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12th May 2018
07:21pm BST

Whether it was diving at loose balls, helping take Teddy Thomas over the line for a Leinster line-out minutes before Nacewa's match sealing penalty or diving at the legs of Leone Nakarawa in the dying minutes, Leavy was everywhere Leinster needed him to be.
He represents one of the many Leinster players in this Champions Cup winning squad that far outweighed their own expectations.
Jordan Larmour started the season hoping to earn a couple of Leinster senior caps and he ended the season as a Grand Slam winner and the starting winger in a Champions Cup final winning team.
James Ryan had never played a senior game for Leinster before this campaign and he ended the season as one of the best forwards in Europe.
Leavy was the third choice flanker behind Sean O'Brien and Josh van der Flier in September and he ends his season as possibly the best player in his position and the province's fans' and players' player of the year.
Sean O'Brien may return next season and force Leavy to the opposite side of the scrum, or vice versa, but it's hard to see anyone displacing the 23-year-old from Leinster's pack. Not when he's had this many standout performances.
His confidence is at an all-time high and rightfully so.
He announced himself to the Irish public on Saint Stephen's Day with a man of the match performance against Munster at Thomond Park and less than six months later and he's one of Leinster's best performers on their biggest day in Bilbao.
Leinster leaned on the experience of Johnny Sexton, Isa Nacewa and Scott Fardy throughout the final but once again it was the exuberance of Leavy, Ryan and Henshaw that provided the newly crowned champions with a physical presence that Racing brought in spades.
The 2018 Champions Cup final was far from a classic, and was not exactly a brilliant advertisement of top-tier rugby for the locals, but European Rugby as a brand was not exactly Leinster's primary concern heading to Spain's Basque country.
Leinster were there to claim a fourth European star to cap off a season where they've produced more stars of their own for the future.
The age profile of their young cohort should set the province up for many seasons to come, but as promising as the future may be for the club, and it is exceptionally bright, the future is now.
It has just presented itself in the form of a blood stained flanker with a smile and his hands raised in victory.
A sight we could see more of in the years to come.

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