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Leinster Rugby
Rugby union team in Ireland
Rugby union team in Ireland
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| teamname | Leinster Rugby |
| image | LeinsterRugby logo 2019.svg |
| image_size | 200px |
| founded | |
| ground | RDS Arena |
| (Capacity: 18,500) | |
| Aviva Stadium | |
| (Capacity: 51,700) | |
| location | Dublin, Ireland |
| coach | Leo Cullen |
| captain | Caelan Doris |
| appearances | Cian Healy (291) |
| top scorer | Johnny Sexton (1,646) |
| most tries | Shane Horgan (69) |
| league | United Rugby Championship |
| season | [2024–25](2024-25-united-rugby-championship) |
| position | League: **1st** |
| Play-offs: **Champions** | |
| Irish Shield: **Champions** | |
| pattern_la1 | _goldborder |
| pattern_b1 | _shoulder_stripes_white_stripes |
| pattern_ra1 | _goldborder |
| pattern_sh1 | _white_stripes_adidas |
| pattern_so1 | _color_3_stripes_white |
| leftarm1 | 0000ff |
| body1 | 0000ff |
| rightarm1 | 0000ff |
| shorts1 | 0000ff |
| socks1 | 0000ff |
| pattern_la2 | _blueborder |
| pattern_b2 | _shoulder_stripes_blue_stripes |
| pattern_ra2 | _blueborder |
| pattern_sh2 | _blue_stripes_adidas |
| pattern_so2 | _color_3_stripes_blue |
| leftarm2 | ffffff |
| body2 | ffffff |
| rightarm2 | ffffff |
| shorts2 | ffffff |
| socks2 | ffffff |
| pattern_la3 | _blueborder |
| pattern_b3 | _red_neck |
| pattern_ra3 | _blueborder |
| pattern_so3 | _blue_top |
| leftarm3 | 003366 |
| body3 | 003366 |
| rightarm3 | 003366 |
| shorts3 | 003366 |
| socks3 | 003366 |
| url | https://www.leinsterrugby.ie/ |
| currentseason | 2025–26 Leinster Rugby season |
(Capacity: 18,500) Aviva Stadium (Capacity: 51,700) Play-offs: Champions Irish Shield: Champions Leinster Rugby () is one of the four professional provincial club rugby union teams from the island of Ireland. They compete in the United Rugby Championship and the European Rugby Champions Cup. The team represents the Leinster Branch, one of the four provincial unions that together make up the Irish Rugby Football Union (IRFU), but is not restricted to players from that province.
Leinster play their home games primarily at the 18,500-capacity RDS Arena ('the RDS') in Dublin, although larger games are played in the 51,700-capacity Aviva Stadium when the capacity of the RDS is insufficient, or during 2024 and 2025 to accommodate venue improvements at the RDS, with occasional on-off games been moved to Croke Park, home of the Gaelic Athletic Association and by some distance the largest stadium in Ireland. Before moving to the RDS in 2005, Leinster's traditional home ground was Donnybrook Stadium, in Dublin 4. The province plays primarily in blue with white or yellow trim and the team crest features a harp within a rugby ball, the harp being an ancient symbol of the province found in and taken from the flag of Leinster, although the traditional colours of Leinster Rugby mean the design more resembles the flag of the president of Ireland or the coat of arms of Ireland.
Leinster turned professional along with its fellow Irish provinces in 1995 and has competed in the United Rugby Championship (formerly known as the Celtic League, Magners League and the Pro12 / Pro14) since it was founded in 2001. Before 1995, the Leinster Branch had previously competed in the annual Irish interprovincial championship.
During their professional history, Leinster have been the most successful team in Ireland or from the Celtic League and its successors. As of 2025, Leinster have won their domestic title on nine occasions, while topping the regular season table a further five times, and have won as of 2025 all four URC Irish Shields. In Europe, Leinster are second only to Toulouse with four European Champions Cups, one EPRC Challenge Cup and four runners-up placings in the Champions Cup.
Leinster enjoy historical rivalries with all three provincial unions, most notably with Munster, where some games between the teams have been watched by over 80,000 fans in Croke Park. In addition, Leinster have notable rivalries with two French club teams; erstwhile rivals Toulouse with whom they have jockeyed for the title of Europe's most decorated team, and La Rochelle, a frequent opponent in European competition who defeated Leinster in back to back European Champions Cup finals in 2022 and 2023 under the direction of long-time Munster player Ronan O'Gara. In more recent years a rivalry has also developed with the South African Bulls franchise, with the sides meeting twice in three seasons in the semi-final of the United Rugby Championship, before meeting in the final of the 2024-25 championship.
History
Founding (1879–1899)
The Leinster Branch was inaugurated at a meeting on 31 October 1879. The meeting was held at Lawrence's premises at 63 Grafton Street and was largely attended. Although this was the formal founding of Leinster as we know it today, with the amalgamation of the Irish Football Union and the Northern Union, the Leinster provincial team had been active since 1879 – when the first interprovincial derby was played against Ulster. The Leinster and Ulster teams also made up the representative Irish team that competed against England in Ireland's first-ever international in 1875. Upon the founding of the union, Munster were also added to the fray in 1879, when their first provincial team was selected and first Munster players represented Ireland.
F. Kennedy (Wanderers) was elected first Hon. Secretary of the Branch and C.B. Crocker (Lansdowne) first Hon. Treasurer.
The function of the Branch was to organise the game of rugby football in the province. Every year five representatives would be selected to join the IRFU Committee. They would be known as the "Leinster Five" and would pick the Leinster representative teams.
The first Interprovincial matches between Leinster, Ulster and Munster were held in 1875. At this time the matches were played with 20 players a side. Leinster lost to Ulster by a converted try and beat Munster by one goal to nil. Since then there has been a match between these teams annually, with Connacht joining the fold in 1885.
Leinster Schools Interprovincial matches have been taking place since 1888. Leinster Schools beat the Ulster Schools in Belfast on Saturday 7 April by a dropped goal to a try. Their first match against Munster Schools took place on 18 March 1899, when Leinster won by two tries to one.
Amateur period (1900–1990s)
The early 1920s led to the creation of the Provincial Towns Cup and the Metropolitan Cup, which are still hard-fought competitions in the Leinster Rugby calendar. Much has changed in rugby over the years, but the original idea of Leinster Club Rugby acting as a feeder for the Leinster Interprovincial side, though now professional, still stands true.
All Interprovincial matches were abandoned during the years of the Great War (1914–1918) and the War period (1939–1945), though unofficial matches were played.
The first major touring side to play Leinster was a team drawn from the New Zealand Army – the Kiwis, in 1946. Although it was not an official touring side organised by the New Zealand Rugby Union, the quality of the match, which was drawn 10 points each, is still remembered to this day.
The first official overseas touring side that came to play Leinster was an Australian touring side in 1957. Since then, Leinster has played against every major touring side from Fiji to France.
Before the days of professional rugby union, there was further emphasis on Irish club rugby as opposed to the provincial game. During these times the provincial sides were purely representative sides and games were far less frequent than now. Between 1946 and 2002 the sides would meet annually to contest the Irish Interprovincial Championship and on rare occasions would be tested against touring international sides. When rugby union was declared 'open' in 1995, these four teams became the four professional teams run by the Irish Rugby Football Union and therefore much of the history of the side has been made in the modern era.
Leinster Lions (1990s–2005)

Leinster became a professional outfit in the mid-1990s. The "Leinster Lions" name came into existence during the 2001–02 season as the result of a joint marketing initiative between Leinster Rugby and its kit sponsors, the Canterbury Clothing Company. Before the start of the 2004–05 season, the 'Lions' was dropped from the name. It is still used for marketing and branding, in particular, the Cubs Club for Junior members of Leinster Rugby. The Leinster mascot is "Leo the Lion". It was also during this time that the song “Molly Malone” became a match fixture to be sung by the fans.
Leinster's first season in the newly formed Celtic League ended in success as the Lions were crowned the inaugural champions, beating rivals Munster Rugby in the 2001–02 final. In 2002–03, they became only the third team in the history of the European Cup to win all their games in pool play. They also went one step further in the playoffs than the previous season by reaching the semi-finals (for the first time since 1995–96), but lost at home against French side Perpignan, which was accompanied by an unsuccessful season in the Celtic League. The 2003–04 season also ended in disappointment as Leinster slumped to their worst ever league performance and failed to qualify from their European Cup group.
Title misses (2004–2007)
Leinster improved during the 2004–05 season, finishing 3rd, just three points behind the eventual winners, the Ospreys. Leinster also won all of their pool games in that year's European Cup, and were again among the favourites for the title, however they went out at the quarter final stage to Leicester Tigers.
The next two seasons of the Celtic League were to end in near misses for Leinster, as they lost out on the 2005–06 and 2006–07 league titles on the final day of the season. These seasons also saw progress in the European Cup. In 2005–06, Leinster progressed to the semi-final but were eliminated by Irish rivals Munster at Lansdowne Road and they reached the quarter-final the following year where they were beaten by eventual winners London Wasps.
European and domestic dominance (2008–2014)
Increasing attendances at Leinster games led to a move across Dublin 4 from Donnybrook Stadium to the redeveloped RDS Arena.
In 2007–08, Leinster failed to qualify from their European Cup pool, but did end the season as Celtic League champions, sealing the title with a 41–8 victory over the Newport Gwent Dragons in front of their home fans at the RDS.
In the 2008–09 season, Leinster topped their European Cup pool despite away losses to French side Castres and English side Wasps. Victory over Harlequins in the quarter-finals followed, despite the Bloodgate Scandal. Leinster overcame Munster 25–6 in a semi-final in Dublin's Croke Park that broke the world record attendance for a club rugby union game with a crowd of over 82,200. Leinster won the 2009 European Cup Final in Murrayfield Stadium in Edinburgh, beating Leicester Tigers 19–16 to claim their first European crown.

In 2009–10 Leinster was eliminated from the European Cup at the semi-final stage by eventual winners Toulouse. Also despite having topped the Pro12 league during the regular season, Leinster lost the first-ever Play-off Final 17–12 on their home ground to the Ospreys.
In the 2010–11 European Cup, Leinster defeated the top English teams (Leicester Tigers, Saracens & Northampton Saints), as well as top French sides, Toulouse (who were the defending European champions), Racing Metro & Clermont Auvergne, (the French Champions). to go on to regain their title as champions of Europe in the 2011 European Cup Final at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff. Trailing at half time, Leinster scored 27 unanswered points in the second half to beat Northampton 33–22 and claim their second European crown with the biggest comeback in European Cup final history. Leinster were also chasing a Pro12 & European Cup double, but lost 19–9 to Irish rivals Munster in the Pro12 Final.
In 2011–12 Leinster became only the second side ever to retain the title of European Champions. Leinster emerged unbeaten in group play to top their group and went on to defeat the Cardiff Blues 34–3 in the quarterfinals, followed by a 19–15 semifinal victory over ASM Clermont Auvergne. and defeated Ulster in the first all-Irish final 42–14, recording the most points scored and the most tries scored in a European Cup final as well as becoming the first unbeaten side to win the European Cup. Once again, Leinster targeted the double, and faced a repeat of the 2010 Pro12 final against the Ospreys. Leinster's domestic title challenge fell at the final hurdle, conceding a final minute try to slump to a one-point defeat, and unable to complete the double despite topping the table in the regular season.
The 2012–13 campaign proved to be another successful season for Leinster Rugby. The club finished in second place during the regular season of the Pro12 and defeated Glasgow Warriors by a score of 17–15 in their semi-final play-off match on 11 May 2013. On 17 May, Leinster were crowned champions of the European Challenge Cup after defeating Stade Français 34–13 in the final at their home ground, the RDS Arena. Leinster successfully completed the double on 25 May, defeating Ulster 24–18 in the Pro12 final to claim their third league championship.
Leinster continued their success in the 2013–14 season by becoming the first team ever to defend the Pro12 title, topping the league in the regular season and defeating Glasgow Warriors 34–12 in their fifth consecutive Pro12 play-off final and also secured their seventh major title in as many years.
