Almost three years ago to the day Leinster came here and were duly sent home, tails between their legs, having shipped more than 50 points. If ever there was a demonstration of how the tables have turned since then it was this routine bonus-point victory in which they were rarely required to find top gear.
Wasps were better in the second half but here ends a European campaign in which they have failed to record a single victory. Back in 2016 they were one of five Premiership quarter-finalists and one of three to reach the last four. Wasps’s subsequent struggles neatly sum up those of the English sides as a whole, with the obvious exception of Saracens.
Irish clubs have strength in depth but Saracens can reach European final | Robert Kitson
Leinster, meanwhile, march on to a home quarter-final against Ulster thanks to tries from Garry Ringrose, Sean Cronin (two) and another for Noel Reid with Jamison Gibson-Park pulling the strings throughout from scrum-half. “They are well coached, play together a lot, have experience mixed in with some real exciting youngsters, so you have to sit back and say what a quality outfit they are,” conceded the Wasps director of rugby, Dai Young. “They can afford to lose four or five players and still pick 14 internationals. That type of strength in depth is going to take some beating.”
Looming large over this fixture was England’s trip to Dublin on 2 February. For a start Eddie Jones was in attendance, perhaps to cast a close eye over the 13 members of Joe Schmidt’s squad rather than the four in his – it should have been five but Brad Shields pulled out with a side strain before kick-off. Before 10 minutes were up, however, Jones had seen Nathan Hughes go down nursing an ankle and Joe Launchbury depart with a neck problem. Hughes soldiered on while Launchbury passed his head injury assessment but did not return – his neck more the problem.