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15th September 2020
01:33pm BST

"He's running the opposition against us, running some of Leinster’s plays, so he’ll be a huge help to us. He just wants to help. He regrets the situation he finds himself in but now he just wants to help the team as much as he can."
Sexton will be aware of the comments and have seen a couple of the headlines but he is wise enough not to let that get under his skin. He has had an ongoing rivalry with Farrell since 2012 and they have been on two Lions tours together. They know each other inside and out, but Leinster will be planning on throwing a lot more at Sarries than Sexton's near-patented give and go 'Loop'.
For McBryde, the Leinster assistant coach, the only question he got about Farrell, in the first of his two Monday briefings, was how Saracens would cope without their own world-class No.10.
"Owen is a world-class player, but when you do lose somebody of that calibre it generally gels everyone a lot closer together. You certainly circle the wagons. You can build that the world is against us. You can build that type of mentality and become stronger because of it."
Saracens will be relegated at the end of the 2019/20 Premiership season after they were sanctioned for breaching the league's salary cap. They have, thus, mixed and match their starting XV for a lot of the season and let some big names leave to ease the wage burden. Still, they retain the core of a side that have swung a heavy bat, domestically and in Europe, for a number of years.
Looking ahead to the challenge Saracens are sure to pose, McBryde was teed up nicely when asked how much better Leinster needed to be from the side that beat Ulster 27-5 in the Guinness PRO14 Final.
"We're going to have to be 10 times better, if I'm honest. "Certain areas like the lineout, in the first half it didn't function. We'll have to spend a little bit of time focusing on what went wrong there and come up with the answers and learn from that lesson... they're a serious team and they are coming here with a point to prove. "So, like I said, we'll have to be 10 times better than we were against Ulster. That's not being disrespectful to Ulster - they're a good team and they pushed us to the limit - but we're going to have to step up again, and we realise that."Leinster's lineouts have not run smoothly since rugby resumed in late August and McBryde is shouldering some of that blame, saying it is up to him to get his players to 'see it like I see it'. It is an area the Irish province need sorting as, in Maro Itoje, Saracens possess a master disruptor of the Paul O'Connell ilk. Last Saturday, McBryde was struck with the thought, "Is this real?", as Leinster closed out a league-winning season that included 17 straight victories. This Saturday, a win over the reigning European champions will feel 10 times better than securing the Guinness PRO14 title. That is simply where Leinster are at right now. Five stars are the goal, and have been all year. The stakes are monumentally high.
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