Blooding a new generation (2015–2017)
Following a remarkable run of seven major trophies in seven years, Leinster's title run came to an end following the 2013–14 season. The 2014–15 season saw a dip in form, with Leinster finishing in fifth place in the league and failing to make the play-offs. Fortunes in the newly formed Champions Cup were better, with the team reaching the semi-final where they were defeated in extra-time by eventual winners, Toulon. At the end of the season, head coach Matt O'Connor left the club by mutual consent with former club captain, Leo Cullen, being named as his replacement. Cullen then brought in ex-England coach Stuart Lancaster as senior coach at the start of the 2016–17 season, which saw a huge improvement from Leinster as well a big group of young players coming through. Despite playing brilliant rugby all season, Leinster failed to win any silverware, falling short in the Champions Cup semi-final to old rivals Clermont and shocked by the Scarlets in the Pro12 Semi-Final at the RDS. However, there was huge optimism amongst the players and supporters as they believed this was only the start of a new generation and perhaps another era of success.
Present Day (2018–2024)
Starting with the 2017–18 season, Leinster won four straight Pro14 championships. In Europe, they won the 2017-18 Heineken Cup, defeating Racing 92 by a score of 15–12 in the final in Bilbao. They were runners-ups four times in 2018-19 Heineken Cup, 2021-22 Heineken Cup, 2022-23 Heineken Cup and the 2023-24 Heineken Cup. Leinster were knocked out of the Heineken cup competition in the quarter-finals in 2019–20, and again at the semi-finals stage in 2020–21.
United Rugby Championship Era (2021–present)
Four South African teams joined the Guinness Pro 14 and the tournament was renamed the United Rugby Championship (URC).
Leinster lost to South African side the Bulls in the inaugural semi-final. In the subsequent two years, Leinster again lost at the URC semi-final stage to Munster, following a late drop goal by Jack Crowley, and the Bulls.
Leinster were marginally more successful in the Champions Cup during this period, making the final in three successive seasons, before losing in a semi-final to Northampton Saints in 2024–25.
However, their mentality was routinely questioned during this period given their failure to win trophies despite a relative abundance of resources.
The format of the 2021–22 Champions Cup competition was affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. Leinster won their first round matchup with Bath. However, the day prior to Leinster's second match, an away fixture to Montpellier, the EPCR announced that the match would not go ahead, and instead awarded a 28–0 win to Montpellier. This was despite Leinster having a full squad certified to be COVID-free, named, and ready to travel. The following day, the EPCR announced that all other matches involving French and UK teams from the same second round would be postponed to a future date. Following the EPCR's decision to award Montpellier a 28–0 bonus-point win for their cancelled round two clash, Leinster beat Montpellier by 89–7, with the 82 point margin eclipsing their previous biggest win in Europe set against Bourgoin back in 2004.{{cite web |title=Leinster demolish Montpellier by 82 points in record-breaking European win. In 2024, they reached the played on the Croke Park surface for the first time where they beat Northampon 20-17 to qualify for the final of the European Champions Cup for the second consecutive season, losing in the final to Toulouse.
Previous season summaries
| Domestic League | European Cup | Domestic / 'A' Cup | Season | Competition | Final Position (Pool) | Points | Play-offs | Competition | Performance | Competition | Performance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1995–96 | *No competition * | [Heineken Cup](1995-96-heineken-cup) | Semi-final | **Interprovincial Championship** | **Champions** | ||||||
| 1996–97 | *No competition * | [Heineken Cup](1996-97-heineken-cup) | 3rd in pool | Interprovincial Championship | 2nd | ||||||
| 1997–98 | *No competition * | [Heineken Cup](1997-98-heineken-cup) | 3rd in pool | **Interprovincial Championship** | **Champions** | ||||||
| 1998–99 | *No competition * | [Heineken Cup](1998-99-heineken-cup) | 4th in pool | Interprovincial Championship | 3rd | ||||||
| 1999–00 | *No competition * | [Heineken Cup](1999-00-heineken-cup) | 2nd in pool | Interprovincial Championship | 3rd | ||||||
| 2000–01 | *No competition * | [Heineken Cup](2000-01-heineken-cup) | 2nd in pool | Interprovincial Championship | 3rd | ||||||
| 2001–02 | **[Celtic League](2001-02-celtic-league)** | **1st (A)** | **21** | **Champions** | [Heineken Cup](2001-02-heineken-cup) | Quarter-final | **Interprovincial Championship** | **Champions** | |||
| 2002–03 | [Celtic League](2002-03-celtic-league) | 5th (B) | 18 | Did Not qualify | [Heineken Cup](2002-03-heineken-cup) | Semi-final | *No competition * | ||||
| 2003–04 | [Celtic League](2003-04-celtic-league) | 8th | 47 | *N/A* | [Heineken Cup](2003-04-heineken-cup) | 2nd in pool | Celtic Cup | Quarter-final | |||
| 2004–05 | [Celtic League](2004-05-celtic-league) | 3rd | 57 | *N/A* | [Heineken Cup](2004-05-heineken-cup) | Quarter-final | Celtic Cup | Semi-final | |||
| 2005–06 | [Celtic League](2005-06-celtic-league) | 2nd | 74 | *N/A* | [Heineken Cup](2005-06-heineken-cup) | Semi-final | *No competition * | ||||
| [2006–07](2006-07-leinster-rugby-season) | [Magners League](2006-07-celtic-league) | 3rd | 61 | *N/A* | [Heineken Cup](2006-07-heineken-cup) | Quarter-final | *No competition * | ||||
| [2007–08](2007-08-leinster-rugby-season) | **[Magners League](2007-08-celtic-league)** | **1st** | **61** | *N/A* | [Heineken Cup](2007-08-heineken-cup) | 3rd in pool | *No competition * | ||||
| [2008–09](2008-09-leinster-rugby-season) | [Magners League](2008-09-celtic-league) | 3rd | 52 | *N/A* | **[Heineken Cup](2008-09-heineken-cup)** | **Champions** | *No competition * | ||||
| 2009–10 | [Magners League](2009-10-celtic-league) | 1st | 55 | *Runner-up* | [Heineken Cup](2009-10-heineken-cup) | Semi-final | [British and Irish Cup](2009-10-british-and-irish-cup) | 2nd in pool | |||
| 2010–11 | [Magners League](2010-11-celtic-league) | 2nd | 70 | *Runner-up* | **[Heineken Cup](2010-11-heineken-cup)** | **Champions** | [British and Irish Cup](2010-11-british-and-irish-cup) | Quarter-final | |||
| 2011–12 | [RaboDirect PRO12](2011-12-pro12) | 1st | 81 | *Runner-up* | **[Heineken Cup](2011-12-heineken-cup)** | **Champions** | [British and Irish Cup](2011-12-british-and-irish-cup) | Semi-final | |||
| 2012–13 | **[RaboDirect PRO12](2012-13-pro12)** | **2nd** | **78** | **Champions** | **[Challenge Cup](2012-13-european-challenge-cup)*** | **Champions** | **[British and Irish Cup](2012-13-british-and-irish-cup)** | **Champions** | |||
| 2013–14 | **[RaboDirect PRO12](2013-14-pro12)** | **1st** | **82** | **Champions** | [Heineken Cup](2013-14-heineken-cup) | Quarter-final | **[British and Irish Cup](2013-14-british-and-irish-cup)** | **Champions** | |||
| 2014–15 | [Guinness PRO12](2014-15-pro12) | 5th | 62 | Did Not qualify | [Champions Cup](2014-15-european-rugby-champions-cup) | Semi-final | [British and Irish Cup](2014-15-british-and-irish-cup) | Semi-final | |||
| 2015–16 | [Guinness PRO12](2015-16-pro12) | 1st | 73 | *Runner-up* | [Champions Cup](2015-16-european-rugby-champions-cup) | 4th in pool | [British and Irish Cup](2015-16-british-and-irish-cup) | Quarter-final | |||
| 2016–17 | [Guinness PRO12](2016-17-pro12) | 2nd | 85 | Semi-Final | [Champions Cup](2016-17-european-rugby-champions-cup) | Semi-final | [British and Irish Cup](2016-17-british-and-irish-cup) | 2nd in pool | |||
| 2017–18 | **[Guinness PRO14](2017-18-pro14)** | **1st (B)** | **70** | **Champions** | **[Champions Cup](2017-18-european-rugby-champions-cup)** | **Champions** | [British and Irish Cup](2017-18-british-and-irish-cup) | *Runner-up* | |||
| 2018–19 | **[Guinness PRO14](2018-19-pro14)** | **1st (B)** | **76** | **Champions** | [Champions Cup](2018-19-european-rugby-champions-cup) | *Runner-up* | **Celtic Cup** | **Champions** | |||
| 2019–20 | **[Guinness PRO14](2019-20-pro14)** | **1st (A)** | **69** | **Champions** | [Champions Cup](2019-20-european-rugby-champions-cup) | Quarter-final | **Celtic Cup** | **Champions** | |||
| 2020–21 | **[Guinness PRO14](2020-21-pro14)** | **1st (A)** | **71** | **Champions** | [Champions Cup](2020-21-european-rugby-champions-cup) | Semi-final | Rainbow Cup | 4th in pool | |||
| 2021–22 | [United Rugby Championship](2021-22-united-rugby-championship) | 1st | 67 | Semi-final | [Champions Cup](2021-22-european-rugby-champions-cup) | *Runner-up* | **[URC Irish Shield](2021-22-united-rugby-championship)** | **Champions** | |||
| 2022–23 | [United Rugby Championship](2022-23-united-rugby-championship) | 1st | 79 | Semi-final | [Champions Cup](2022-23-european-rugby-champions-cup) | *Runner-up* | **[URC Irish Shield](2022-23-united-rugby-championship)** | **Champions** | |||
| 2023–24 | [United Rugby Championship](2023-24-united-rugby-championship) | 3rd | 65 | Semi-final | [Champions Cup](2023-24-european-rugby-champions-cup) | *Runner-up* | **[URC Irish Shield](2023-24-united-rugby-championship)** | **Champions** | |||
| 2024–25 | **[United Rugby Championship](2024-25-united-rugby-championship)** | **1st** | **76** | **Champions** | [Champions Cup](2024-25-european-rugby-champions-cup) | Semi-final | **[URC Irish Shield](2024-25-united-rugby-championship)** | **Champions** |
Gold background denotes champions Silver background denotes runner-up
- After dropping into the competition from the Champions Cup/Heineken Cup
Heineken Cup / Champions Cup
| Season | Pool/Round | Pos | Played | Won | Drawn | Lost | Bonus | Points |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [1995–96](1995-96-heineken-cup) | Pool C | 1st | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | – | 4 |
| **Semi-final** | Leinster 14 – 23 **Cardiff** | |||||||
| [1996–97](1996-97-heineken-cup) | Pool B | 3rd | 4 | 2 | 0 | 2 | – | 4 |
| [1997–98](1997-98-heineken-cup) | Pool A | 3rd | 6 | 2 | 0 | 4 | – | 4 |
| [1998–99](1998-99-heineken-cup) | Pool A | 4th | 6 | 2 | 0 | 4 | – | 4 |
| [1999–00](1999-00-heineken-cup) | Pool 1 | 2nd | 6 | 4 | 0 | 2 | – | 8 |
| [2000–01](2000-01-heineken-cup) | Pool 1 | 2nd | 6 | 3 | 1 | 2 | – | 7 |
| [2001–02](2001-02-heineken-cup) | Pool 6 | 1st | 6 | 5 | 0 | 1 | – | 10 |
| **Quarter-final** | **Leicester Tigers** 29 – 18 Leinster | |||||||
| [2002–03](2002-03-heineken-cup) | Pool 4 | 1st | 6 | 6 | 0 | 0 | – | 12 |
| **Quarter-final** | **Leinster** 18 – 13 Biarritz Olympique | |||||||
| **Semi-final** | Leinster 14 – 21 **USA Perpignan** | |||||||
| [2003–04](2003-04-heineken-cup) | Pool 3 | 2nd | 6 | 4 | 0 | 2 | 2 | 18 |
| [2004–05](2004-05-heineken-cup) | Pool 4 | 1st | 6 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 26 |
| **Quarter-final** | Leinster 13 – 29 **Leicester Tigers** | |||||||
| [2005–06](2005-06-heineken-cup) | Pool 5 | 2nd | 6 | 4 | 0 | 2 | 6 | 22 |
| **Quarter-final** | Toulouse 35 – 41 **Leinster** | |||||||
| **Semi-final** | Leinster 6 – 30 **Munster** | |||||||
| [2006–07](2006-07-heineken-cup) | Pool 2 | 1st | 6 | 4 | 0 | 2 | 5 | 21 |
| **Quarter-final** | **Wasps** 35 – 13 Leinster | |||||||
| [2007–08](2007-08-heineken-cup) | Pool 6 | 3rd | 6 | 3 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 12 |
| [2008–09](2008-09-heineken-cup) | Pool 2 | 1st | 6 | 4 | 0 | 2 | 4 | 20 |
| **Quarter-final** | Harlequins 5 – 6 **Leinster** | |||||||
| **Semi-final** | Munster 6 – 25 **Leinster** | |||||||
| **[Final](2009-heineken-cup-final)** | **Leinster** 19 – 16 Leicester Tigers | |||||||
