Leicester v Leinster: Tigers captain Martin Corry will want to repeat last week's Premiership title victory over London Irish while his Leinster counterpart Leo Cullen is out to spoil Leicester's potential double
Fans from the Midlands swarm through the streets of the capital of Scotland, having seen their side progress on penalty kicks in the capital of Wales
The side from Ireland have the better start, earning a scrum from kick-off, and making progress through the running of Gordon D'arcy and the kicking of Chris Whitaker and Johnny Sexton
Whitaker's high balls keep the pressure on Leicester's backs but it is the Tigers who have the game's first chance to score only for Julien Dupuy to pull his penalty kick
Given the ball and too much space, Brian O'Driscoll sends Leinster in to the lead with a pure strike right through the ball, right through the posts, seemingly without even thinking about it
Dupuy draws Leicester level with a penalty after Dan Hipkiss breaks through the Leinster defence only for Sexton to send the Irish side ahead with a stunning drop-goal from the halfway line
Sexton and Dupuy exchange penalties before Leinster prop Stan Wright hits the bin for a professional foul and Tigers make the spare man tell as James Woods crosses the line after good work from Hipkiss and Ayoola Erinle
Leinster, dominating much of the first-half with Whitaker, Sexton and O'Driscoll on fire, find themselves 13-9 down to Leicester's resilience and extra man at the break
Leicester begin the second-half taking the game to the Irish side, still missing Wright, and the pressure tells when Cian Healy strays offside at the ruck to kick the ball away
Healy's error gives Dupuy the chance to get his third penalty score of the day, which the Frenchman, try-scoring hero of the quarter-finals, duly accepts
Leinster respond immediately through Rocky Elsom's, then O'Driscoll's, good running which sets up Jamie Heaslip to skid over the line and Sexton to convert, bringing the score to 16-16
Leinster are as good as reduced a man again as O'Driscoll sustains a shoulder injury and is put out of harm's way on the left but he recovers to run deep in to Leicester territory and earn his side a penalty
Sexton gets the three points to put the Blues ahead, 19-16, but his kick barely makes it over the bar, giving Leinster eight minutes to hold on for their first European trophy
And hang on, they do. Leinster's first European final, their first trophy, all the more pleasurable for Cullen, part of the losing Leicester final side of two years ago, and man-of-the-match Rocky Elsom
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