Sports
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Leinster Set to Face Edinburgh in Champions Cup Round of 16
RTE.ie
January 18, 2026•4 days ago

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Leinster will host Edinburgh in the Champions Cup Round of 16. Harlequins stunned Ronan O'Gara's La Rochelle, eliminating the two-time champions. Northampton secured home advantage with a win, while Bordeaux finished top of their pool. Munster and Ulster will compete in the Challenge Cup.
Leinster will play Edinburgh in the Investec Champions Cup Round of 16 following the conclusion of the pool stage of the competition this afternoon.
The Scottish side finished fourth in their pool which led to them being paired with Leo Cullen's outfit.
Leinster are the sole Irish represenative in the competition following Munster's exit on Saturday, and they'll have home advantage in the quarter-final, should they get through, where the winner of Harlequins and Sale Sharks awaits.
If Leinster were to make it to the last four, they could be playing that game in Ireland, with the EPCR confirming that "the highest-ranked clubs from the pool stage will have home country advantage."
Munster will play Exeter away from home in the Challenge Cup, while Ulster will host Ospreys and Connacht take on the Sharks in Galway in the same competition.
Champions Cup Round of 16 matches:
Bordeaux Begles v Leicester
Glasgow v Bulls
Leinster v Edinburgh
Bath v Saracens
Northampton v Castres
Harlequins v Sale
Toulon v Stormers
Toulouse v Bristol
The games will be played on the weekend of 3-5 April.
Earlier today Harlequins defied their abysmal domestic form to stun Ronan O'Gara's La Rochelle 27-17 at Stade Marcel Deflandre as the French side bowed out.
England fly-half Marcus Smith was sent to the sin bin for a high tackle on Jules Favre in the 56th minute but upon his return, Quins produced the matchwinning moment against the 2022 and 2023 champions.
It was Tom Lawday who delivered the decisive score with eight minutes remaining by storming over with a strong run down the right wing after being given sight of the line by a long pass from Jarrod Evans.
Man of the match Smith converted the try and added a late penalty to begin the celebrations, in the process leaving European heavyweights La Rochelle to reflect on their shock group exit from the competition.
With the score tied at 17-17 heading into the final 10 minutes, Harlequins kept their nerve to complete a famous win that means they finish Pool Three in second place behind Leinster.
The success in European action has proved to be a refuge for the London club, who have sunk to ninth in the Gallagher Prem and recently issued an apology to fans.
La Rochelle will now compete in the Challenge Cup with Newcastle next and a possible quarter-final against Ulster also ahead.
Northampton wings Edoardo Todaro and Ollie Sleightholme did the damage in a 43-28 victory over Scarlets that secured home advantage in the Champions Cup round of 16.
Teenage Italy international Todaro displayed his finishing instincts to grab a first-half hat-trick and was named man of the match as a result, while Sleightholme went over in the 51st minute.
Once Craig Wright finished a line-out drive, Saints led 33-14 and appeared to be coasting, but Scarlets found a second wind to cross through Sam Costelow and Jac Davies.
Tension mounted at Franklin's Gardens until Anthony Belleau, who continued to deputise for calf-injury victim Fin Smith, rifled over a penalty in the 76th minute to put daylight between the rivals.
Callum Chick then drove over from the close range in overtime to give the final scoreline a lopsided look that failed to reflect Scarlets’ gutsy performance.
The bonus-point victory means Northampton finish the group campaign in second place, four points adrift of top side and defending champions Bordeaux.
Bordeaux secured for top spot in Pool Four of the Champions Cup after defeating Bristol Bears 27-15 at a rainswept Ashton Gate.
The current European champions did the bulk of the damage in the first half with Gabriel Oghre’s early try quickly overhauled by two from Louis Bielle-Biarrey and a third by Nicolas Depoortere.
All three Bordeaux tries came off turnovers with Bristol living dangerously in wet conditions with loose kicking and poor decision-making contributing to their 17-5 deficit.
The Bears rallied with Benhard Janse van Rensburg showing his strength to cross in the 65th minute but they continued to make mistakes that let the visitors wrestle back control.
France wing Bielle-Biarrey went over for his hat-trick to secure the man of the match award and the outstanding Matthieu Jalibert added two penalties in a strong finale by the Top 14 heavyweights.
The result means Bordeaux finish top of the group to claim home advantage until the semi-final stage, while Bristol must travel for their round-of-16 tie.
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