| [2009–10](2009-10-heineken-cup) | Pool 6 | 1st | 6 | 4 | 1 | 1 | 4 | 22 |
| **Quarter-final** | **Leinster** 29 – 28 ASM Clermont Auvergne | |||||||
| **Semi-final** | **Toulouse** 26 – 16 Leinster | |||||||
| [2010–11](2010-11-heineken-cup) | Pool 2 | 1st | 6 | 5 | 0 | 1 | 4 | 24 |
| **Quarter-final** | **Leinster** 17 – 10 Leicester Tigers | |||||||
| **Semi-final** | **Leinster** 32 – 23 Toulouse | |||||||
| **[Final](2011-heineken-cup-final)** | **Leinster** 33 – 22 Northampton Saints | |||||||
| [2011–12](2011-12-heineken-cup) | Pool 3 | 1st | 6 | 5 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 24 |
| **Quarter-final** | **Leinster** 34 – 3 Cardiff | |||||||
| **Semi-final** | ASM Clermont Auvergne 15 – 19 **Leinster** | |||||||
| **[Final](2012-heineken-cup-final)** | **Leinster** 42 – 14 Ulster | |||||||
| [2012–13](2012-13-heineken-cup) | Pool 5 | 2nd | 6 | 4 | 0 | 2 | 4 | 20 |
| [2013–14](2013-14-heineken-cup) | Pool 1 | 1st | 6 | 5 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 22 |
| **Quarter-final** | **RC Toulon** 29 – 14 Leinster | |||||||
| [2014–15](2014-15-european-rugby-champions-cup) | Pool 2 | 1st | 6 | 4 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 20 |
| **Quarter-final** | **Leinster** 18 – 15 Bath | |||||||
| **Semi-final** | **RC Toulon** 25 – 20 Leinster (A.E.T.) | |||||||
| [2015–16](2015-16-european-rugby-champions-cup) | Pool 5 | 4th | 6 | 1 | 0 | 5 | 2 | 6 |
| [2016–17](2016-17-european-rugby-champions-cup) | Pool 4 | 1st | 6 | 4 | 1 | 1 | 5 | 23 |
| **Quarter-final** | **Leinster** 32 – 17 Wasps | |||||||
| **Semi-final** | **ASM Clermont Auvergne** 27 – 22 Leinster | |||||||
| [2017–18](2017-18-european-rugby-champions-cup) | Pool 3 | 1st | 6 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 27 |
| **Quarter-final** | **Leinster** 30 — 19 Saracens | |||||||
| **Semi-final** | **Leinster** 38 – 16 Scarlets | |||||||
| **[Final](2018-european-rugby-champions-cup-final)** | **Leinster** 15 – 12 Racing 92 | |||||||
| [2018–19](2018-19-european-rugby-champions-cup) | Pool 1 | 1st | 6 | 5 | 0 | 1 | 5 | 25 |
| **Quarter-final** | **Leinster** 21 – 18 Ulster | |||||||
| **Semi-final** | **Leinster** 30 – 12 Toulouse | |||||||
| **[Final](2019-european-rugby-champions-cup-final)** | **Saracens** 20 – 10 Leinster | |||||||
| [2019–20](2019-20-european-rugby-champions-cup) | Pool 1 | 1st | 6 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 4 | 28 |
| **Quarter-final** | Leinster 17 – 25 **Saracens** | |||||||
| [2020–21](2020-21-european-rugby-champions-cup) | Pool A | 1st | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 10 |
| **Round of 16** | **Leinster** –Cancelled– RC ToulonLeinster awarded a walkover as Toulon were unable to field a team following positive COVID-19 test results in the squad | |||||||
| **Quarter-final** | Exeter Chiefs 22 – 34 **Leinster** | |||||||
| **Semi-final** | **La Rochelle** 32 – 23 Leinster | |||||||
| [2021–22](2021-22-european-rugby-champions-cup) | Pool A | 4th | 4 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 3 | 15 |
| **Round of 16** | Connacht 21 – 26 **Leinster** | |||||||
| **Leinster** 56 – 20 Connacht | ||||||||
| **Quarter-final** | Leicester Tigers 14 – 23 **Leinster** | |||||||
| **Semi-final** | **Leinster** 40 – 17 Stade Toulousain | |||||||
| **Final** | **La Rochelle** 24 – 21 Leinster | |||||||
| [2022–23](2022-23-european-rugby-champions-cup) | Pool A | 1st | 4 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 4 | 20 |
| **Round of 16** | **Leinster** 30 – 15 Ulster | |||||||
| **Quarter-final** | **Leinster** 55 – 24 Leicester Tigers | |||||||
| **Semi-final** | **Leinster** 41 – 22 Stade Toulousain | |||||||
| **Final** | **La Rochelle** 27 – 26 Leinster | |||||||
| [2023–24](2023-24-european-rugby-champions-cup) | Pool D | 1st | 4 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 19 |
| **Round of 16** | **Leinster** 36 – 22 Leicester Tigers | |||||||
| **Quarter-final** | **Leinster** 40 – 13 La Rochelle | |||||||
| **Semi-final** | **Leinster** 20 – 17 Northampton Saints | |||||||
| **[Final](2024-european-rugby-champions-cup-final)** | **Toulouse** 31 – 22 Leinster | |||||||
| [2024–25](2024-25-european-rugby-champions-cup) | Pool 2 | 1st | 4 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 18 |
| **Round of 16** | **Leinster** 62 – 0 Harlequins | |||||||
| **Quarter-final** | **Leinster** 52 – 0 Glasgow Warriors | |||||||
| **Semi-final** | Leinster 34 – 37 **Northampton Saints** |
Challenge Cup
| Season | Round | Result |
|---|---|---|
| [2012–13](2012-13-european-challenge-cup) | **Quarter-Final** | Wasps 28 – 48 **Leinster** |
| **Semi-final** | **Leinster** 44 – 16 Biarritz Olympique | |
| **Final** | **Leinster** 34 – 13 Stade Français |
United Rugby Championship
| Season | Pos | Played | Won | Drawn | Lost | Bonus | Points | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [2001–02](2001-02-celtic-league) | 1st (Pool A) | 7 | 7 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 21 | |
| **Quarter-Final** | **Leinster** 34 – 22 Newport | |||||||
| **Semi-final** | **Leinster** 35 – 13 Glasgow | |||||||
| **Final** | **Leinster** 24 – 20 Munster | |||||||
| [2002–03](2002-03-celtic-league) | 5th (Pool B) | 7 | 3 | 0 | 4 | 6 | 18 | |
| [2003–04](2003-04-celtic-league) | 8th | 22 | 9 | 1 | 12 | 9 | 47 | |
| [2004–05](2004-05-celtic-league) | 3rd | 20 | 12 | 1 | 7 | 7 | 57 | |
| [2005–06](2005-06-celtic-league) | 2nd | 20 | 14 | 0 | 6 | 10 | 74{{#tag:ref | 11 teams were involved in this season, so one team did not play each week and were awarded 4 points instead. |
| Therefore, each team finished the season with 8 more points than the table would seem to warrant. | ||||||||
| [2006–07](2006-07-celtic-league) | 3rd | 20 | 12 | 1 | 7 | 11 | 61 | |
| [2007–08](2007-08-celtic-league) | 1st | 18 | 13 | 1 | 4 | 7 | 61 | |
| [2008–09](2008-09-celtic-league) | 3rd | 18 | 11 | 1 | 6 | 6 | 52 | |
| [2009–10](2009-10-celtic-league) | 1st | 18 | 13 | 0 | 5 | 3 | 55 | |
| **Semi-final** | **Leinster** 16 – 6 Munster | |||||||
| **[Final](2010-celtic-league-grand-final)** | Leinster 12 – 17 **Ospreys** | |||||||
| [2010–11](2010-11-celtic-league) | 2nd | 22 | 15 | 1 | 6 | 8 | 70 | |
| **Semi-final** | **Leinster** 18 – 3 Ulster | |||||||
| **[Final](2011-celtic-league-grand-final)** | **Munster** 19 – 9 Leinster | |||||||
| [2011–12](2011-12-pro12) | 1st | 22 | 18 | 1 | 3 | 7 | 81 | |
| **Semi-final** | **Leinster** 19 – 15 Glasgow | |||||||
| **[Final](2012-pro12-grand-final)** | Leinster 30 – 31 **Ospreys** | |||||||
| [2012–13](2012-13-pro12) | 2nd | 22 | 17 | 0 | 5 | 10 | 78 | |
| **Semi-final** | **Leinster** 17 – 15 Glasgow | |||||||
| **[Final](2013-pro12-grand-final)** | Ulster 18 – 24 **Leinster** | |||||||
| [2013–14](2013-14-pro12) | 1st | 22 | 17 | 1 | 4 | 12 | 82 | |
| **Semi-final** | **Leinster** 13 – 9 Ulster | |||||||
| **[Final](2014-pro12-grand-final)** | **Leinster** 34 – 12 Glasgow | |||||||
| [2014–15](2014-15-pro12) | 5th | 22 | 11 | 3 | 8 | 12 | 62 | |
| [2015–16](2015-16-pro12) | 1st | 22 | 16 | 0 | 6 | 9 | 73 | |
| **Semi-final** | **Leinster** 30 – 18 Ulster | |||||||
| **[Final](2016-pro12-grand-final)** | Leinster 10 – 20 **Connacht** | |||||||
| [2016–17](2016-17-pro12) | 2nd | 22 | 18 | 0 | 4 | 13 | 85 | |
| **Semi-final** | Leinster 15 – 27 **Scarlets** | |||||||
| [2017-18](2017-18-pro14) | 1st | 21 | 14 | 1 | 6 | 12 | 70 | |
| **Semi-final** | **Leinster** 16 – 15 Munster | |||||||
| **[Final](2018-pro14-grand-final)** | **Leinster** 40 – 32 Scarlets | |||||||
| [2018–19](2018-19-pro14) | 1st | 21 | 15 | 1 | 5 | 14 | 76 | |
| **Semi-final** | **Leinster** 24 – 9 Munster | |||||||
| **[Final](2019-pro14-grand-final)** | **Leinster** 18 – 15 Glasgow | |||||||
| [2019–20](2019-20-pro14) | 1st | 15 | 15 | 0 | 0 | 9 | 69 | |
| **Semi-final** | **Leinster** 13 — 3 Munster | |||||||
| **[Final](2020-pro14-grand-final)** | **Leinster** 27 — 5 Ulster | |||||||
| [2020–21](2020-21-pro14) | 1st | 16 | 14 | 0 | 2 | 15 | 71 | |
| **[Final](2021-pro14-grand-final)** | **Leinster** 16 — 6 Munster | |||||||
| [2021–22](2021-22-united-rugby-championship) | 1st | 18 | 13 | 0 | 5 | 15 | 67 | |
| **Quarter-final** | **Leinster** 76 — 14 Glasgow Warriors | |||||||
| **Semi-final** | Leinster 26 — 27 **Bulls** | |||||||
| [2022–23](2022-23-united-rugby-championship) | 1st | 18 | 16 | 1 | 1 | 13 | 79 | |
| **Quarter-final** | **Leinster** 35 — 5 Sharks | |||||||
| **Semi-final** | Leinster 15 — 16 **Munster** | |||||||
| [2023–24](2023-24-united-rugby-championship) | 3rd | 18 | 13 | 0 | 5 | 13 | 65 | |
| **Quarter-final** | **Leinster** 43 — 20 Ulster | |||||||
| **Semi-final** | **Bulls** 25 – 20 Leinster | |||||||
| [2024–25](2024-25-united-rugby-championship) | 1st | 18 | 16 | 0 | 2 | 12 | 76 | |
| **Quarter-final** | **Leinster** 33–21 Scarlets | |||||||
| **Semi-final** | **Leinster** 37–19 Glasgow Warriors | |||||||
| **[Final](2025-united-rugby-championship-final)** | **Leinster** 32–7 Bulls |
Current standings
United Rugby Championship
European Rugby Champions Cup
Pool C
Honours

| Honours | Competition | Winners | Season(s) | Runners-up | Season(s) | European | Domestic | Provincial | 'A'-Team |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Heineken European Cup]] | 4 | [2008–09](2008-09-heineken-cup), [2010–11](2010-11-heineken-cup), [2011–12](2011-12-heineken-cup), [2017–18](2017-18-european-rugby-champions-cup) | 4 | [2018–19](2018-19-european-rugby-champions-cup), [2021–22](2021-22-european-rugby-champions-cup), [2022–23](2022-23-european-rugby-champions-cup), [2023–24](2023-24-european-rugby-champions-cup) | |||||
| **European Rugby Challenge Cup**Formerly known as European Challenge Cup | 1 | [2012–13](2012-13-european-challenge-cup) | - | - | |||||
| **United Rugby Championship**Formerly known as Celtic League / Magners League / Pro12 / Pro14 | 9 | [2001–02](2001-02-celtic-league), [2007–08](2007-08-celtic-league), [2012–13](2012-13-pro12), [2013–14](2013-14-pro12), [2017–18](2017-18-pro14), [2018–19](2018-19-pro14), [2019–20](2019-20-pro14), [2020–21](2020-21-pro14), [2024–25](2024-25-united-rugby-championship) | 5 | [2005–06](2005-06-celtic-league), [2009–10](2009-10-celtic-league), [2010–11](2010-11-celtic-league), [2011–12](2011-12-pro12), [2015–16](2015-16-pro12) | |||||
| **[URC Irish Shield](2021-22-united-rugby-championship-urc-regional-shields-pools-tables)**Contested from 2022 to present | 4 | [2021–22](2021-22-united-rugby-championship-urc-regional-shields-pools-tables), [2022–23](2022-23-united-rugby-championship-urc-regional-shields-pools-tables), [2023–24](2023-24-united-rugby-championship-urc-regional-shields-pools-tables), [2024–25](2024-25-united-rugby-championship-urc-regional-shields-pools-tables) | - | - | |||||
| **Irish Inter-Provincial Championship**Contested from 1946 to 2002 – Bold indicates Grand Slam; * indicates shared title; years shown are season ending years | 22 | **1949**, 1950*, 1955*, 1957*, **1959**, | |||||||
| 1961, **1962**, **1964**, 1965*, **1972**, | |||||||||
| 1973*, 1976*, 1978*, **1980**, **1981**, | |||||||||
| 1982, 1983*, **1984**, 1994*, **1996**, | |||||||||
| 1998*, 2002 | *N/A* | *N/A* | |||||||
| **Celtic Cup**Contested from 2019 to 2020 | 2 | [2018–19](2018-19-celtic-cup), [2019–20](2019-20-celtic-cup) | - | - | |||||
| **British & Irish Cup**Contested from 2009 to 2018 | 2 | [2012–13](2012-13-british-and-irish-cup), [2013–14](2013-14-british-and-irish-cup) | 1 | [2017–18](2017-18-british-and-irish-cup) |
Colours and crest
The current crest was introduced in 2005 as Leinster Rugby held no copyright on the previous crest. The new, stylised crest, is made specific to Leinster Rugby as it incorporates the harp with a rugby ball. The Leinster Rugby crest is on all official club merchandise including replica jerseys.
