John Cooney strikes at the death to give Ulster dramatic win

A second close encounter in a week saw the Irish province come out on top once again

Ulster’s John Cooney celebrates with teammates at the final whistle after kicking the winning penalty in their Pro14 victory over Edinburgh. Photo: Bryan Keane/Inpho
Ulster’s John Cooney celebrates with teammates at the final whistle after kicking the winning penalty in their Pro14 victory over Edinburgh. Photo: Bryan Keane/Inpho

Ulster 30 Edinburgh 29

Ulster look to be making a speciality of dramatic finishes but this was something else.

Not surprisingly, John Cooney delivered for them when it mattered, his nerveless 80th minute penalty – on the week he signed a long-term contract – giving Dan McFarland two wins from two at the start of his tenure and allowing the scrumhalf claim 20 of Ulster’s total.

In fairness, McFarland will want a rather less stressful result next time as this game looked dead and gone for Ulster – they trailed 23-6 early in the second half – before they somehow roared back to life with tries from new signing Will Addison, Cooney himself and a stunning 55-metre solo run from Craig Gilroy.

READ MORE

Cooney converted all three scores and kicked three penalties, the last one with the clock in red, to put Ulster top of Conference B overnight on Jordi Murphy’s debut for the province.

Edinburgh, as with the Scarlets last week, will wonder how they lost this game – the losing bonus is of no consolation – and there is no easy answer for Richard Cockerill, though when the game became fast and loose they simply lost their way, inviting Ulster back in to gleefully grasp their dramatic result.

It didn’t start well for Ulster with Cooney taking time out with a wrist problem – he did at least return – and then Ross Kane going off his feet at a ruck which resulted in Simon Hickey – who ended up slotting 19 points – kicking a third minute penalty for the visitors.

The Edinburgh outhalf then slotted his second on nine minutes from closer in after Iain Henderson was adjudged to have not rolled away from a ruck.

Matters deteriorated further for the hosts after making ground through Mark Bennett on the right. A combination of Jamie Ritchie and Stuart McInally created the line-break in midfield and with a penalty coming for offside against Stuart McCloskey, the Scots put ambitious width on the ball – knowing the penalty was theirs anyway – which saw Tom Brown skate in around Craig Gilroy’s attempted intercept.

Hickey landed a great conversion and Ulster now had considerable work to do to get back in the game. Cooney did manage their first points shortly afterwards with a penalty but only after quite a wait as Mark Bennett needed the medical cart to leave the field.

But just when Ulster needed to steady the ship they were pinged at the restart for not releasing and Hickey struck again to make it 16-3.

With breakdown and handling issues affecting their game, Ulster did at least make some inroads into Edinburgh’s 22 jutst before the half-hour with Murphy and Marcell Coetzee carrying strongly before Matt Scott killed the ball and Cooney’s second penalty cut the Scots’ lead to 16-6.

It got no better for Ulster with what remained, though Murphy came close in the 37th minute only for the TMO to rule it out and then, in the last minute, Cooney had to down Mata as he bore down on the line.

The new half started with Ulster showing plenty of intent after doubtless receiving roasting at half-time but after Murphy and Cooney combined in the visitors’ territory, Andy Warwick lost the ball and Edinburgh counter-attacked, breaking up-field with replacement James Johnstone rounding Henry Speight to run under the sticks and score.

Hickey easily converted and Ulster looked down and out as they trailed 23-6.

The Irish province then struck back with their first try of the Pro14 season when new signing Addison raced over after Ulster ran a penalty.

Cooney converted the 53rd minute score and Ulster now trailed 13-23 but, not for the first time, the province quickly conceded and Hickey had his fourth penalty to keep Edinburgh well in front.

But Ulster weren’t done and a minute after the hour, they hit back with Addison supplying Cooney who scored under the posts and then converted to put the province six points behind at 26-20.

Then came the drama, with Gilroy running in from his own half – ably abetted by Fraser McKenzie taking Cooney out which actually assisted Gilroy – and Cooney converting to put the home side in front for the first time.

Hickey then nailed a 79th minute penalty which looked to have broken Ulster hearts until Cooney got a last minute shot and nailed it.

Scoring sequence – 3mins Hickey pen 0-3, 9mins Hickey pen 0-6, 14mins Brown try, 11-0, Hickey con 13-0, 20mins Cooney pen 3-13, 22mins Hickey pen 3-16, 25 mins Cooney pen 6-16, h-t 6-16, 45mins Johnstone try 6-21, Hickey con 6-23, 53mins Addison try 22-23, 61mins Cooney try 18-26, Cooney con 20-26, 67mins Gilroy try 25-26, Cooney con 27-26, 79mins Hickey pen 27-29, 80mins Cooney pen 30-29

ULSTER: W Addison, C Gilroy, D Cave, S McCloskey, H Speight; B Burns, J Cooney; A Warwick, R Herring (capt), R Kane, K Treadwell, I Henderson, M Coetzee, J Murphy, N Timoney.

Replacements: E O’Sullivan for Warwick, W Herbst for Kane and Reidy for Coetezee all 50mins, A O’Connor for Treadwell 60mins.

EDINBURGH: B Kinghorn; D Fife, M Bennett, M Scott, T Brown; S Hickey, H Pyrgos; P Schoeman, S McInally (capt), WP Nel, B Toolis, G Gilchrist, L Hamilton, J Ritchie, V Mata.

Replacements: J Johnstone for Bennett 19mins, L Crosbie for Mata half-time, M McCallum for Nel 54 mins, F McKenzie for Toolis 56mins, A Dell for Schoeman 66mins, R Ford for McInally 70mins, S Kennedy for Pyrgos 74mins.

Referee: S Berry (SRU).