Exeter Chiefs' Rob Baxter relishing Champions Cup clash at Munster
Sunday 13 January 2019 16:46, UK
Exeter boss Rob Baxter is ready for "a fantastic test" when the Chiefs face a Heineken Champions Cup showdown against Munster next Saturday.
Baxter's men kept alive their quarter-final hopes with a 34-12 bonus-point victory over Castres at Sandy Park, but the Gallagher Premiership leaders still face a Herculean task to progress.
Exeter must beat Munster in Limerick, although a losing bonus point would still edge the Irish heavyweights through as Pool Two winners unless Chiefs post a try bonus-point victory.
History is also against Baxter's men, as no team has reached the tournament's knockout phase after failing to win any of their first three games. Exeter drew with Munster, then lost to Castres away and Gloucester at home.
"We have done the most important thing, which is get to the last stage of the pool effectively in a knockout game," Baxter said.
Trending
- Move over Trent? The tackle on Mbappe that encapsulated Bradley's big night
- Merson: Criminal for Salah deal to run down - but I wouldn't offer new one
- Man Utd latest: The cost of sacking Ten Hag and hiring Amorim revealed
- Papers: Man Utd draw up four-player striker wish list for January
- Championship highlights: Leeds return to summit; QPR win
- Liverpool beat Madrid after Salah AND Mbappe miss penalties LIVE!
- Bellingham: Liverpool are best team in Europe | Slot awaits injury updates
- Leicester set to appoint Van Nistelrooy as manager
- Transfer Centre LIVE! Will Chelsea sell Nkunku in January?
- Should Rogers' stoppage-time goal have stood? Have your say...
"It is not as simple as that because we have to do more than just win the game. We have to collect at least a four-point gap to get level with Munster, but we have given ourselves a definite something to go over there and play for.
"We can genuinely talk this week about going and testing ourselves in one of Europe's iconic venues against one of Europe's iconic teams, in as close to a knockout as we could get.
"It is going to be a fantastic test for us, and great to see which players want to stand up and fight. The biggest thing for us is to get emotionally recharged.
"Looking at Munster (at Gloucester) on Friday, they went there absolutely bubbling with emotion, to get in the faces of Gloucester, particularly in the forwards.
"It was almost evident they had a real game-plan to go after certain people within the Gloucester team. That is the thing we have got to face first.
"We have to decide that they are going to go there and stand up and not back down, physically or emotionally. And that will give us our best chance."
Tries by Jack Nowell, Joe Simmonds, Jonny Hill, Tom O'Flaherty, Henry Slade and replacement hooker Luke Cowan-Dickie - plus two Simmonds conversions - saw off 14-man French champions Castres.
And it gave the Premiership belated cause for cheer, with five clubs - Bath, Wasps, Gloucester, Leicester and Newcastle - having been knocked out before the penultimate round of pool games had even been completed.
Castres' replacement prop Tudor Stroe was sent off midway through the second half for a swinging forearm into Chiefs centre Ollie Devoto's head.
And although wing Taylor Paris and centre Thomas Combezou scored tries for Castres, with fly-half Benjamin Urdapilleta adding one conversion, Exeter were good value and deservedly maintained their European dream.
Baxter paid tribute to England wing Nowell, who scored a sparkling solo try in the No 15 shirt on his first appearance since mid-November after being sidelined by a hamstring injury.
"It was great to see guys like Jack Nowell back, playing so well," Baxter said.
"We saw Jack picking and going and getting his hands on the ball, way more than a full-back normally would. It suited him the way the game went.
"Jack can play pretty much anywhere across the backline. When we are playing that relatively high-tempo game, it doesn't really matter what number is on his back.
"There is certainly a possibility of him staying there (full-back) for a little while now, after playing so well."