The province's current kit (2018/19) is blue with a pattern of spearheads on the jersey which takes inspiration from the people of Laighean (the ancient Irish name for Leinster), while the alternative kit is green with gold features, the colours seen in the Flag of Leinster, with a pattern of geographical cutouts for its 12 counties. The European kit is 'night navy' with the name of each of the 12 counties visible on the jersey written in the ancient Irish alphabet ogham.
The Leinster jersey also features four stars above the crest, to represent the four European Cup titles won to date.
Stadia
RDS Arena
Main article: RDS Arena

Leinster's current home ground is the RDS Arena. Games were first played at the RDS during the 2006–07 season, initially just for European Cup games. By the following season, however, all games had been moved to the RDS. The RDS has undergone large scale redevelopment since Leinster moved in. The arena now has a mostly seated capacity of 18,500. As the RDS remains a showjumping venue, the North and South stands are removable. A roof has been constructed to cover the grandstand opposite the pre-existing Anglesea stand. The RDS will be Leinster's home until 2027, as a 20-year lease was signed in 2007.
In July 2014, it was announced by the RDS and Leinster rugby that a design competition was being held to develop the arena into a 25,000 capacity world-class stadium, with work expected to commence on the redevelopment in April 2016. The selling of naming rights to the arena will be a key component in funding the project, with an initial budget of €20,000,000 being proposed.
Aviva Stadium
Main article: Aviva Stadium

For bigger games where the RDS does not have sufficient capacity, Leinster play their games at the Aviva Stadium, which has an all-seater capacity of 51,700. These are often key home games in the European Cup or United Rugby Championship games against domestic rivals. In 2010 they first played a home league game against Munster, the first time the stadium sold out, and then against ASM Clermont Auvergne. Leinster defeated Leicester Tigers at the venue in the 2010–11 European Cup quarter-finals and went on to beat Toulouse in the semi-finals, also held at the Aviva stadium on 30 April 2011, en route to winning their second European Cup. The following season Leinster hosted Munster, Bath and Cardiff at the Aviva Stadium and remained unbeaten at the ground until December 2012 when they lost 21–28 to ASM Clermont Auvergne.
Donnybrook Stadium
Main article: Donnybrook Stadium

Leinster's traditional home over the years has been Donnybrook Stadium in Donnybrook, Dublin 4. Donnybrook consists of a single covered stand and three sides of open terracing. A move across Dublin 4 to the RDS Arena for Leinster was needed to accommodate growing crowds, as the 6,000 capacity stadium had become too small. For this reason, Leinster have signed a long-term lease with the Royal Dublin Society to play home games at the RDS Arena. Donnybrook has since, been improved as a venue with the reconstruction of the grandstand in 2008 and remains an important venue for rugby union in Dublin.
Supporters
Before the advent of professionalism in the Irish game, provincial rugby games were generally poorly attended. During most of the 1990s, Leinster matches regularly attracted crowds of about 500 to 2,000. The decision to structure the game professionally via the provincial network through centralised player contracts and the subsequent on-field success achieved by Leinster and the other provinces resulted in a significant increase in support within a decade. Leinster had 3,700 season ticket holders in 2006, double the number of the previous season. The Official Leinster Supporters Club was formally established as a club in 2007. The last match at the old Lansdowne Road stadium was against Ulster on 31 December 2006 before it was demolished to make way for the new Aviva Stadium, earning the match the moniker of "The Last Stand". Leinster won the match 20–12, with an attendance of 48,000 – a record at the time. A previous attendance record in the Pro12 was also set at Lansdowne Road, for a game between Leinster and Munster which drew a crowd of 30,000. Leinster's supporters were named as 'Player of the Month' for April 2009 following their support in the European Cup Quarter Final against Harlequins at The Stoop.
,_EI-RJX,_Avro_RJ85_(36969025474)_(2).jpg)
On several occasions Leinster have set the record for the largest Celtic league and Pro12 attendances. On 2 October 2010, Leinster beat Munster 13–9 in the 5th round of the league at the Aviva Stadium. This set a new crowd attendance record for a Pro12 game at 50,645. They subsequently set a new record on 29 March 2014 during a sellout match against Munster in which 51,700 fans were in attendance. This Pro12 record was subsequently surpassed by attendances at the Judgement Day fixtures. During the 2014–15 Pro12 season Leinster had the best support of any club in the PRO12 league with an average attendance of 17,717.
Leinster's European Cup clash against Munster at Croke Park on 2 May 2009 set a world record attendance at the time for a club rugby union game with a crowd of 82,208.
Home attendance
| League | Fixtures | Average Attendance | Highest | Lowest | League | Fixtures | Average Attendance | Highest | Lowest | Total Attendance | Average Attendance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| – | – | – | – | – | [1995–96 Heineken Cup](1995-96-heineken-cup) | 2 | **5,675** | 7,350 | 4,000 | 11,350 | **5,675** |
| – | – | – | – | – | [1996–97 Heineken Cup](1996-97-heineken-cup) | 2 | **3,750** | 4,000 | 3,500 | 7,500 | **3,750** |
| – | – | – | – | – | [1997–98 Heineken Cup](1997-98-heineken-cup) | 3 | **6,267** | 7,000 | 5,500 | 18,800 | **6,267** |
| – | – | – | – | – | [1998–99 Heineken Cup](1998-99-heineken-cup) | 3 | **5,500** | 8,000 | 4,000 | 16,500 | **5,500** |
| – | – | – | – | – | [1999–00 Heineken Cup](1999-00-heineken-cup) | 3 | **4,833** | 6,500 | 3,000 | 14,500 | **4,833** |
| – | – | – | – | – | [2000–01 Heineken Cup](2000-01-heineken-cup) | 3 | **8,147** | 12,000 | 3,940 | 24,440 | **8,147** |
| [2001–02 Celtic League](2001-02-celtic-league) | 6• | **8,926** | 30,000 | 3,056 | [2001–02 Heineken Cup](2001-02-heineken-cup) | 3 | **7,500** | 7,500 | 7,500 | 76,056 | **8,451** |
| [2002–03 Celtic League](2002-03-celtic-league) | 3 | **5,500** | 6,000 | 4,500 | [2002–03 Heineken Cup](2002-03-heineken-cup) | 5 | **21,600** | 45,000 | 6,000 | 124,500 | **15,563** |
| [2003–04 Celtic League](2003-04-celtic-league) | |||||||||||
| Celtic Cup | 12* | **3,173** | 7,000 | 1,068 | [2003–04 Heineken Cup](2003-04-heineken-cup) | 3 | **14,963** | 23,463 | 7,200 | 82,965 | **5,531** |
| [2004–05 Celtic League](2004-05-celtic-league) | |||||||||||
| Celtic Cup | 12* | **5,038** | 13,500 | 2,800 | [2004–05 Heineken Cup](2004-05-heineken-cup) | 4 | **19,891** | 48,500 | 5,100 | 140,020 | **8,751** |
| [2005–06 Celtic League](2005-06-celtic-league) | 10 | **5,814** | 14,135 | 1,700 | [2005–06 Heineken Cup](2005-06-heineken-cup) | 4 | **20,932** | 47,000 | 11,133 | 141,868 | **10,133** |
| [2006–07 Celtic League](2006-07-celtic-league) | 10 | **11,892** | 48,000 | 3,750 | [2006–07 Heineken Cup](2006-07-heineken-cup) | 3 | **15,861** | 22,530 | 6,400 | 166,503 | **12,808** |
| [2007–08 Celtic League](2007-08-celtic-league) | 9 | **14,361** | 18,500 | 9,439 | [2007–08 Heineken Cup](2007-08-heineken-cup) | 3 | **17,820** | 18,563 | 16,752 | 182,709 | **15,226** |
| [2008–09 Celtic League](2008-09-celtic-league) | 9 | **14,728** | 18,500 | 10,910 | [2008–09 Heineken Cup](2008-09-heineken-cup) | 3 | **17,680** | 18,300 | 16,500 | 185,592 | **15,466** |
| [2009–10 Celtic League](2009-10-celtic-league) | 11 | **15,835** | 19,750 | 11,836 | [2009–10 Heineken Cup](2009-10-heineken-cup) | 4 | **18,709** | 20,000 | 17,836 | 249,021 | **16,601** |
| [2010–11 Celtic League](2010-11-celtic-league) | 12 | **16,849** | 50,645 | 9,790 | [2010–11 Heineken Cup](2010-11-heineken-cup) | 5 | **36,229** | 50,073 | 17,936 | 383,333 | **22,549** |
| [2011–12 Pro12](2011-12-pro12) | 12 | **18,971** | 48,365 | 14,362 | [2011–12 Heineken Cup](2011-12-heineken-cup) | 4 | **33,282** | 50,340 | 17,924 | 360,780 | **22,549** |
| [2012–13 Pro12](2012-13-pro12) | 12 | **19,084** | 46,280 | 13,235 | [2012–13 Heineken Cup](2012-13-heineken-cup) | ||||||
| [2012–13 Challenge Cup](2012-13-european-challenge-cup) | 6† | **22,369** | 48,964 | 9,654 | 363,222 | **20,179** | |||||
| [2013–14 Pro12](2013-14-pro12) | 13 | **19,507** | 51,700 | 14,400 | [2013–14 Heineken Cup](2013-14-heineken-cup) | 3 | **28,137** | 47,370 | 18,500 | 338,002 | **21,125** |
| [2014–15 Pro12](2014-15-pro12) | 11 | **17,675** | 43,817 | 11,322 | [2014–15 European Rugby Champions Cup](2014-15-european-rugby-champions-cup) | 3 | **29,509** | 43,958 | 17,558 | 282,952 | **20,211** |
| [2015–16 Pro12](2015-16-pro12) | 12 | **15,118** | 43,108 | 8,612 | [2015–16 European Rugby Champions Cup](2015-16-european-rugby-champions-cup) | 3 | **25,428** | 44,925 | 14,569 | 257,700 | **17,180** |
| [2016–17 Pro12](2016-17-pro12) | 12 | **15,579** | 40,527 | 10,792 | [2016–17 European Rugby Champions Cup](2016-17-european-rugby-champions-cup) | 4 | **30,081** | 50,266 | 13,890 | 307,272 | **19,205** |
| [2017–18 Pro14](2017-18-pro14) | 11 | **16,793** | 46,374 | 10,115 | [2017–18 European Rugby Champions Cup](2017-18-european-rugby-champions-cup) | 5 | **34,432** | 51,700 | 15,947 | 356,883 | **22,305** |
