THERE are times when coaches seem totally illogical but there is some sense in Glasgow Warriors’ head coach Gregor Townsend’s admission that losing to Connacht was the best thing that could have happened to Warriors’ Guinness Pro12 defence.
The Warriors were denied a home semi-final when they lost 14-7 to the Irish province in Galway two weeks ago in their final match of the regular season, prop Sila Puafisi’s red card being the crucial moment of the game.
Glasgow return to the Sportsground today with a large crowd of supporters following them, but will have to become the first ever side to reach the competition’s final having won away from home in the last four.
The prize is massive – the Pro-12 final is a week today at Murrayfield and Warriors could count on 15-20,000 fans cheering them on.
However, despite being forced to do it the hard way, Townsend claims coming out of the teams’ last meeting second best has proved to be a blessing in disguise. He said: “It was the best thing that could have happened to us.
“You learn more from defeat. You do get confidence from victories but you find out how to be better after a loss. Things get put through the magnifying glass. We’ve had two weeks’ preparation to put things right.
“It would have been better for the club and our supporters to have been at home, but having that defeat has really sharpened our focus ahead of this weekend.
“Our preparation has been better than normal because the team we just lost to and who we want to put a few things right against is who we play in the next game.
“We will learn from where we could be better and try to get our strengths out. But whether you are home or away, these games are always going to be tough.
“We lost away to Leinster three years ago by just two points.
“We won two years ago at home to Munster by a point and then against Ulster last year by a point. So they are always tight. Whoever takes their opportunities will win.”
The vast majority of the 9,500 capacity crowd in the Sportsground today will be supporting Pat Lam’s side, but Townsend hopes his team’s vast reserves of experience will give Glasgow the upper hand.
The Scotstoun side have reached the play-offs for the last five years straight but this is Connacht’s debut appearance in the semis. Townsend said: “That experience might help us. It might not, given Connacht beat us last time and are at home, so they will be pretty confident.
“It’s a new experience for them and I’m sure it will be a fantastic atmosphere at the Sportsground.
“It’s great for Connacht and their supporters that they are getting to host a semi-final. But we want to put them under pressure and see if they will make mistakes.
“Whether that is because they have not played in a semi-final before or because they are playing a very good Glasgow team doesn’t matter so long as we get the right outcome and Glasgow win the game.”
The Warriors coach has made five changes to the side beaten a fortnight ago. Mark Bennett joins Peter Horne – who makes his 100th Glasgow appearance – in the centres, while wing Sean Lamont, scrum-half Henry Pyrgos, prop Zander Fagerson and flanker Simone Favaro also start.
Puafisi is banned for the match because of his sending off, and Alex Dunbar will miss today and the rest of the season because of a knee injury. It will still be an all-international XV starting for Glasgow, and in Leone Nakarawa, playing what could be his last match for the Warriors if they go out, they have a potential match-winner.
Whichever team win today, they know it will be Leinster they will face in the final, after they beat Ulster 30-18 in the first semi-final last night.
Jamie Heaslip, Isa Nacewa and Sean Cronin scored tries for the Dublin hosts, with Jonny Sexton converting all three and adding three penalties.
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