Champions Cup final: Leinster 0 Bordeaux Bègles 00 minutes ago12 mins: Bordeaux immediately respond, they get around Leinster’s rush defence and feed Bielle-Biarrey, who is barely stopped, then they pass to the other touchline where Woki is waiting to score on the wing. TMO check to see if he kept his feet out of touch.3 minutes ago9 mins: Try for Leinster! Patience reward for Leinster. Gibson-Park found a gap and gained five metres to the five-metre line. Ringrose was smashed and the attack was tight. But after many more phases, Harry Byrne hits a sharp pass to Tommy O’Brien on the wing who scores! Then Byrne hits a fine conversion from near the sideline.Leinster 7 Bordeaux 05 minutes ago7 mins: From the lineout, Leinster manage to turn the ball over, aided by Clarkson. Leinster scrum within the 22. Scrum okay for Leinster and keep the ball for several phases, gradual ground being made. 7 minutes ago5 mins: Serious sunshine and heat in Bilbao, with half the pitch under shadow in the second half. Jalibert kicks into touch and they have a defensive lineout from the sunny part. Good throw though by Dan Sheehan and solid exit, kicked far by Gibson-Park.9 minutes ago2 mins: A first mistake of the day and not someone you’d expect it from, Hugo Keenan, although might be a bit rusty after injury. He drops the ball and it’s a scrum for Bordeaux but Leinster turn over the ball and then Gibson-Park clears.18 minutes agoThe teams are ready to come on the pitch. Here are the starting teams again:LEINSTER: Hugo Keenan; Tommy O’Brien, Garry Ringrose, Robbie Henshaw, Rieko Ioane; Harry Byrne, Jamison Gibson-Park; Andrew Porter, Dan Sheehan, Thomas Clarkson; Joe McCarthy, James Ryan; Jack Conan, Josh van der Flier, Caelan Doris (capt).BORDEAUX: Salesi Rayasi; Pablo Uberti, Damian Penaud, Yoram Moefana, Louis Bielle-Biarrey; Matthieu Jalibert, Maxime Lucu (capt); Jefferson Poirot, Maxime Lamothe, Carlü Sadie; Boris Palu, Adam Coleman; Pierre Bochaton, Cameron Woki, Marko Gazzotti.28 minutes agoAnd a final read before the game, where it will be won and lost, by Nathan Johns. Bordeaux’s attack, featuring the great Louis Bielle-Biarrey will need to be severely limited.“Bordeaux’s attack is good, we all know that. But just how good? They’ve average 6.4 tries per game in this year’s Champions Cup, 43.6 points, 537.4 metres, 34.3 defenders beaten, 17 clean breaks and 15 offloads. All of those numbers are a good bit better than Leinster’s equivalents.“They do this by playing largely without the ball, averaging 10 fewer carries and 30 fewer passes per game than Leinster in this year’s competition. Across their quarter- and semi-final victories over Toulouse and Bath combined, Bordeaux’s opponents made 85 more carries. When they have possession, UBB are mighty efficient.“How? In part thanks to their famed transition. When they get the ball back off a turnover or kick, they can strike quickly. Attack coach McNamara hunts the famed zero-ruck try.“This is largely why Matthieu Jalibert leads the Champions Cup for defenders beaten (34), why Louis Bielle-Biarrey is the top try-scorer (eight) and Salesi Rayasi isn’t far behind in third (seven). They average 15 offloads per game (compared to Leinster’s 6.9), avoiding rucks that give defenders a chance to slow down their ball. They’ve scored 16 tries in transition and five from restarts this year.”[ Where the Champions Cup final between Leinster and Bordeaux will be won and lostOpens in new window ]38 minutes agoHere is Gerry Thornley’s preview of today’s game:“Forget any pining for an all-French affair. The Champions Cup has the final it deserves and, of course, the one it should have had last year. Leinster are back in a ninth final and seeking a fifth title by dethroning the holders. Whoever lifts the trophy will have earned it.“It will likely be a very intense, fluctuating and close encounter.”