the European Cup in 2012 drawing 16-16 with a late penalty in France before winning the game at the RDS 25-3.

The French club, under the coaching baton of Jake White, already have a substantial South African presence including the Du Plessis brothers, hooker Bismarck and prop Jannie, but that number will increase with the arrival of Tiaan Liebenberg (Cheetahs) and Nico Janse van Rensburg (Bulls). But the marquee signing has to be Fijian wing Nemani Nadolo who joins from the Crusaders. French centre Alexandre Dumoulin is on his way from Racing 92. Francois Trinh Duc has gone to Toulon while four of their French internationals including Nicolas Mas and Thibaut Private have retired.

Leinster have beaten Castres five out of the six times they have played and there has been a significant turnover in playing personnel at the club.

Loic Jacquet and Daniel Kotze move from Clermont, Maama Vaipulu from the Chiefs, Horacio Agulla (Bath) and Steve Mafi (Western Force) while Richie Gray, Rudi Wulf, Johnnie Beattie and Ibrahim Diarra have all left.

Leinster coach Leo Cullen will definitely be adding to a modest influx of Robbie Henshaw, Jamison Gibson-Park and Ian Nagle in the coming months. Eoin Reddan, Kevin McLaughlin and Luke Fitzgerald have retired, Ian Madigan, Ben Te'o, Marty Moore and Cian Kelleher are just some of those that have moved on.

Montpellier will start as warm favourites.

Pool 4 Winner
5-4 Montpellier
7-4 Northampton
7-2 Leinster
8-1 Castres

Pool 5: Exeter Chiefs, Clermont Auvergne, Ulster, Bordeaux-Begles

Overview: One individual sub plot to this pool with be Ian Madigan (Bordeaux-Begles) squaring off against Paddy Jackson (Ulster). The French club have lost a number of players including Argentine Francisco Gomez Kodela, French international Sofiane Guitoiune (Toulouse), Sekope Kepu (Waratahs) and Pierre Bernard (Toulon) while outside of Madigan their man signing so far is Luke Jones of the Melbourne Rebels, who joins compatriot Adam Ashley Cooper at the club.

Perennial bridesmaids Clermont Auvergne have watched Jonathan Davies, Jamie Cudmore, Brock James, Loic Jacquet and Daniel Kotze move on while recruiting the Fijian duo Sitaleki Timani and Isoea Toeava and Remi Lamaret. They still possess a ridiculous depth of quality to their roster.

Exeter Chiefs, runners-up in the Aviva Premiership, have bolstered the Australia contingent at the club with Lachlann Turner, Dave Dennis and Greg Holmes while Ollie Devoto has joined from Bath. They have made Sandy Park such a difficult place to win for visiting teams while they can prove a real handful for teams on the road.

Outhalf Gareth Steenson and Ian Whitten will get a chance to go back to the province of their birth in Chiefs' colours. Ulster coach Les Kiss has recruited admirably in fullback Charles Piutau, flanker Marcell Coetzee, prop Rodney Ah You, secondrow Kieran Treadwell (Harlequins), Brett Herron (Bath) and Angus Lloyd (Trinity).

Pool 5 Winner
11-8 Clermont Auvergne
13-8 Exeter Chiefs
7-2 Ulster
8-1 Bordeaux Begles

Pool 3 Winner

8-11 Saracens
13-8 Toulon
12-1 Scarlets
12-1 Sale Sharks

John O'Sullivan

John O'Sullivan

John O'Sullivan is an Irish Times sports writer


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