| [2018–19 Pro14](2018-19-pro14) | 12 | **17,242** | 50,120 | 10,057 | [2018–19 European Rugby Champions Cup](2018-19-european-rugby-champions-cup) | 5 | **34,285** | 51,700 | 18,055 | 378,329 | **22,255** |
| [2019–20 Pro14](2019-20-pro14) | 7‡ | **12,919** | 18,300 | 7,967 | [2019–20 European Rugby Champions Cup](2019-20-european-rugby-champions-cup) | 3‡ | **25,086** | 42,041 | 15,080 | 165,691 | **16,569** |
| [2020–21 Pro14](2020-21-pro14) | |||||||||||
| Pro14 Rainbow Cup | 1‡ | **1,200** | 1,200 | 1,200 | [2020–21 European Rugby Champions Cup](2020-21-european-rugby-champions-cup) | 0‡ | – | – | – | 1,200 | **1,200** |
| [2021–22 United Rugby Championship](2021-22-united-rugby-championship) | 11 | **14,138** | 32,411 | 8,559 | [2021–22 European Rugby Champions Cup](2021-22-european-rugby-champions-cup) | 4‡ | **26,134** | 42,067 | 5,000 | 260,046 | **17,336** |
| [2022–23 United Rugby Championship](2022-23-united-rugby-championship) | 11 | **18,773** | 45,436 | 12,441 | [2022–23 European Rugby Champions Cup](2022-23-european-rugby-champions-cup) | 6 | **39,377** | 51,711 | 15,469 | 442,765 | **26,045** |
| [2023–24 United Rugby Championship](2023-24-united-rugby-championship) | 10 | **18,939** | 49,246 | 10,404 | [2023–24 European Rugby Champions Cup](2023-24-european-rugby-champions-cup) | 5 | **46,747** | 82,300 | 18,600 | 423,119 | **28,208** |
| [2024–25 United Rugby Championship](2024-25-united-rugby-championship) | 12 | **26,345** | 80,468 | 12,879 | [2024–25 European Rugby Champions Cup](2024-25-european-rugby-champions-cup) | 5 | **38,923** | 55,627 | 22,400 | 510,754 | **30,044** |
| •Only matches in which there was a reported attendance are included. | |||||||||||
| *Match figures inclusive of both Celtic League and Celtic Cup fixtures. | |||||||||||
| †Match figures inclusive of both Heineken Cup and Challenge Cup fixtures. | |||||||||||
| ‡Match figures include fixtures in which COVID-19 restrictions limited attendance, but exclude fixtures in which no spectators were allowed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. |
Up to date at end of the 2024–25 season.
| Key |
|---|
| * |
Leinster A
LeinsterA Leinster A is the team that represents Leinster in the British & Irish Cup, having won the competition a record two times to date, in the 2012–13 season as well as the 2013–14 season, also becoming the first and only side to ever successfully defend the trophy. Leinster A also compete in the All Ireland Inter-provincial Championship. Pre-professionalism and a formal Celtic league structure, the main Leinster team competed in the AIIPC. Since the advent of professionalism, the provinces have fielded lesser teams to concentrate on the Celtic League. The team is composed of Senior Leinster squad players requiring game time, Development contract & Academy players and, occasionally, AIL players called up from their clubs.
For the 2019–20 season, the Leinster A team was coached by Noel McNamara.
| Competition | Played | Won | Drawn | Lost | % Won | Championships | Total | 76 | 61 | 2 | 13 | % | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| British and Irish Cup | 61 | 46 | 2 | 13 | % | [2012–13](2012-13-british-and-irish-cup), [2013–14](2013-14-british-and-irish-cup) | |||||||||||||
| Celtic Cup | 15 | 15 | 0 | 0 | 100.00% | [2018–19](2018-19-celtic-cup), [2019–20](2019-20-celtic-cup) |
Updated as of 12 April 2021.
Sponsorship
Kit sponsor
From the 1999–2000 season until the 2017–18 season Leinster's kits were supplied by Canterbury of New Zealand having previously been supplied by O'Neills. For the next five seasons starting with the 2018–19 season Leinster's kits were supplied by Adidas. From the 2023–24 season, the kits are now supplied by Castore.
Main sponsor
Leinster's main shirt sponsor was ACC Bank from 1992 until the year 2000. The recently founded Esat Digifone also featured on the back of the jerseys from 1997.
From 2001 to 2007 the main sponsor was Bank of Scotland (Ireland).
Since 2007 Bank of Ireland, the country's oldest banking institution are Leinster's primary sponsors appearing in the front of their shirt, their sleeves, the top back of their shirt and the front right of their shorts. The Bank of Ireland symbol appeared on Leinster's front right and front left collars. On occasion, the team will wear a shirt adorned with the logo of another sponsor due to a promotion run annually by the bank offering up the sponsorship space to an Irish business by way of a competition to win the right to become a sponsor for a day. During the 2013–14 season the contest was won by Dublin-based meat wholesaler Gahan Meats and for 2014–15 the shirt sponsorship winners were accounting software provider Big Red Cloud. The sponsorship prize package is valued at €50,000 and attracts hundreds of companies keen to be shortlisted each year. The left of Leinster's back shorts had Bank of Ireland between 2009 and 2013 where it was replaced by Bank of Ireland's Twitter address right up until 2015 where it was replaced by Laya Healthcare. For about a decade, the team's "official airline"' was Ireland's CityJet.
Management and coaches
| Position | Name | Nationality |
|---|---|---|
| Head coach | Leo Cullen | Ireland |
| Senior Coach | Jacques Nienaber | RSA |
| Assistant coach | Robin McBryde | WAL |
| Backs Coach | Tyler Bleyendaal | NZL |
| Contact Skills Coach | Sean O'Brien | Ireland |
| Kicking Coach & Head Analyst | Emmet Farrell | Ireland |
Current squad
| Leinster Rugby United Rugby Championship squad |
|---|
| (c) denotes the team captain, **Bold** denotes internationally capped players. |
| * denotes players qualified to play for Ireland on residency or dual nationality. |
| ST denotes a short-term signing. |
| Players and their allocated positions from the Leinster Rugby website. |
Academy squad
| Leinster Rugby Academy squad |
|---|
| (c) denotes the team captain, **Bold** denotes internationally capped players. |
| * denotes players qualified to play for Ireland on residency or dual nationality. |
| Players and their allocated positions from the Leinster Rugby website. |
Results versus representative sides
:Scores and results list Leinster's points tally first.
| Date | Opponent | Location | Result | Score | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 17 December 1902 | CAN Canada | Dublin | Won | 13–6 | Match Report | |
| 17 November 1945 | New Zealand New Zealand KiwisRepresentative side consisting of New Zealand soldiers who completed military service in World War II. Much of the squad went on to represent the All Blacks. | Lansdowne Road, Dublin | Drew | 10–10 | [Details of Tour](http://rugbyredefined.com/2013/04/25/2nd-new-zealand-expeditionary-force-rugby-team/) | |
| 27 November 1957 | Australia Australia | Lansdowne Road, Dublin | Lost | 8–10 | [Match Programme](http://i.imgur.com/UfGnEHT.jpg) | |
| [Match Ticket](http://i.imgur.com/695njI3.jpg) | ||||||
| 1 February 1961 | South Africa South Africa | Lansdowne Road, Dublin | Lost | 5–12 | [Match Programme](http://i.imgur.com/ZIyxnlD.jpg) | |
| [Match Report](https://www.world.rugby/match/7760) | ||||||
| 22 January 1964 | New Zealand New Zealand | Lansdowne Road, Dublin | Lost | 8–11 | [Match Programme](http://i.imgur.com/PBpB3nG.jpg) | |
| [Match Report](https://www.world.rugby/match/7845) | ||||||
| 7 December 1966 | Australia Australia | Lansdowne Road, Dublin | Lost | 3–9 | [Match Programme](http://i.imgur.com/0Rcj2Ws.jpg) | |
| 15 November 1972 | New Zealand New Zealand | Lansdowne Road, Dublin | Lost | 9–17 | [Match Programme](http://i.imgur.com/XihjqMU.jpg) | |
| 15 September 1973 | Fiji Fiji | Lansdowne Road, Dublin | Won | 30–9 | [Match Programme](http://i.imgur.com/KimKUsc.jpg) | |
| 13 November 1974 | New Zealand New Zealand | Lansdowne Road, Dublin | Lost | 3–8 | [Match Programme](http://i.imgur.com/HnWUYLT.jpg) | |
| [Match Highlights](http://www.rte.ie/archives/2014/1114/659307-leinster-miss-chance-to-beat-the-all-blacks/) | ||||||
| 21 October 1978 | Argentina Argentina | Lansdowne Road, Dublin | Lost | 13–24 | [Match Report](https://www.world.rugby/match/6615) | |
| 30 December 1979 | Italy Italy | Donnybrook, Dublin | Won | 26–10 | [100 year anniversary](http://i.imgur.com/ZTtcrhY.jpg) | |
| 8 October 1980 | ROU Romania | Donnybrook, Dublin | Won | 24–10 | [Match Programme](http://i.imgur.com/wsouOra.jpg) | |
| [Match Report](https://www.world.rugby/match/6509) | ||||||
| 8 November 1989 | New Zealand New Zealand | Lansdowne Road, Dublin | Lost | 9–36 | [Match Programme](http://i.imgur.com/AZfZOwY.jpg) | |
| [Match Report](https://www.world.rugby/match/6020) | ||||||
| 17 October 1992 | Australia Australia | Lansdowne Road, Dublin | Lost | 11–38 | [Match Programme](http://i.imgur.com/0mokbUE.jpg) | |
| [Match Report](https://www.world.rugby/match/5448) | ||||||
| 12 November 1994 | USA United States | Donnybrook, Dublin | Won | 9–6 | [Match Programme](http://i.imgur.com/i5V4gwo.jpg) | |
| 24 August 1999 | Argentina Argentina | Donnybrook, Dublin | Lost | 22–51 | [Match Report](http://www.leinsterrugby.ie/team/results/match_centre_leinster.php?section=overview&fixid=69545) | |
| 24 August 2019 | Canada Canada | Tim Hortons Field, Hamilton | Won | 38–35 | url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200601113259/https://www.leinsterrugby.ie/report_nostats/match-report-canada-35-leinster-rugby-38/?FixGuid=19CL9178 | date=1 June 2020 }} |
| 18 November 2022 | Chile Chile | Donnybrook Stadium, Dublin | Won | 40–3 | [Match Report](https://www.irishtimes.com/sport/rugby/2022/11/18/leinster-run-in-six-tries-in-convincing-friendly-victory-over-world-cup-bound-chile/) |
Records against European Cup and URC opponents in the professional era (1995–present)