[ Leinster need to find Champions Cup performance for the ages to dethrone Bordeaux BèglesOpens in new window ]Leinster fans ahead of the match. Photograph: Nick Elliott/Inpho 1 hour agoSome fans photos as supporters head to the game:Leinster fan Phil Noble from Swords in Bilbao. Photograph: James Crombie/Inpho Bordeaux fans before the game against Leinster in Bilbao. Photograph: James Crombie/Inpho Leinster fans before the Investec Champions Cup final at the San Mames Stadium, Bilbao. Photograph: Ben Whitley/PA 1 hour agoGerry Thornley has an interview with Ian Madigan, the former Irish outhalf and it is a busy weekend for the player turned pundit, with his former clubs lining out in both European finals.[ Ian Madigan: ‘I’m not emotionally detached. Leinster is my boyhood club. I want them to win’Opens in new window ]1 hour agoConor Murray writes about Jacques Nienaber, the World Cup champion coach who has been the tactical brains behind Leinster in recent seasons. Murray played under him at Munster.“What immediately endeared Nienaber to the group was his quiet charisma. He’s funny, too. It’s some going to make 40 professional athletes laugh before flipping into deadly serious mode.“The lasting compliment I’d pay Nienaber is you wanted a pat on the back from him for making a dominant tackle within his system. Mainly because he empowered you to read the game and take big risks. It’s a similar environment to what Ireland have developed under Andy Farrell. You want to play for coaches like them."[ Conor Murray: Nienaber’s Springbok defence may not matter against all-out Bordeaux attackOpens in new window ]Leinster senior coach Jacques Nienaber. Photograph: Grace Halton/Inpho 2 hours agoAfter losing four finals since 2018, some better memories for Leinster come from 2018 in the same location in Bilbao, when they beat Racing 92. Nathan Johns remembers along with Devin Toner.[ Back in Bilbao - remembering Leinster’s last European triumph in 2018Opens in new window ]Leinster's Devin Toner, Jack McGrath and Scott Fardy celebrate with the European Rugby Champions Cup trophy. Photograph: Dan Sheridan/Inpho 2 hours agoHopefully things go better for Leinster than they did for Ulster last night. Ulster were thrashed 59-26 by Montpellier in the stifling heat in Bilbao. As Gerry Thornley writes:“As feared, the toll of losing too many big-game players at the end of a long season – coupled with the stifling heat in Bilbao and the greater potency of a fully-loaded Montpellier – was too much for a willing Ulster side.“Even at their best – and there were too many errors for that to be the case – Ulster would have struggled to cope with this Montpellier side, all the more so when the contrasting oomph of the latter’s bench came into effect.“In winning this trophy for a third time, the second-placed side in the Top 14 were also ruthless in their finishing, scoring nine tries from what seemed like no more than a dozen visits to the Ulster 22. On this evidence they’ll be a threat to Toulouse et al to add a Bouclier de Brennus.”[ Weakened Ulster burn out against ruthless Montpellier in Challenge Cup finalOpens in new window ]3 hours agoHello and welcome to live coverage of the Champions Cup final between Leinster and Bordeaux Bègles. Kick-off at the San Mamés Stadium in Bilbao is at 2.45pm. Leinster are going for their first Champions Cup star since 2018 after four defeats in finals since then. They will face a tough French side, who are defending champions and have a wealth for talent, in sweltering conditions as a heatwave has hit northern Spain. Here are the teams for the final, as Leo Cullen has opted for the tried and tested from the Toulon win.LEINSTER: Hugo Keenan; Tommy O’Brien, Garry Ringrose, Robbie Henshaw, Rieko Ioane; Harry Byrne, Jamison Gibson-Park; Andrew Porter, Dan Sheehan, Thomas Clarkson; Joe McCarthy, James Ryan; Jack Conan, Josh van der Flier, Caelan Doris (capt). Replacements: Ronan Kelleher, Paddy McCarthy, Tadhg Furlong, Diarmuid Mangan, Max Deegan, Luke McGrath, Ciarán Frawley, Jamie Osborne.BORDEAUX: Salesi Rayasi; Pablo Uberti, Damian Penaud, Yoram Moefana, Louis Bielle-Biarrey; Matthieu Jalibert, Maxime Lucu (capt); Jefferson Poirot, Maxime Lamothe, Carlü Sadie; Boris Palu, Adam Coleman; Pierre Bochaton, Cameron Woki, Marko Gazzotti. Replacements: Gaetan Barlot, Ugo Boniface, Ben Tameifuna, Lachie Swinton, Temo Matiu, Bastien Vergnes-Taillefer, Arthur Retiere, Hugo Reus.