Leinster warmed up for the start of their Heineken Cup defence with a 30-21 victory over Irish rivals Munster in their RaboDirect PRO12 clash at Lansdowne Road on Saturday night.
Tries from Richardt Strauss and Peter O'Mahony inside the first six minutes were the opening blows of another explosive interprovincial derby. Place-kickers Jonathan Sexton and Ronan O'Gara then took centre stage, swapping a series of penalties, while Leinster's second try from Ian Madigan was the main difference at the break as his side led 20-14.
Brian O'Driscoll needed just a sliver of space as the hosts added 10 more points before the hour mark but Munster made them sweat late on with a final try from Conor Murray.
Joe Schmidt's side had the first sniff of the try-line in front of the 46,280-strong crowd. O'Driscoll's dinked kick forced O'Mahony to concede a five-metre scrum and from it Leinster sprung to the left and Strauss was able to spin out of Donnacha Ryan's tackle to score under the posts. The hooker's full-stretch effort, confirmed by television match official Marshall Kilgore, was converted by Sexton.
Munster's rapid response would have warmed the heart of new head coach Rob Penney. Keith Earls roared up the right wing and numbers on the left created the space for O'Mahony to reach over in the corner. There was a question mark over whether Mike Sherry had knocked on in the build-up to the try but the score stood, although Ronan O'Gara was unable to convert.
The early tries really opened up what is traditionally a tight, defence-dominated derby. Both sides opted to run from deep, move the ball at pace and probe for the slightest of gaps. The scores kept coming as O'Gara sandwiched a Jonanthan Sexton penalty with two of his own, giving Munster an 11-10 lead heading into the second quarter.
Sexton had struck the left-hand post with his second effort as Munster began to leak successive penalties, and Leinster soon regained the lead. They pressed through the middle, man of the match Eoin Reddan delivering some deft passes, before Madigan stepped inside Casey Laulala's challenge to slip through for a neatly-taken 21st-minute try. Sexton converted to move the European champions 17-11 clear, the added cohesion brought by O'Driscoll and company having a telling effect.
Increasing pressure on the Munster scrum gave Sexton two more shots at the posts, the second of which he landed to punish David Kilcoyne for bringing the set-piece down. Strauss infringed at a central ruck moments later, allowing O'Gara to boot the visitors back to within a converted score on the cusp of half-time.
The woodwork denied O'Gara early in the second period as he suffered his first penalty miss of the night. A sumptuous strike from Sexton then kick-started a key spell from the hosts.
The direct running of Fergus McFadden and Strauss parted the Munster defence and O'Driscoll somehow scrambled his way over in the left corner. The Ireland captain dotted down with his outstretched left arm despite the presence of Denis Hurley and the late-arriving Simon Zebo.
It was a real hammer blow to Munster's chances and Damien Varley, barely on the pitch, was immediately yellow-carded by referee Leighton Hodges as he paid the price for his side's repeated ruck infringements. The conversion was added by Sexton - his sixth success from eight kicks - and Munster had a mountain to climb.
But as Leinster lost Isa Nacewa, O'Driscoll and Andrew Conway to injury, Munster pulled back a try as Murray lunged over unopposed following a pack drive. O'Gara's replacement Ian Keatley weighed in with a tremendous touchline conversion to bring it back to a nine-point deficit and suddenly it was game on again.
The Munster forwards looked re-energised, with their scrum making inroads, and Laulala was denied a try by a marginal knock-on call. Both sides pushed for a late bonus point with John Cooney and Earls leading breaks, but the scores dried up as Leinster were left to celebrate an eighth win in their last 10 meetings with Munster.