THE LAST TIME Leo Cullen visited St James’ Park, he was there as a spectator to watch Newcastle beating Crystal Palace in the 2002 FA Cup.
Leinster’s scheduled game against the Newcastle Falcons had been postponed due to cold weather, so Cullen and his team-mates headed to the football to while away a relaxing afternoon.
Cullen with Guy Easterby on Sunday. Source: Dan Sheridan/INPHO
The now Leinster head coach’s second visit to the stadium for a game – on 11 May when his team face Saracens in the Heineken Champions Cup final – is going to be a very different story.
The Premiership side showed their class in taking Munster apart on Saturday, a day before Leinster impressed in beating Toulouse in the second semi-final, and Mark McCall’s men feel they have a score to settle with Cullen’s men.
Last season’s 30-19 defeat to Leinster at the quarter-final stage, after they had won the 2016 and 2017 tournaments, rankles greatly with this Saracens group.
So while Leinster have the motivation of chasing a record fifth title next month in Newcastle, Cullen knows how ferociously fired-up Sarries will be.
“I think when a team loses in a competition when they’ve won it previously, it just drives greater desire usually,” said Cullen on Sunday. “That’s what my experience would be.
“Particularly when you’ve got a group of players that has generally stayed together over the course of a good number of seasons now, you can see that some of them are pretty ambitious.
“They’re going to be a real handful but what would you expect at this stage of the competition. They were seeded number one, so they’re in the final for a reason. They’ve probably been the most consistent team in the competition so far.”
Cullen dismissed the suggestion that Ireland’s defeat to England in the opening round of this year’s Six Nations – when many of the same players were involved – will have any relevance to this European club decider.
Leinster will include many Ireland stars. Source: James Crombie/INPHO
And on the topic of whether this final is era-defining for two clubs who have won the most recent three versions of this competition, Cullen simply said, “That’s probably for someone else to decide.”
As ever, Cullen and Stuart Lancaster will hone in on the rugby itself, looking to build a game plan that negates the strengths Sarries showed against Munster.