Johnny Sexton Leo Cullen Ross Byrne Jamison Gibson-Park Aviva Stadium France Ireland Dublin Leinster Rugby on Johnny Sexton Leo Cullen Ross Byrne Jamison Gibson-Park Aviva Stadium France Ireland Dublin

Pain of late defeat last year will spur Leinster on — Gibson-Park

breakingnews.ie

Jamison Gibson-Park admits the lingering pain of last year’s agonising Heineken Champions Cup final defeat to La Rochelle has fuelled Leinster’s desire for a shot at redemption.

Leo Cullen’s men are preparing for Saturday’s showpiece rematch with the French club in Dublin – 12 months on from losing to a last-gasp try in Marseille.

Scrum-half Gibson-Park concedes the disappointment of the dramatic climax at Stade Velodrome was a bitter pill to swallow. And the Ireland international is determined to help secure a different outcome against Ronan O’Gara’s side this time around as Leinster bid to equal Toulouse’s record of five Champions Cup titles. “It’s one of those things that’s mentioned all the time with great teams over the years, the way they use defeats and having it spur you on for the next year,” said Gibson-Park, who won the competition with his province in 2018. “There’s probably no doubt that it has for us in getting to this point. “When you work with a collective group to try and get somewhere and you fall at the last hurdle, it’s hard, especially when it’s like that, a few minutes from the end of the game. ⭐CHAMPIONS D'EUROPE 2022 ⭐ pic.twitter.com/GNBeUQuXTV — Stade Rochelais (@staderochelais) May 28, 2022 “It’s tough moments in the dressing room and on the pitch afterwards. “You live for those moments where you get to lift trophies and you enjoy those moments in the dressing room with your brothers. “But the sombre feelings after a defeat stick with you as well.” Leinster led for most of the 2022 final before replacement scrum-half Arthur Retiere crossed a minute from time in a 24-21 victory for La Rochelle.

Related News
Twelve months on from last year's agonising defeat to La Rochelle, but familiar heartbreak for Leinster.
Leo Cullen spoke of Leinster’s “devastation” as they were beaten 27-26 by La Rochelle in Saturday’s Champions Cup final at the Aviva Stadium.
Leo Cullen admitted he was bitterly disappointed after Leinster were edged out for the second Heineken Champions Cup final in a row and said La Rochelle "had their number".
Leinster's wait for a fifth Champions Cup title goes on after a remarkable final in Dublin where they lost a 17-point lead and were reduced to 13 players at the end of an incredible battle against Ronan O'Gara's La Rochelle.
La Rochelle beat Leinster 27-26 in a heroic Champions Cup final comeback to seal back-to-back European titles. In a rematch of last year's final, the Irish side got off to a dream start at Dublin's Aviva Park. Ad In the first minute, Dan Sheehan shovelled a pass to Jack Conan and collected the return ball before diving over to score.
Leinster were left shattered after their stunning start to the Heineken Champions Cup final failed to prevent La Rochelle defending their crown in a 27-26 defeat at the Aviva Stadium.

Latest News

Change privacy settings
This page might use cookies if your analytics vendor requires them.