| Against | Played | Won | Drawn | Lost | % Won | Total | 711 | 514 | 21 | 176 | % | *Matches played as part of the Irish Interprovincial Rugby Championship, separate from Celtic League fixtures, are not included in this table. | †Results do not include the cancelled Montpellier vs Leinster 2021-22 Heineken Cup fixture in which Montpellier were awarded a 28–0 victory due to positive Covid tests in the Leinster squad. | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FRA Agen | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 100.00% | |||||||||||||
| ITA Aironi | 4 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 100.00% | |||||||||||||
| ITA Benetton | 29 | 25 | 2 | 2 | % | |||||||||||||
| ENG Bath | 14 | 12 | 0 | 2 | % | |||||||||||||
| FRA Bayonne | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | % | |||||||||||||
| FRA Biarritz | 6 | 4 | 0 | 2 | 66.67% | |||||||||||||
| FRA Bordeaux | 2 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 50.00% | |||||||||||||
| SCO Border Reivers | 10 | 7 | 0 | 3 | 70.00% | |||||||||||||
| FRA Bourgoin | 4 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 75.00% | |||||||||||||
| WAL Bridgend | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 100.00% | |||||||||||||
| ENG Bristol | 3 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 100.00% | |||||||||||||
| FRA Brive | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 100.00% | |||||||||||||
| South Africa Bulls | 7 | 3 | 0 | 4 | % | |||||||||||||
| WAL Cardiff Blues | 38 | 30 | 2 | 6 | % | |||||||||||||
| WAL Cardiff RFC | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | % | |||||||||||||
| FRA Castres | 8 | 6 | 1 | 1 | 75.00% | |||||||||||||
| WAL Celtic Warriors | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0.00% | |||||||||||||
| 4 | 3 | 0 | 1 | % | ||||||||||||||
| FRA Clermont Auvergne | 10 | 6 | 0 | 4 | % | |||||||||||||
| IRE Connacht* | 49 | 40 | 0 | 9 | % | |||||||||||||
| WAL Dragons | 41 | 32 | 0 | 9 | % | |||||||||||||
| WAL Ebbw Vale RFC | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 100.00% | |||||||||||||
| SCO Edinburgh | 44 | 29 | 1 | 14 | % | |||||||||||||
| ENG Exeter Chiefs | 5 | 5 | 0 | 0 | 100.00% | |||||||||||||
| SCO Glasgow Warriors | 58 | 40 | 2 | 16 | % | |||||||||||||
| ENG Gloucester | 4 | 3 | 0 | 1 | % | |||||||||||||
| ENG Harlequins | 5 | 4 | 0 | 1 | % | |||||||||||||
| FRA La Rochelle | 7 | 4 | 0 | 3 | % | |||||||||||||
| RSA Lions | 4 | 3 | 0 | 1 | % | |||||||||||||
| ENG Leicester Tigers | 16 | 11 | 0 | 5 | % | |||||||||||||
| WAL Llanelli RFC | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | % | |||||||||||||
| ENG London Irish | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0.00% | |||||||||||||
| FRA Lyon | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 100.00% | |||||||||||||
| FRA Montpellier† | 8 | 6 | 1 | 1 | % | |||||||||||||
| IRE Munster* | 57 | 37 | 1 | 19 | % | |||||||||||||
| ITA Milan | 3 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 66.67% | |||||||||||||
| ENG Newcastle Falcons | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 100.00% | |||||||||||||
| WAL Newport RFC | 4 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 100.00% | |||||||||||||
| ENG Northampton Saints | 12 | 10 | 0 | 2 | % | |||||||||||||
| WAL Ospreys | 43 | 27 | 3 | 13 | % | |||||||||||||
| FRA Pau | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 100.00% | |||||||||||||
| FRA Perpignan | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0.00% | |||||||||||||
| WAL Pontypridd RFC | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 100% | |||||||||||||
| FRA Racing 92 | 5 | 5 | 0 | 0 | 100.00% | |||||||||||||
| ENG Sale Sharks | 3 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 66.67% | |||||||||||||
| ENG Saracens | 5 | 3 | 0 | 2 | 60.00% | |||||||||||||
| WAL Scarlets | 45 | 30 | 2 | 13 | % | |||||||||||||
| RSA Sharks | 6 | 5 | 0 | 1 | %% | |||||||||||||
| RSA Southern Kings | 3 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 100.00% | |||||||||||||
| FRA Stade Français | 6 | 3 | 0 | 3 | 50.00% | |||||||||||||
| RSA Stormers | 5 | 1 | 1 | 3 | % | |||||||||||||
| WAL Swansea RFC | 3 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 100.00% | |||||||||||||
| FRA Toulon | 4 | 0 | 0 | 4 | 0.00% | |||||||||||||
| FRA Toulouse | 15 | 8 | 0 | 7 | % | |||||||||||||
| IRE Ulster* | 58 | 43 | 3 | 12 | % | |||||||||||||
| ENG Wasps | 11 | 6 | 1 | 4 | % | |||||||||||||
| ITA Zebre | 21 | 21 | 0 | 0 | % |
Correct as of 24 January 2026.
Since the inception of the Celtic league, Leinster have dominated their Irish provincial rivals Ulster, with a 43–12 win–loss record. Similarly, Leinster enjoy a 40–9 win–loss ratio against western province Connacht. Leinster also hold a 37–19 head-to-head advantage against arch-rivals Munster, in one of the most intense derbies in world rugby. Of the United Rugby Championship sides, Munster have the most competitive record against Leinster; all of the league's other sides, excluding South African clubs, have substantial losing records against Leinster. The Welsh side, Celtic Warriors competed in the Celtic league during the first couple of seasons and have a winning record against Leinster of two wins and zero defeats.
Among European teams, of those who have played at least three games against Leinster, only RC Toulon enjoys a winning record. They have a commanding 4–0 head-to-head lead.
Records against Irish Provinces (1946–present)
| Against | Played | Won | Drawn | Lost | % Won | Total | 339 | 221 | 15 | 103 | % | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Connacht Connacht | 109 | 86 | 4 | 19 | % | |||||||||||
| Munster Munster | 115 | 64 | 5 | 46 | % | |||||||||||
| Ulster Ulster | 115 | 71 | 6 | 38 | % |
Correct as of 24 January 2026.
Notable players
*See also *.
Club captains
Professional era only
| Captain | Season(s) | Championships/Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Kurt McQuilkin | 1997–98 | Interprovincial Championship: 1 (1998) |
| Gabriel Fulcher | 1998–99 | — |
| Liam Toland | 1999–00 – 2000–01 | — |
| Reggie Corrigan | 2001–02 – 2004–05 | United Rugby Championship: 1 ([2002](2001-02-celtic-league)) |
| Interprovincial Championship: 1 (2002) | ||
| Brian O'Driscoll | 2005–06 – 2007–08 | United Rugby Championship: 1 ([2008](2007-08-celtic-league)) |
| Leo Cullen | 2008–09 – 2013–14 | European Cup: 3 ([2009](2008-09-heineken-cup), [2011](2010-11-heineken-cup), [2012](2011-12-heineken-cup)) |
| Challenge Cup: 1 ([2013](2012-13-european-challenge-cup)) | ||
| United Rugby Championship: 2 ([2013](2012-13-pro12), [2014](2013-14-pro12)) | ||
| Jamie Heaslip | 2014–15 | — |
| Kevin McLaughlin | 2015 | Retired mid-season due to injury |
| Isa Nacewa | 2015–16 – 2017–18 | European Cup: 1 ([2018](2017-18-european-rugby-champions-cup)) |
| United Rugby Championship: 1 ([2018](2017-18-pro14)) | ||
| Johnny Sexton | 2018–19 – 2022–23 | United Rugby Championship: 3 ([2019](2018-19-pro14), [2020](2019-20-pro14), [2021](2020-21-pro14)) |
| Irish Shield: 2 ([2022](2021-22-united-rugby-championship-urc-regional-shields-pools-tables), [2023](2022-23-united-rugby-championship-urc-regional-shields-pools-tables)) | ||
| James Ryan | ||
| Garry Ringrose | 2023–24 | Irish Shield: 1 ([2024](2023-24-united-rugby-championship-regional-shield-competitions)) |
| Caelan Doris | 2024–25 – | United Rugby Championship: 1 [(2025)](2024-25-united-rugby-championship) |
| Irish Shield: 1 ([2025](2024-25-united-rugby-championship-regional-shield-competitions)) |
British & Irish Lions
The following Leinster players have also represented the British & Irish Lions. Bold indicates tour captain.
| Year | Tour | Series Result | Players |
|---|---|---|---|
| [1888](1888-british-lions-tour-to-new-zealand-and-australia) | New Zealand New Zealand | ||
| AUS Australia | *No Test* | — | |
| [1891](1891-british-lions-tour-to-south-africa) | RSA South Africa | — | |
| [1896](1896-british-lions-tour-to-south-africa) | RSASouth Africa | **Thomas Crean** | |
| Robert Johnston | |||
| [1899](1899-british-lions-tour-to-australia) | AUSAustralia | — | |
| [1903](1903-british-lions-tour-to-south-africa) | RSASouth Africa | — | |
| [1904](1904-british-lions-tour-to-australia-and-new-zealand) | AUSAustralia | ||
| New ZealandNew Zealand | |||
| — | |||
| [1908](1908-british-lions-tour-to-new-zealand-and-australia) | New ZealandNew Zealand | ||
| AUSAustralia | |||
| *No Test* | — | ||
| [1910](1910-british-lions-tour-to-south-africa) | RSASouth Africa | — | |
| [1910](1910-british-lions-tour-to-argentina) | ARG Argentina | — | |
| [1924](1924-british-lions-tour-to-south-africa) | RSASouth Africa | — | |
| [1927](1927-british-lions-tour-to-argentina) | ARGArgentina | — | |
| [1930](1930-british-lions-tour-to-new-zealand-and-australia) | New ZealandNew Zealand | ||
| AUSAustralia | |||
| — | |||
| [1936](1936-british-lions-tour-to-argentina) | ARGArgentina | — | |
| [1938](1938-british-lions-tour-to-south-africa) | RSASouth Africa | George J. Morgan | |
| [1950](1950-british-lions-tour-to-new-zealand-and-australia) | New ZealandNew Zealand | ||
| AUSAustralia | |||
| **Karl Mullen** | |||
| [1955](1955-british-lions-tour-to-south-africa) | RSASouth Africa | Tony O'Reilly | |
| Robin Roe | |||
| [1959](1959-british-lions-tour-to-australia-and-new-zealand) | AUSAustralia | ||
| New ZealandNew Zealand | |||
| Niall Brophy | |||
| **Ronnie Dawson** | |||
| Bill Mulcahy | |||
| Tony O'Reilly (2) | |||
| [1962](1962-british-lions-tour-to-south-africa) | RSASouth Africa | Niall Brophy (2) | |
| Bill Mulcahy (2) | |||
