Bell scores superb try as Ulster hold off Cardiff
BBC | 01.02.2026 04:34
United Rugby Championship
Ulster (14) 21
Tries: Wilson, Bell, Irvine Cons: Murphy 3
Cardiff (0) 14
Tries: Mulder, Emmanuel Cons: Sheedy 2
Australia prop Angus Bell scored a superb solo try as Ulster defeated Cardiff 21-14 in the United Rugby Championship.
After early pressure, Scott Wilson's try was converted by Jack Murphy before Bell lit up a bitterly cold night at the Affidea Stadium.
Bell picked up the ball on the edge of the 22, beat two Cardiff players and sidestepped full-back Cam Winnett on his way to the tryline.
Murphy converted again and Richie Murphy's side led 14-0 at the interval.
Ulster had thrown away leads of 19 and 14 points in their two previous meetings with Cardiff, most recently in the Challenge Cup in December, and Yohan Mulder's try in the second half gave the visitors hope.
Charlie Irvine grabbed Ulster's try with 15 minutes remaining, but Cardiff immediately responded through Steff Emanuel as the game opened up.
However, after resisting late Cardiff pressure, the hosts held on to win and they overtake Cardiff in the URC table to move up to fourth place, eight points off leaders Glasgow Warriors with a game in hand.
Both sides were missing several players before the Six Nations but it was Ulster who made a fast start in Belfast.
Murphy's side were camped in the Cardiff 22 and got the reward for their early pressure.
Prop Wilson crashed over under the posts in the 12th minute after some good work by David McCann to charge into the 22, and Jack Murphy added the conversion.
Not to be outdone, Australian prop Bell, who is on a deal with Ulster until the end of the season from the Waratahs, scored the try of the night in the 19th minute when he picked the ball on the 22, broke through two tackles, sat down Winnett with a superb sidestep and raced over the line.
Murphy again added the extras, and Bell's try was so good it left Ulster back row Marcus Rea with his hands on his head, in disbelief in what he had just seen.
Cardiff, who overturned a 14-point deficit with 15 minutes left in December's Challenge Cup game in Wales, responded well and almost got over through prop Rhys Barrett after a tap-and-go, but Wilson got under the ball to stop it from being grounded.
The visitors threatened eight minutes after the restart when hooker Evan Lloyd made several metres, but the in-form Zac Ward, who missed out on Ireland selection, claimed Callum Sheedy's kick under pressure and the chance was lost.
But they made their pressure count in the 54th minute when the forward hammered the Ulster line and scrum-half Yohan Mulder raced over the line.
The stop-start nature of the game did not help either side as temperatures fell and the rain increased, and replacement Dave Shanahan somehow dropped the ball with the tryline gaping from Matthew Dalton's offload.
Ulster got their third try moments later when Irvine, a part-time medical student, powered over the line, which Murphy converted, but Cardiff immediately responded when Emanuel latched on to Sheedy's pass and raced clear, and the fly-half converted.
Cardiff threw phase after phase at the Ulster line, but James Hume produced a big turnover with five minutes remaining.
Ulster then went up the other end and were held up over the line, but the win not only moves them up the table but preserves their unbeaten home record this season.
Ulster: E McIlroy; W Kok; J Hume, Ben Carson; Z Ward; J Murphy, C McKee; A Bell, R Herring, S Wilson; I Henderson (capt), C Irvine, M Dalton, M Rea, D McCann.
Replacements: J McCormick, S Crean, B O'Connor, H Sheridan, L McLoughlin, D Shanahan, J Flannery, B Moxham.
Cardiff: C Winnett; I Lloyd; H Millard, S Emanuel; T Bowen; C Sheedy, Johan Mulder; R Barratt, E Lloyd, J Sebastian; J McNally (capt), G Nott; A Lawrence, D Thomas, T Basham.
Replacements: D Hughes, D Southworth, J Cowell, R Thornton, L de la Rua, A Davies, E Evans, L Halfpenny.
Referee: Hollie Davidson