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Williams proud in defeat

Image: Williams: impressed by young side despite defeat

Ulster head coach Matt Williams reflected on a missed opportunity after his young side went down 24-19 at Stade Francais.

Ulster narrowly beaten in Paris

Ulster head coach Matt Williams reflected on a missed opportunity after his young side went down 24-19 at Stade Francais in their final Heineken Cup pool fixture. Williams made nine changes to the starting XV that beat Pool Four winners Harlequins last weekend as Ulster - already out of quarter-final contention - went in search of a maiden win on French soil. The makeshift line-up, featuring a collection of youngsters and second teamers, initially took the game to the Parisians and only surrendered the lead with 25 minutes left as they began to tire. Stade ended up squeezing home to take second place in the pool and even though Williams was delighted to see his side run them so close, he left the French capital with some regrets. "I must say how happy I am with the guys, in terms of effort and courage," said the Australian. "We came here with a plan to run the ball, and I thought our offloading and running in the first half was magnificent. We made break after break but we didn't take those chances and we missed our kicks. "But I am loathe to criticise the players because they gave their all, and there is nothing left in that dressing room.

Dominated

"We dominated the game and the better team lost, but at the end of the day the scoreboard says we lost." Paul Steinmetz's try and Niall O'Connor's penalty gave Ulster an 8-6 half-time lead, and it should have been a bigger margin given the number of times they broke through Stade's porous defence. But the hosts, who also fielded a weakened team, drafted their big guns off the bench and took the lead in the 55th minute when Juan Manuel Leguizamon side-stepped his way over. Mark Gasnier added another try late on for Stade, whose France fly-half Lionel Beauxis finished with 14 points from the boot, and Nigel Brady's last-second try came too late for Ulster. Williams was thrilled with how his young team stood up to the test and reserved special praise for Ian Whitten, who won his midfield duel with Stade's Australian rugby league convert Gasnier. "I always think we all give French teams a little too much respect when they play at home - I think you have to attack them over here and I was delighted with our style. It was magnificent," he added.
Magnificent
"We've got a great crop of players, as I've said to everyone from day one. I was comfortable bringing in these players. "I thought, for example, Ian Whitten was comfortably the best centre out there. I thought he had a magnificent game and overshadowed Gasnier by a considerable margin. "His kicking game, how he entered the line, his offloading - that's the first time he's run on a senior field. He was phenomenal." Stade were eliminated from the tournament last weekend following their defeat in Wales to the Scarlets. This win ended a three-match losing run but there was scant reason to cheer after being given the runaround on a pitch they have only lost once on in the Heineken Cup, to Munster seven seasons ago. Stade and France hooker Dimitri Szarzewski said: "Our priority was to win and we achieved our objective. "Last week, we didn't turn up (against the Scarlets), and we wanted to rediscover our fighting qualities and show something in front of our fans. "It was a good match, even if we weren't very good to tell the truth."