2025 United Rugby Championship Grand Final

2025 United Rugby Championship Grand Final
Event2024–25 United Rugby Championship
Date14 June 2025, 17:00 BST (UTC+1)
VenueCroke Park, Dublin
Man of the MatchIreland Ryan Baird
Attendance46,127

The 2025 United Rugby Championship Grand Final was the final match of the 2024–25 United Rugby Championship (URC) season. It was contested at Croke Park, Dublin by Ireland's Leinster, with home field advantage, and the visiting Bulls from Pretoria, South Africa.[1] It was the third successive cross-continental final in the competition.

The final was held in Ireland for the first time since 2021 and the reconfiguration of the United Rugby Championship, with a third appearance for the Bulls following their defeats in 2022 and 2024, and a first appearance for Leinster since the competition adopted its current format, but a record 11th final appearance in total (winning in 2002, 2013, 2014, 2018, 2019, 2020 and 2021, and losing in 2010, 2011, 2012 and 2016).[2] Bulls have previously appeared in, and won, three finals (2007, 2009 and 2010) in the Super Rugby competition, and lost in the final of the transitional season Pro14 Rainbow Cup.[3]

For the first time in this format, the top-seeded team at the start of the play-offs has reached the final. Neither side has yet won the United Rugby Championship in its current format, but Leinster attempted to win a record-extending ninth overall title in all formats of the competition; the Bulls attempted to win their first title in this competition in their third final, to go with their three Super Rugby titles, and one Super Rugby Unlocked title won prior to 2021.

Route to the Grand Final

Ireland Leinster vs South Africa Bulls
League season - top eight


Pos Team Pld W D L PF PA PD TF TA TB LB Pts
1 Leinster 18 16 0 2 542 256 +286 79 35 11 1 76
2 Bulls 18 14 0 4 542 361 +181 71 44 9 3 68
3 Sharks 18 13 0 5 436 402 +34 55 59 7 3 62
4 Glasgow Warriors 18 11 0 7 468 327 +141 70 40 10 5 59
5 Stormers 18 10 0 8 507 418 +89 66 57 11 4 55
6 Munster 18 9 0 9 444 429 +15 67 59 11 4 51
7 Edinburgh 18 8 1 9 471 407 +64 66 57 9 6 49
8 Scarlets 18 9 1 8 427 382 +45 50 52 6 4 48


Play-offs
Opponent Result Play-offs Opponent Result
Wales Scarlets (H) 33–21 Quarter-finals Scotland Edinburgh (H) 37-19
Scotland Glasgow Warriors (H) 42–33 Semi-finals South Africa Sharks (H) 25–13

Previous meetings

Leinster and Bulls have met six times in the United Rugby Championship since 2021 with Bulls leading the rivalry four games to two. Bulls have won both previous play-off matches between the sides, the semi-finals in 2022 and 2024. Bulls also won the solitary regular season match between the teams this year by a single point.

Previous meetings between Leinster and Bulls in the United Rugby Championship[4]
Date Home Score Away Stage Venue Crowd
22 March 2025 Bulls 21–20 Leinster Regular season Loftus Versfeld Stadium 15,299
15 June 2024 Bulls 25–20 Leinster Semi-final Loftus Versfeld Stadium 31,578
29 March 2024 Leinster 47–14 Bulls Regular season RDS Arena 16,982
22 April 2023 Bulls 62–7 Leinster Regular season Loftus Versfeld Stadium 5,500
10 June 2022 Leinster 26–27 Bulls Semi-final RDS Arena 11,565
25 September 2021 Leinster 31–3 Bulls Regular season Aviva Stadium 19,419

Matches in yellow in URC Playoffs

Match

Venue

The URC trophy on display at Loftus Versfeld Stadium before the 2024 Grand Final

With Leinster reaching the final from the first seeding, they maintained home advantage throughout the playoffs and elected to play the final in Croke Park, Dublin,[5] having already played one URC fixture (against Munster) and one European Champions Cup fixture there this season.[6] Although this will be tenth final played in a Dublin stadium in the entire history of the competition, the final will come to Croke Park for the first time.

