Ben Teo’s broken arm takes gloss off Leinster’s bonus-point win

Centre lasts 19 minutes of debut game before suffering injury in an innocuous tackle

Leinster’s Tom Denton offloads to Ben Marshall to score  a try during the  Guinness Pro12 game against Edinburgh at the  RDS. Photograph:  Dan Sheridan/Inpho
Leinster’s Tom Denton offloads to Ben Marshall to score a try during the Guinness Pro12 game against Edinburgh at the RDS. Photograph: Dan Sheridan/Inpho

Leinster 33 Edinburgh 8

It's the injuries that resonate. Again. Ben Te'o showed a glimpse of that Rugby League power before the recently landed Aucklander broke his forearm in an innocuous tackle. Kane Douglas, the more ensconced Wallaby lock, seemed fitter last night and by dint more aggressive until sparking himself and then guided ashore by Dr John Ryan.

At least the seemingly incessant prop-fall doesn’t have a new entry.

An initially eager and light-footed Tadhg Furlong got treatment for his ongoing neck problem but was replaced due to "cramp".

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Considering Nathan White’s surgery, Marty Moore’s shoulder and with Mike Ross’s fitness unclear, Furlong’s rapid promotion up the tighthead ranks remains a possibility that Leinster coach Matt O’Connor believes would be a mistake.

“To ask him to play tighthead against South Africa at the moment is probably a step too far for him,” said Matt O’Connor. “Given the injury profile across the frontrow in the country he might get that opportunity. Who is to say?

“He will fight for you, he will do a good job for you but is he up for that yet? I don’t know.”

Another typical Leinster RDS night then. Five tries in this always comfortable victory belie just how poor Alan Solomons’s Edinburgh were.

When Te'o was forced off after just 19 minutes Leinster already sat upon a 12-0 lead. That was largely down to shockingly inept defending than any masterful ingenuity from backrowers Dominic Ryan and Jack Conan.

Ryan peeled off a lineout maul after three minutes to find the blindside unmanned. Taking over place-kicking from the absent Ian Madigan, Gopperth scuffed the conversion.

The Kiwi atoned by converting Conan's try soon after, the number eight busting the attempted tackle of Argentine flanker Tomas Leonardi to streak away.

Conan had an impressive night, clearly belonging in this environment, but fellow St Gerard's graduate Steve Crosbie might need to finish his rugby education in the academy before another climb at this altitude.

An undoubted talent, more at outhalf, Te’o’s premature exit forced Crosbie to inside centre where he dropped three balls, two in contact, and got ran over a few times. The 21-year-old battled on in difficult circumstances.

O'Connor could have moved Luke Fitzgerald to outside centre and kept Noel Reid at 12 but he went the other way. Fitzgerald eventually finished the game at centre where a clever burst and offload created the fifth try for Mick McGrath.

Despite his nightmarish injury run, he remains a world class attacking threat.

“Luke looked sharp. He beat blokes for fun out there,” remarked O’Connor.

Edinburgh should have clawed their way back into this affair as a groggy Douglas struggled to find his feet. Instead Tom Heathcote botched his second eminently kickable penalty.

That left it 12-3 at the turn.

There were individual positives. Richardt Strauss is returning to his high standards again and scrumhalf Luke McGrath is growing in stature but as a collective Leinster were error strewn and disjointed.

That brutish victory in Castres keeps the season on track but Leinster do not seem themselves yet this term. O’Connor can rightly point to the disruptive nature of the ever-mounting injuries.

“The performance level is a little bit irrelevant given that there are 20 plus blokes out of the environment,” O’Connor reasoned. “It’s about making sure you prep the guys up to get a job done at the weekend. The lack of combinations makes it difficult to grow your game.”

The pack, where Ryan was a constant force, eventually sorted it out.

From a generous penalty near Edinburgh’s line, the lineout maul ended

for the second time with the flanker flopping over. Gopperth made it 19-3.

After Solomons made three changes, the Scots powder-puff defence immediately gifted Ben Marshall the bonus-point try 17 minutes from time.

The rest was window dressing. Bottom line: five points banked. Job done.

Scoring sequence – 3 mins: D Ryan try, 5-0; 13 mins: J Conan try, 10-0; J Gopperth conv, 12-0; T Heathcote pen, 12-3. Half-time. 52 mins: D Ryan try, 17-3; J Gopperth conv, 19-3; 63 mins: B Marshall try, 24-3; J Gopperth conv, 26-3; 75 mins: T Leonardi try, 26-8; 79 mins: M McGrath try, 31-8; J Gopperth conv, 33-8.

LEINSTER: Z Kirchner; D Fanning, B Te'o, N Reid, L Fitzgerald; J Gopperth, L McGrath; M Bent, R Strauss, T Furlong; T Denton, K Douglas; K McLaughlin (capt), D Ryan, J Conan.

Replacements: S Crosbie for Te'o (19 mins), B Marshall for Douglas (32 mins), E Byrne for Bent (46 mins), I Boss for McGrath (61 mins), M Bent for Furlong, B Byrne for Strauss (both 66 mins), D Leavy for Ryan, M McGrath for Reid both (69 mins).

EDINBURGH: N McLenna; D Fife, J Dominguez, A Strauss (capt), T Visser; T Heathcote, S Hidalgo-Clyne; A Dell, J Hilterbrand, W Nel; B Toolis, J Turley; M Bradbury, T Leonardi, D Denton.

Replacements: G Tonks for McLennan (15 mins), R Sutherland for Dell (22 mins), S Kennedy for Hidalfo-Clyde (49 mins), J Andress for Bradbury, J Richie for Nel, J Cuthbert for Strauss (all 62 mins), G Turner for Fife (69 mins).

Referee: N Owens (Wales).