| [1966](1966-british-lions-tour-to-australia-and-new-zealand) | AUSAustralia | ||
| New ZealandNew Zealand | |||
| — | |||
| [1968](1968-british-lions-tour-to-south-africa) | RSASouth Africa | Ronnie Dawson (2) | |
| [1971](1971-british-lions-tour-to-new-zealand) | New ZealandNew Zealand | Mike Hipwell | |
| Sean Lynch | |||
| Fergus Slattery | |||
| [1974](1974-british-lions-tour-to-south-africa) | RSASouth Africa | Tom Grace | |
| John Moloney | |||
| Fergus Slattery (2) | |||
| [1977](1977-british-lions-tour-to-new-zealand) | New ZealandNew Zealand | Willie Duggan | |
| Philip Orr | |||
| [1980](1980-british-lions-tour-to-south-africa) | RSASouth Africa | Ollie Campbell | |
| Rodney O'Donnell | |||
| Philip Orr (2) | |||
| John Robbie | |||
| Tony Ward | |||
| [1983](1983-british-lions-tour-to-new-zealand) | New ZealandNew Zealand | Ollie Campbell (2) | |
| Hugo MacNeill | |||
| [1989](1989-british-lions-tour-to-australia) | AUSAustralia | Paul Dean | |
| Brendan Mullin | |||
| [1993](1993-british-lions-tour-to-new-zealand) | New ZealandNew Zealand | Vince Cunningham | |
| Nick Popplewell | |||
| [1997](1997-british-lions-tour-to-south-africa) | RSASouth Africa | Eric Miller | |
| [2001](2001-british-lions-tour-to-australia) | AUSAustralia | Brian O'Driscoll | |
| Malcolm O'Kelly | |||
| [2005](2005-british-irish-lions-tour-to-new-zealand) | New ZealandNew Zealand | Shane Byrne | |
| Gordon D'Arcy | |||
| Denis Hickie | |||
| Shane Horgan | |||
| **Brian O'Driscoll** (2) | |||
| Malcolm O'Kelly (2) | |||
| [2009](2009-british-irish-lions-tour-to-south-africa) | RSASouth Africa | Gordon D'Arcy (2) | |
| Luke Fitzgerald | |||
| Jamie Heaslip | |||
| Rob Kearney | |||
| Brian O'Driscoll (3) | |||
| [2013](2013-british-irish-lions-tour-to-australia) | AUSAustralia | Cian Healy | |
| Jamie Heaslip (2) | |||
| Rob Kearney (2) | |||
| Seán O'Brien | |||
| Brian O'Driscoll (4) | |||
| Johnny Sexton | |||
| [2017](2017-british-irish-lions-tour-to-new-zealand) | New ZealandNew Zealand | Tadhg Furlong | |
| Robbie Henshaw | |||
| Jack McGrath | |||
| Seán O'Brien (2) | |||
| Johnny Sexton (2) | |||
| [2021](2021-british-irish-lions-tour-to-south-africa) | RSASouth Africa | Jack Conan | |
| Tadhg Furlong (2) | |||
| Robbie Henshaw (2) | |||
| Ronan Kelleher | |||
| Andrew Porter | |||
| [2025](2025-british-irish-lions-tour-to-australia) | AUSAustralia | Tom Clarkson | |
| Jack Conan (2) | |||
| Tadhg Furlong (3) | |||
| Jamison Gibson-Park | |||
| Hugo Keenan | |||
| Ronan Kelleher (2) | |||
| James Lowe | |||
| Joe McCarthy | |||
| Jamie Osborne | |||
| Andrew Porter (2) | |||
| Garry Ringrose | |||
| James Ryan | |||
| Dan Sheehan | |||
| Josh van der Flier |
Notable overseas players
The following is a list of non-Irish qualified representative Leinster players:
| Nation | Player | Season(s) |
|---|---|---|
| ARG Argentina | Felipe Contepomi | 2003/04 – 2008/09 |
| Mariano Galarza | 2010 | |
| Juan Gomez | 2007/08 – 2008/09 | |
| AUS Australia | Shaun Berne | 2009/10 – 2010/11 |
| Adam Byrnes | 2005/06 | |
| Kane Douglas | 2014/15 | |
| Rocky Elsom | 2008/09 | |
| Scott Fardy | 2017/18 – 2020/21 | |
| Owen Finegan* | 2006/07 | |
| Joe Tomane | 2018/19 – 2019/20 | |
| Chris Whitaker* | 2006/07 – 2008/09 | |
| CKI Cook Islands | Stan Wright | 2006/07 – 2010/11 |
| ENG England | Will Green | 2005/06 – 2006/07 |
| FIJ Fiji | Isa Nacewa | 2008/09 – 2012/13; |
| 2015/16 – 2017/18 | ||
| FRA France | Rabah Slimani | 2024/25 – present |
| GEO Georgia | Vakh Abdaladze | 2017/18 – 2022/23 |
| NZL New Zealand | Jordie Barrett | 2025/26 |
| Matt Berquist | 2011/12 | |
| Jimmy Gopperth | 2013/14 – 2014/15 | |
| David Holwell | 2005, 2008 | |
| Charlie Ngatai | 2022/23 – 2023/24 | |
| Ben Te'o† | 2014/15 – 2015/16 | |
| Brad Thorn* | 2012 | |
| RUS Russia | Vasily Artemiev | 2006/07 |
| Adam Byrnes | 2005/06 | |
| SAM Samoa | Michael Alaalatoa | 2021/22 – 2023/24 |
| Fosi Pala'amo | 2006/07 | |
| SCO Scotland | Nathan Hines | 2009/10 – 2010/11 |
| ZAF South Africa | Jason Jenkins | 2022/23 – 2023/24 |
| Zane Kirchner | 2013/14 – 2016/17 | |
| Ollie Le Roux | 2007/08 | |
| RG Snyman* | 2024/25 - Present | |
| CJ van der Linde* | 2008/09 – 2009/10 | |
| Heinke van der Merwe* | 2010/11 – 2012/13 | |
| ** indicates World Cup winners* | ||
| *† Ben Te'o subsequently represented England at international level* |
Head coaches (professional era)
:**Original research sourced from http://www.leinsterrugby.ie/team/results/index.php
| Coach | Season(s) | GP* | W | D | L | Win % | Loss % | Championships / Notes | Total | **1995 – present** | **748** | **531** | **22** | **195** | **%** | **%** | *Games played are inclusive of matches played against touring international sides, but do not include friendlies against club opposition. | †Glennon was the Leinster head coach for two separate spells between 1992 and 1998, but only matches during the professional era are included in this table. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IRE Jim Glennon† | 1995/96 – 1996/97 | 14 | 9 | 0 | 5 | % | % | Interprovincial Championship (1996) | ||||||||||
| WAL | 1997/98 – 1999/00 | 34 | 16 | 0 | 18 | % | % | Interprovincial Championship (1998) | ||||||||||
| AUS | 2000/01 – 2002/03 | 46 | 31 | 3 | 12 | % | % | United Rugby Championship ([2002](2001-02-celtic-league)) | ||||||||||
| Interprovincial Championship (2002) | ||||||||||||||||||
| AUS | 2003/04 | 30 | 14 | 2 | 14 | 46.7% | 46.7% | |||||||||||
| IRE | 2004/05 | 26 | 17 | 1 | 8 | % | % | |||||||||||
| IRE | 2004/05 | 3 | 2 | 0 | 1 | % | % | Interim Coach | ||||||||||
| AUS | 2005/06 – 2009/10 | 134 | 88 | 4 | 42 | % | % | European Cup ([2009](2008-09-heineken-cup)) | ||||||||||
| United Rugby Championship ([2008](2007-08-celtic-league)) | ||||||||||||||||||
| NZL | 2010/11 – 2012/13 | 99 | 77 | 3 | 19 | % | % | European Cup ([2011](2010-11-heineken-cup), [2012](2011-12-heineken-cup)) | ||||||||||
| European Challenge Cup ([2013](2012-13-european-challenge-cup)) | ||||||||||||||||||
| United Rugby Championship ([2013](2012-13-pro12)) | ||||||||||||||||||
| AUS | 2013/14 – 2014/15 | 61 | 40 | 5 | 16 | % | % | United Rugby Championship ([2014](2013-14-pro12)) | ||||||||||
| IRE | 2015/16 – present | 302 | 238 | 4 | 60 | % | % | European Cup ([2018](2017-18-european-rugby-champions-cup)) | ||||||||||
| United Rugby Championship ([2018](2017-18-pro14), [2019](2018-19-pro14), [2020](2019-20-pro14), [2021](2020-21-pro14), [2025](2024-25-united-rugby-championship)) | ||||||||||||||||||
| United Rugby Championship Coach of the year ([2018](2017-18-pro12), [2022](2021-22-united-rugby-championship)) | ||||||||||||||||||
| Irish Shield ([2022](2021-22-united-rugby-championship-urc-regional-shields-pools-tables), [2023](2022-23-united-rugby-championship-urc-regional-shields-pools-tables), [2024](2023-24-united-rugby-championship-urc-regional-shields-pools-tables), [2025](2024-25-united-rugby-championship-urc-regional-shields-pools-tables)) |
Personnel honours and records
(correct as of 24 January 2026)
Bold indicates active player
| Most tries | Rank | Player | Tries |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Shane Horgan | 69 | |
| 2 | **James Lowe** | 68 | |
| 3 | Brian O'Driscoll | 61 | |
| 4 | Gordon D'Arcy | 60 | |
| 5 | Denis Hickie | 56 | |
| 6 | Dave Kearney | 55 | |
| **Luke McGrath** | |||
| 8 | **Jordan Larmour** | 49 | |
| **Dan Sheehan** | |||
| 10 | Isa Nacewa | 47 |
| Most appearances | Rank | Player | Apps |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Cian Healy | 291 | |
| 2 | Devin Toner | 280 | |
| 3 | Gordon D'Arcy | 257 | |
| 4 | **Luke McGrath** | 246 | |
| 5 | Jamie Heaslip | 229 | |
| Rhys Ruddock | |||
| 7 | Leo Cullen | 219 | |
| Rob Kearney | |||
| 9 | Seán Cronin | 206 | |
| 10 | Shane Jennings | 205 |
| Most points | Rank | Player | Points |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Johnny Sexton | 1,646 | |
| 2 | Felipe Contepomi | 1,225 | |
| 3 | Ross Byrne | 1,196 | |
| 4 | Ian Madigan | 827 | |
| 5 | Isa Nacewa | 706 | |
| 6 | Brian O'Meara | 553 | |
| 7 | Fergus McFadden | 444 | |
| 8 | **Harry Byrne** | 392 | |
| 9 | Alan McGowan | 372 | |
| 10 | Jimmy Gopperth | 352 |
[[World Rugby Player of the Year]]
Inaugurated 2001
| Season | Nominated | Winner | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2001 | Brian O'Driscoll | — | ||||||||
| 2002 | Brian O'Driscoll (2) | — | ||||||||
| 2004 | Gordon D'Arcy | — | ||||||||
| 2007 | Felipe Contepomi | — | ||||||||
| 2009 | Jamie Heaslip, Brian O'Driscoll (3) | — | ||||||||
| 2014 | Johnny Sexton | — | ||||||||
| 2016 | Jamie Heaslip (2) | — | ||||||||
| 2018 | Johnny Sexton (2) | **Johnny Sexton** | ||||||||
| 2022 | title=Johnny Sexton and Josh van der Flier nominated for World Rugby Player of the Year | url=https://www.the42.ie/andy-farrell-coach-of-the-year-5919220-Nov2022/ | website=the42 | date=14 November 2022 | access-date=14 November 2022}} | title=Ireland's Josh van der Flier named World Rugby men's player of the year | url=https://www.the42.ie/world-rugby-awards-2022-5925213-Nov2022/ | website=the42 | date=20 November 2022 | access-date=20 November 2022}} |
| 2024 | Caelan Doris | — |
World Rugby Breakthrough Player of the Year
Inaugurated 2015
Nominated (3 nominees per year)
| Season | Nominated | Winner |
|---|---|---|
| 2018 | Jordan Larmour | — |
| 2022 | Dan Sheehan | — |
World Rugby Junior Player of the Year
Inaugurated 2008 - awarded to World Rugby Under 20 Championship player of the tournament
| Season | Nominated | Winner |
|---|---|---|
| 2014 | Garry Ringrose | — |
| 2016 | Max Deegan | **Max Deegan** |
Europe
All players listed below are Irish unless otherwise noted.