Leinster have a perfect competitive record at the ground, winning four times in four visits. This will be the first visit of a South African club side to the venue; the Springboks lost to Ireland in the only previous rugby union match involving both nations at the stadium.[5]

Details

For the first time since it became the United Rugby Championship, the highest seeded team made the final, and faced the second seed, as all six knockout matches were won by the team with home advantage. Leinster hosted the Bulls in Croke Park, the first URC final to be held outside South Africa, and the first appearance of Leinster in a final since the format began. Bulls reached a record third final. Both teams needed their first URC title, although it would be Leinster's ninth total championship in all formats of the competition. and their twelfth play-off Grand Final. This final was the first between the two teams.

In their previous meeting this season, in Round 13, Bulls inflicted the first defeat of the season across all competitions on Leinster, 21-20 in Pretoria. In all previous URC meetings going back to 2021, Bulls lead Leinster four wins to two, including both previous play-off meetings.

In the final, Leinster proved much too strong for the Bulls in wet conditions, racing to a 19-0 lead at half time. A Bulls try early in the second half briefly raised hopes of a comeback, but Leinster saw out a dominant win with a further try and two penalties, confirming a 32–7 win for their nineth championship in total. The Bulls were consigned to a third URC final defeat in four years.

14 June 2025 Leinster Ireland 32–7 South Africa Bulls Croke Park, Dublin  
Try: Jack Conan, 6'
Jordie Barrett, 14'
Josh van der Flier, 23'
Fintan Gunne, 73'
Con: Sam Prendergast, 7', 14'
Ross Byrne, 74'
Pen: Prendergast, 45', 68'
Try: Akker van der Merwe, 51'
Con: Johan Goosen, 51'
Attendance: 46,127
Referee: Italy Andrea Piardi[7]

Teams

Both teams were announced on the morning of June 12 2025. Both teams opted for a five-three split on the bench (five forwards, three backs as replacements).[8] Jake White made one change to the Bulls team to face Leinster, with Marco van Staden replacing the injured Cameron Hanekom. Josh van der Flier and Garry Ringrose return for Leinster, but Hugo Keenan and Tadgh Furlong fail to recover from previous injuries, while Leinster club captain Caelan Doris is a long term injury absentee. Jack Conan deputises as captain. The final will also be All Black Jordie Barrett's final game for Leinster before returning to New Zealand.

On the morning of the final, Leinster's first choice scrum-half Jamison Gibson-Park was ruled out by late injury. Luke McGrath came into the starting XV, with Fintan Gunne coming onto the bench.

