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Heineken Champions Cup: Harlequins claim top-two seeding after controversial Castres win; Leinster smash Bath

Champions Cup R4; Friday: Quins 36-33 Castres; Saturday: Bath 7-64 Leinster, Ulster 34-31 Clermont, Scarlets 21-52 Bristol; Glasgow vs La Rochelle (8pm); Sunday: Sale vs Ospreys (1pm), Stade Francais vs Connacht (1pm), Munster vs Wasps (3.15pm), Montpellier vs Exeter (5.30pm)

van der flier
Image: Leinster booked safe passage to the Heineken Champions Cup Round of 16 following a crushing win at Bath

We recap the latest Heineken Champions Cup action as Harlequins booked a top-two seed via a controversial win, while Leinster smashed Bath to qualify for the Round of 16...

Friday: Harlequins 36-33 Castres

Alex Dombrandt completed a controversial hat-trick deep into stoppage time as Harlequins snatched a 36-33 Heineken Champions Cup victory over Castres at the Stoop.

Dombrandt touched down with an outstretched arm in the 85th minute - the final act of play, with replays seeming to show the ball short - to preserve Quins' perfect record in the group stage.

An unpredictable clash saw the lead regularly change hands but it was the Top 14's third-placed team who appeared to be finishing stronger until a late rally from the Gallagher Premiership champions led by Dombrandt.

Dombrandt
Image: Alex Dombrandt's controversial late try saw Harlequins beat Castres on Friday night

The ending was rough on Castres, with Scottish referee Mike Adamson missing two forward Quins passes by Marcus Smith, and were unrewarded for a seemingly legitimate turnover with the clock in the red.

To compound things, TMO Brian MacNeice then awarded Dombrandt's try despite the on-field call being 'no try' and images seeming to suggest the No 8 was short and then knocked the ball on.

The victory was significant for Harlequins as it guaranteed them second place in Pool B and home advantage for the second leg of the Round of 16 and for the quarter-finals too, while Castres were dumped out where victory would have seen them through.

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Saturday: Bath 7-64 Leinster

Leinster marched on in the European Champions Cup with a 64-7 demolition of a Bath side whose wretched run of form and injuries continued with another head injury to England flanker Sam Underhill.

Jimmy O'Brien crossed four times as the Irish province finished their Pool A fixtures with 15 points and a points difference of +136 - despite forfeiting their second game in Montpellier 28-0 due to Covid issues.

Leinster, who ran in 10 tries, fielded eight of the Ireland starters who toppled the All Blacks, including captain Johnny Sexton, but Bath began brightly.

They scored the rest of their tries through Josh van der Flier, Jordan Larmour, Ciaran Frawley, Andrew Porter, Hugo Keenan and Dan Sheehan.

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Image: Flanker Josh van der Flier scored one of 10 Leinster tries at the Rec

Saturday: Scarlets 21-52 Bristol Bears

Bristol ended their Heineken Champions Cup pool phase campaign with a 52-21 bonus-point victory over the Scarlets in Llanelli.

Pat Lam's team had already qualified for the tournament's round of 16 in April, and a rousing finale that saw them score three tries in six minutes left Scarlets shell-shocked.

Bristol moved third in Pool B, although they will be overhauled by Munster if the Irish side defeat Wasps on Sunday and claim a bonus point.

Centres Semi Radradra and Ioan Lloyd scored early Bristol tries, yet it was not until the final quarter that they cut loose as a penalty try was followed by a rapid scoring burst, with Harry Thacker, Piers O'Conor and Ratu Naulago all touching down, before Radrarda scored again, fly-half Callum Sheedy claimed a try, while also adding five conversions.

It all added up to a spectacular blitz of 31 points after the home side had levelled things up at 21-21.

The Scarlets had their moments through tries from hooker Ryan Elias and full-back Johnny McNicholl, with Rhys Patchell booting three penalties and a conversion, but their European Cup campaign is over for another season.

Saturday: Glasgow Warriors 30-38 La Rochelle

Glasgow's hopes of reaching the last 16 of the Heineken Champions Cup hang by a thread following a 38-30 defeat to La Rochelle at Scotstoun.

Leading 15-9 at the interval, the French visitors pulled away in the second half with two tries in five minutes from Pierre Bougarit and Pierre Boudehent.

Warriors responded with two late replies from Ollie Smith but it was not enough to overturn the result, and they must now rely on both Ospreys and Montpellier failing to get what they need from their final matches on Sunday, against Sale Sharks and Exeter Chiefs, respectively, if they are to progress.

Three games cancelled due to Covid-19: Toulouse 0-28 Cardiff, Leicester Tigers 28-0 Bordeaux-Begles, Racing 92 28-0 Northampton Saints

Unfortunately, three games in Round 4 were lost to Covid-19 enforced cancellations.

Despite defending champions Toulouse naming a squad of 23 to face Cardiff, Covid cases at the club into the double figures caused the EPCR to call off the match and award Cardiff - yet to win a game this season in Europe - a 28-0 bonus-point win which may yet see the Welsh side into the round of 16.

Toulouse rugby logo (AP)
Image: Toulouse suffered a 28-0 Covid loss to Cardiff, as the EPCR cancelled their Pool B clash

Toulouse responded angrily, with president Didier Lacroix saying the club would take legal action after the enforced cancellation, terming it a "total lack of respect" and adding: "We cannot let this injustice pass.

"It's not just one case, many clubs have already been wronged and it is time for this to stop. We are talking about the credibility of this competition."

A second game fell by the wayside when Bordeaux discovered positive cases in their camp on Friday just before they were due to travel to England to face Leicester, forcing them to pull out and the Tigers awarded a bonus-point 28-0 win.

That second Covid cancellation ensured Leicester could not be caught at the top of Pool B, handing them home advantage until the final should they make it that far.

Northampton Saints flag (PA)
Image: Northampton Saints pulled out of their game vs Racing 92 in a third Champions Cup cancellation

A third cancellation arrived on Saturday when Northampton disclosed cases which saw their trip to Paris to play Racing 92 called off, and the French outfit handed a 28-0 win which assures them of top spot in Pool A - despite playing just two games - and, like Leicester, home advantage until the final should they progress.

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