Leinster, who reintroduced Heaslip, Rob Kearney and Luke Fitzgerald to league
action, went ahead in the third minute when McFadden landed his first
penalty.
The home side welcomed another 2009 Lion, Mike Blair, back into
their starting line-up. The Scotland scrum half captained Edinburgh, with centre
Nick De Luca and flanker Alan MacDonald also earning recalls.
Edinburgh
quickly levelled through Paterson but the first half was error-strewn and
largely forgettable and neither side could gain the upperhand in open
play.
Rob Moffat's league leaders had more of the ball in open play,
using Ben Cairns and De Luca to forage through the middle.
Time and
again, Leinster's defence was up to the task with Cian Healy, Heaslip and former
Edinburgh lock Nathan Hines putting into some forceful hits.
Big wingers
Tim Visser and Mark Robertson looked dangerous when the ball came their way and
Leinster had to dig themselves out of trouble on occasion through the kicking of
McFadden, out-half Shaun Berne and returning full-back Kearney.
With the
sides cancelling each other out, place-kicks became so vital. Phil Godman was
off target with one midway through the half, before Paterson kicked Edinburgh in
front for the first time on the half-hour mark.
The Scots deserved to be further ahead on the balance of play, and Visser had to bundled into touch as he threatened to break the try deadlock.
Leinster were beginning to get in trouble for misdemeanours at the breakdown
and young prop Healy saw yellow, five minutes before the break, for illegally
slowing up Edinburgh ball.
As is so often the case, going down to 14 men
seemed to have a galvanising effect. McFadden punted an injury-time penalty
through the uprights for a 6-6 half-time scoreline and followed up with two
excellent penalties in the opening minutes of the second half.
McFadden
missed one effort in between, but continued to take on the place-kicking duties
despite the presence of Jonathan Sexton on the pitch, the man who kicked
Leinster to European glory at this very ground last May.
Edinburgh had
looked the more likely to score a try in the opening 40 minutes and just moments
after losing lock Scott MacLeod to the sin-bin and going 12-6 down, they struck
for the only try of the night.
Allister Hogg carried forward with menace
off the back of a scrum and centre Cairns prized his way through a gap in the
middle, slashing his way through and beating the cover to score under the
posts.
Credit to John Houston who made the initial incision and Craig Hamilton who provided the try-scoring pass.
Play was kept between the 22s for the most part. Paterson, who tagged on the
conversion, threatened from deep and Visser was inches away from a try, Sexton
doing well to get back and touch down after a well-judged chip and chase by the
Dutchman.
The breakdown was the key area, where the match would be won
and lost, and Leinster engineered two more kicks, on 62 and 66 minutes, which
the in-form McFadden had no trouble in converting.
Flanker Sean O'Brien
should be singled out too for nabbing some timely turnovers for Michael Cheika's
men.
The game lulled briefly as a raft of replacements came on, before it
built again for a final crescendo. Paterson's brace of penalties saw Edinburgh
close in on their fourth win of the current campaign.
But luck was not on
the Scottish star's side at the death, as Sexton's smartly-struck drop goal from
35 metres out proved to be the match-winning kick.
Edinburgh Score Card | |||||
Name | Tries | Conv | Pen | Drop | Pts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chris Paterson | 1 | 4 | 14 | ||
Ben Cairns | 1 | 5 | |||
Total | 1 | 1 | 4 | 19 |
Leinster Score Card | |||||
Name | Tries | Conv | Pen | Drop | Pts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Johnny Sexton | 1 | 3 | |||
Fergus McFadden | 6 | 18 | |||
Total | 6 | 1 | 21 |