FB 15 Ireland Jimmy O’Brien
RW 14 Ireland Tommy O’Brien
OC 13 Ireland Garry Ringrose downward-facing red arrow 75'
IC 12 New Zealand Jordie Barrett rugby ball 12'
LW 11 Ireland James Lowe
FH 10 Ireland Sam Prendergast downward-facing red arrow 69' rugby goalposts icon 45', 68' (p) rugby goalposts icon 7', 14' (c)
SH 9 Ireland Luke McGrath downward-facing red arrow 69'
N8 8 Ireland Jack Conan (c) downward-facing red arrow 75' rugby ball 6'
OF 7 Ireland Josh van der Flier rugby ball 23'
BF 6 Ireland Ryan Baird
RL 5 Ireland James Ryan downward-facing red arrow 43'
LL 4 Ireland Joe McCarthy
TP 3 Ireland Thomas Clarkson downward-facing red arrow 56'
HK 2 Ireland Dan Sheehan downward-facing red arrow 56'
LP 1 Ireland Andrew Porter downward-facing red arrow 75'
Substitutions:
HK 16 Ireland Rónan Kelleher upward-facing green arrow 56'
TP 17 Ireland Jack Boyle upward-facing green arrow 75'
LP 18 France Rabah Slimani upward-facing green arrow 56'
LK 19 South Africa RG Snyman upward-facing green arrow 43'
BR 20 Ireland Max Deegan upward-facing green arrow 75'
SH 21 Ireland Fintan Gunne upward-facing green arrow 69' rugby ball 73'
FH 22 Ireland Ross Byrne upward-facing green arrow 69' rugby goalposts icon 75' (c)
CT 23 Ireland Jamie Osborne upward-facing green arrow 75'
Coach:
Ireland Leo Cullan
FB 15 South Africa Willie le Roux
RW 14 South Africa Canon Moodie
OC 13 South Africa David Kriel
IC 12 South Africa Harold Vorster
LW 11 South Africa Sebastian de Klerk downward-facing red arrow 65'
FH 10 South Africa Johan Goosen downward-facing red arrow 69' rugby goalposts icon 51' (c)
SH 9 South Africa Embrose Papier downward-facing red arrow 72'
N8 8 South Africa Marcell Coetzee downward-facing red arrow 65'
OF 7 South Africa Ruan Nortje (c)
BF 6 South Africa Marco van Staden
RL 5 South Africa JF van Heerden
LL 4 South Africa Cobus Wiese downward-facing red arrow 37'
TP 3 South Africa Wilco Louw downward-facing red arrow 65'
HK 2 South Africa Johan Grobbelaar downward-facing red arrow 45'
LP 1 South Africa Jan-hendrik Wessels downward-facing red arrow 52'
Substitutions:
HK 16 South Africa Akker van der Merwe upward-facing green arrow 45' rugby ball 51'
TP 17 South Africa Alulutho Tshakweni upward-facing green arrow 52'
LP 18 South Africa Mornay Smith upward-facing green arrow 65'
LK 19 South Africa Jannes Kirsten upward-facing green arrow 37'
BR 20 South Africa Nizaam Carr upward-facing green arrow 65'
SH 21 South Africa Zak Burger upward-facing green arrow 72'
FH 22 South Africa Keagan Johannes upward-facing green arrow 69'
BK 23 South Africa Devon Williams upward-facing green arrow 65'
Coach:
South Africa Jake White

Man of the Match: Ryan Baird Ireland

Assistant referees: Mike Adamson; Sam Grove-White Scotland [9]
Television match official:Matteo Liperini Italy[9]

Broadcasting

The match was shown live by SuperSport in South Africa, by Premier Sports in the United Kingdom and by TG4 in Ireland. Flo Rugby & URC.tv carried coverage elsewhere.[10]

References

  1. ^ "Leinster 37-19 Glasgow: Six-try hosts beat holders to reach URC final". BBC Sport. 7 June 2025. Retrieved 8 June 2025.
  2. ^ Leinster also won a previous edition of the Celtic League without a play-off.
  3. ^ "'Excited' Bulls ready for Leinster showdown - Akker van der Merwe". RTE Sport. 12 June 2025. Retrieved 12 June 2025.
  4. ^ "Rugby Database: Leinster vs Bulls rugby stats". www.rugbydatabase.co.nz. Retrieved 10 June 2025.
  5. ^ a b "DUBLIN'S CROKE PARK TO HOST HISTORIC URC GRAND FINAL". United Rugby Championship. Retrieved 10 June 2025.
  6. ^ "Irish Rugby | Croke Park Final Awaits Leinster After Dethroning Glasgow". Retrieved 8 June 2025.
  7. ^ "URC Grand Final Match Official Appointments". United Rugby Championship. Retrieved 10 June 2025.
  8. ^ "The URC Grand Final Team Announcements". United Rugby Championship. Retrieved 12 June 2025.
  9. ^ a b URC Grand Final appointments
  10. ^ "The URC Grand Final Team and Broadcast Announcements". United Rugby Championship. Retrieved 12 June 2025.