ERC European Dream Team
The following Leinster players were selected in the ERC European Dream Team, an all-time dream team of Heineken Cup players over the first 15 years of professional European rugby. (1995–2010). Both O'Driscoll and Elsom were part of the 2008–09 Heineken Cup winning team.
| Season(s) | Player | Position |
|---|---|---|
| 2008–2009 | AUS Rocky Elsom* | Flanker |
| 1999–2014 | Brian O'Driscoll | Centre |
** Elsom had the fewest Heineken Cup appearances in the team and was the only member born outside of Europe*
European Player of the Year
Awarded annually since 2010-11
| Season | Nominated | Winner |
|---|---|---|
| [2010–11](2010-11-heineken-cup) | Seán O'Brien, Jamie Heaslip, FIJ Isa Nacewa | **Seán O'Brien** |
| [2011–12](2011-12-heineken-cup) | Rob Kearney, Johnny Sexton | **Rob Kearney** |
| [2012–13](2012-13-heineken-cup) | Jamie Heaslip (2) | — |
| [2013–14](2013-14-heineken-cup) | — | — |
| [2014–15](2014-15-european-rugby-champions-cup) | Jamie Heaslip (3) | — |
| [2015–16](2015-16-european-rugby-champions-cup) | — | — |
| [2016–17](2016-17-european-rugby-champions-cup) | Garry Ringrose | — |
| [2017–18](2017-18-european-rugby-champions-cup) | AUS Scott Fardy, Tadhg Furlong, Johnny Sexton (2) | — |
| [2018–19](2018-19-european-rugby-champions-cup) | Seán Cronin, Tadhg Furlong (2), Garry Ringrose (2) | — |
| [2019–20](2019-20-european-rugby-champions-cup) | Tadhg Furlong (3), Jordan Larmour, Garry Ringrose (3) | — |
| [2020–21](2020-21-european-rugby-champions-cup) | — | — |
| [2021–22](2021-22-european-rugby-champions-cup) | Caelan Doris, Josh van der Flier, James Lowe | **Josh van der Flier** |
| [2022–23](2022-23-european-rugby-champions-cup) | Caelan Doris (2), Josh van der Flier (2), Garry Ringrose (4), Jamie Osborne | — |
| [2023–24](2023-24-european-rugby-champions-cup) | Caelan Doris (3), Jamison Gibson-Park, James Lowe (2), Dan Sheehan | — |
| [2024–25](2024-25-european-rugby-champions-cup) | Caelan Doris (4), Jamison Gibson-Park (2), Jordie Barrett | — |
European Cup Team of the Year
The following Leinster players were selected on the European Cup team of the year.
*All players listed below are Irish unless otherwise noted. Inaugurated 2020-21. *
| Season | Irish players | Foreign players |
|---|---|---|
| [2020–21](2020-21-european-rugby-champions-cup) | Rónan Kelleher, Josh van der Flier | — |
| [2021–22](2021-22-european-rugby-champions-cup) | Rónan Kelleher (2), Tadhg Furlong, Ross Molony, Josh van der Flier (2), Johnny Sexton, James Lowe, Garry Ringrose, Hugo Keenan | — |
| [2023–24](2023-24-european-rugby-champions-cup) | Joe McCarthy, Caelan Doris, James Lowe (2) | — |
Rugby Champions Cup player records
| Most tries | Rank | Player | Tries |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Brian O'Driscoll | 33 | |
| 2 | **James Lowe** | 31 | |
| 3 | Shane Horgan | 27 | |
| 4 | Gordon D'Arcy | 26 | |
| 5 | Denis Hickie | 19 |
| Most appearances | Rank | Player | Apps |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Cian Healy | 114 | |
| 2 | Gordon D'Arcy | 104 | |
| 3 | Brian O'Driscoll | 87 | |
| Shane Horgan | 87 | ||
| 5 | Jamie Heaslip | 85 |
| Most points | Rank | Player | Points |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Johnny Sexton | 728 | |
| 2 | Ross Byrne | 376 | |
| 3 | Felipe Contepomi | 352 | |
| 4 | Alan McGowan | 225 | |
| 5 | Brian O'Meara | 192 |
Statistics do not include European Rugby Challenge Cup matches. Updated as of 29 May 2025.
Rugby Champions Cup Individual Season Records
| Top Try Scorer | Season | Player | Tries |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2004–05 | Shane Horgan | 8 | |
| 2008–09 | Brian O'Driscoll | 5 | |
| 2016–17 | Isa Nacewa | 7 | |
| 2018–19 | Seán Cronin | 6 | |
| 2021–22 | James Lowe | 10 | |
| 2022–23 | Josh van der Flier | 6 | |
| 2023–24 | James Lowe | 6 |
| Top Point Scorer | Season | Player | Points |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2005–06 | Felipe Contepomi | 129 | |
| 2010–11 | Johnny Sexton | 138 | |
| 2011–12 | Johnny Sexton (2) | 103 | |
| 2014–15 | Ian Madigan | 113 | |
| 2021–22 | Johnny Sexton (3) | 83 |
The players listed above were the top try-scorers and points-scorers for the European Rugby Champions Cup in a given season.
United Rugby Championship
*All players listed below are Irish unless otherwise noted. Inaugurated 2006-07. *
United Rugby Championship Team of the Year
The following Leinster players were selected on the Pro 14/URC team of the year.
| Season | Irish players | Foreign players |
|---|---|---|
| [2006–07](2006-07-celtic-league) | Jamie Heaslip, Gordon D'Arcy, Denis Hickie | ARG Felipe Contepomi |
| [2007–08](2007-08-celtic-league) | Jamie Heaslip (2), Leo Cullen, Bernard Jackman, Malcolm O'Kelly | ARG Felipe Contepomi (2), RSA Ollie Le Roux, COK Stan Wright |
| [2008–09](2008-09-celtic-league) | Jamie Heaslip (3), Brian O'Driscoll | AUS Rocky Elsom |
| [2009–10](2009-10-celtic-league) | Jamie Heaslip (4), Brian O'Driscoll (2), Leo Cullen (2) | — |
| [2010–11](2010-11-celtic-league) | Jamie Heaslip (5), Richardt Strauss, Seán O'Brien, Mike Ross | FIJ Isa Nacewa |
| [2011–12](2011-12-pro12) | Richardt Strauss (2) | FIJ Isa Nacewa (2) |
| [2012–13](2012-13-pro12) | Ian Madigan | — |
| [2013–14](2013-14-pro12) | Seán Cronin, Jordi Murphy, Rhys Ruddock | — |
| [2014–15](2014-15-pro12) | — | — |
| [2015–16](2015-16-pro12) | Josh van der Flier | FIJ Isa Nacewa (3), NZL Ben Te'o |
| [2016–17](2016-17-pro12) | Jack Conan, Dan Leavy | — |
| [2017–18](2017-18-pro14) | Andrew Porter, Jack Conan (2), Jordan Larmour | AUS Scott Fardy, NZL James Lowe |
| [2018–19](2018-19-pro14) | — | AUS Scott Fardy (2) |
| [2019–20](2019-20-pro14) | Will Connors, Max Deegan | AUS Scott Fardy (3) |
| [2020–21](2020-21-pro14) | Michael Bent, Dave Kearney, Scott Penny | — |
| [2021–22](2021-22-united-rugby-championship) | Ross Byrne | — |
| [2022–23](2022-23-united-rugby-championship) | Ross Byrne (2), Scott Penny (2), Dan Sheehan | — |
| [2023–24](2023-24-united-rugby-championship) | Jordan Larmour (2) | — |
| [2024–25](2024-25-united-rugby-championship) | Jamie Osbourne | RSA RG Snyman |
United Rugby Championship Player Records
| Category | Player | Total |
|---|---|---|
| Tries | Dave Kearney | 48 |
| Appearances | Devin Toner | 191 |
| Points | Johnny Sexton | 887 |
| Successful Conversions & Penalties | Ross Byrne | 343 |
Updated 14 June 2025
United Rugby Championship Golden Boot
The Golden Boot is awarded to the kicker who has successfully converted the highest percentage of place kicks during the 22-week regular Pro12 season. To be eligible, the player must have taken at least 20 kicks at goal. The prize has been awarded annually since 2012. (Percentage success rate in brackets)
| Season | Winner | Percentage | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2011-12 Pro12 | 2011-12 | Johnny Sexton | 90% |
| 2012-13 Pro12 | 2012-13 | Ian Madigan | 87% |
| 2014-15 Pro12 | 2014-15 | Ian Madigan | 87% |
United Rugby Championship Individual Awards
| Category | Player | Season | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Top Try Scorer | Shane Horgan, Girvan Dempsey (Joint) | [2001–02](2001-02-celtic-league) | 7 |
| Jamie Heaslip (Joint) | [2006–07](2006-07-celtic-league) | 7 | |
| Barry Daly | [2017–18](2017-18-pro14) | 12 | |
| Scott Penny (Joint) | [2020–21](2020-21-pro14) | 9 | |
| Top Point Scorer | Felipe Contepomi | [2005-06](2005-06-celtic-league) | 287 |
| Felipe Contepomi (2) (Joint) | [2008-09](2008-09-celtic-league) | 161 | |
| Ian Madigan | [2012–13](2012-13-pro12) | 186 | |
| Players' Players of the Year | Dan Sheehan | [2022-23](2022-23-united-rugby-championship) | *N/A* |
| RG Snyman | [2024-25](2024-25-united-rugby-championship) | *N/A* | |
| Young Player of the Year | Joey Carbery | [2016–17](2016-17-pro14) | *N/A* |
| Jordan Larmour | [2017–18](2017-18-pro14) | *N/A* | |
| Caelan Doris | [2019–20](2019-20-pro14) | *N/A* | |
| Scott Penny | [2020–21](2020-21-pro14) | *N/A* | |
| Coach of the Year | Leo Cullen | [2017–18](2017-18-pro14) | *N/A* |
| Leo Cullen (2) | [2021–22](2021-22-united-rugby-championship) | *N/A* |
United Rugby Championship Team Awards
- 2010–11: Fairplay Award
- 2011–12: Fairplay Award
End-of-season club awards
| Season | Player of the Year | Young Player of the Year | Supporters' Player of the Year | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [2006–07](2006-07-leinster-rugby-season) | Gordon D'Arcy | Luke Fitzgerald, Felix Jones | – | ||||||||
| [2007–08](2007-08-leinster-rugby-season) | Bernard Jackman | Luke Fitzgerald | Keith Gleeson | ||||||||
| [2008–09](2008-09-leinster-rugby-season) | Rocky Elsom | Cian Healy | Felipe Contepomi | ||||||||
| [2009–10](2009-10-leinster-rugby-season) | Jamie Heaslip | Rhys Ruddock | Shane Jennings | ||||||||
| [2010–11](2010-11-leinster-rugby-season) | Isa Nacewa | Eoin O'Malley | Shane Horgan | ||||||||
| [2011–12](2011-12-leinster-rugby-season) | Rob Kearney | Ian Madigan | – | ||||||||
| 2012–13 | Ian Madigan | Jordi Murphy | – | ||||||||
| 2013–14 | Jack McGrath | Marty Moore | – | ||||||||
| 2014–15 | Seán Cronin | Jack Conan, Peter Dooley | – | ||||||||
| 2015–16 | Ben Te'o | Josh Van Der Flier | – | ||||||||
| 2016–17 | Luke McGrath | Joey Carbery | Isa Nacewa | ||||||||
| 2017–18 | Dan Leavy | James Ryan | Dan Leavy | ||||||||
| 2018–19 | James Ryan | Max Deegan | Seán Cronin | ||||||||
| 2019–20 | Garry Ringrose | Caelan Doris | – | ||||||||
| title=END OF SEASON AWARD WINNERS ANNOUNCED | url=https://www.leinsterrugby.ie/end-of-season-award-winners-announced/ | website=Leinster rugby | date=9 July 2021 | access-date=9 July 2021 | last1=Buachalla | first1=Marcus Ó. }} | Robbie Henshaw | Ronan Kelleher | Josh van der Flier | ||
| title=2022 BANK OF IRELAND LEINSTER RUGBY AWARDS BALL | url=https://www.leinsterrugby.ie/2022-bank-of-ireland-leinster-rugby-awards/ | website=Leinster rugby | date=5 June 2022 | access-date=5 June 2022 | author1=Client | archive-date=5 June 2022 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220605190019/https://www.leinsterrugby.ie/2022-bank-of-ireland-leinster-rugby-awards/ | url-status=dead }} | Josh van der Flier | Dan Sheehan | Ciarán Frawley |
| title=2023 BANK OF IRELAND AWARDS BALL | url=https://www.irishrugby.ie/2023/05/29/doris-and-murphy-honoured-as-leinsters-best-players-for-2022-23/ | website=irishrugby.ie | date=29 May 2023 | access-date=11 November 2023}} | Caelan Doris | Scott Penny | Garry Ringrose | ||||
| title= Gibson-Park And Dalton Chosen As Leinster Players Of The Year | url=https://www.irishrugby.ie/2023/05/29/doris-and-murphy-honoured-as-leinsters-best-players-for-2022-23/ | website=irishrugby.ie | date=2 June 2024 | access-date=4 June 2024}} | Jamison Gibson-Park | Joe McCarthy | Joe McCarthy | ||||
| title=RG Snyman and Linda Djougang named Leinster Players of the Year | newspaper=The Irish Times | url=https://www.irishtimes.com/sport/2025/05/07/rg-snyman-and-linda-djougang-named-leinster-players-of-the-year/}} | RG Snyman | Sam Prendergast | RG Snyman |
Notes
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