“We punched them in the face.”
Alex Mitchell mentioned violence after winning 80 minutes of European rugby at Aviva Stadium in 80 minutes, which may be surprising.
Yet it was an emotional reflection that matched the Northampton Saints’ performance that made Leinster’s bleeding in his investment Champions League semifinals more than just bleeding.
In the same phase of last year's defeat, the dominant Premier League champion was revenge in the same phase of defeat and confident in the context of external skepticism, producing a knockout blow in the knockout to end Leinster's pursuit of the fifth star on Jersey - an amazing 37-34 victory.
Saints and England text message Mitchell told RTE: "There are several experts saying they will win 20-30 and the Saints won't score."
“We showed up today, and this time it was a little fearless. Last year, we were waiting to see what Leinster was going to do.
"We showed up today and we slammed their face for the first 20 minutes. They didn't really expect it. Thanks to the boys, we got the results."
Leinster gained fans' confidence for the fourth time in a row, and experts also have a good foundation.
Ireland has thrown the ball at Dublin's zealous home without admitting a knockout victory and Manchester United rugby champions Glasgow Warriors.
However, the Saints did not read the script.
England Wing Tommy Freeman has made his record widening to seven attempts and further strengthened his choice of British and Irish lions, while the Henry Pollock star continues to rise after his scorching attempts.
The landlord reacted after halftime, but to some extent, a little lack of clinical advantage to restore the lead, while the Saints were able to deny Leinster's blitz defense again as James Ramm scored his fifth attempt.
Irish Wing James Lowe dragged his side within three to establish an exciting ending, but Northampton camped on his own line with his last GASP lapse before kick-off death, but before kick-off death.
Rugby Phil Dowson's Saints Director was a member of the club's last match to overcome Leinster in 2013, but the planners in the front row planned their latest wins perhaps the greatest of his coaching career.
"A lot of people write us down, we know we are weak, but the beliefs within the organization are excellent," Dowson told BBC Radio Northampton.
"I don't want to think about what my blood pressure does at the end, but the last defensive suit posted a lot about our group, about the lad's attack and its impact. We got the turnover, killed the clock and prompted the wild scene in the coach box.
"We have had experience in participating in news defense before. We have practiced the competition and we have revisited these principles. We can spend more opportunities, but we have spent enough opportunities to get into the scoring table."