Munster recorded their first win at Welford Road in 11 years with a 25-16 success over Leicester Tigers in the European Champions Cup on Sunday evening.
Mathew Tait had scored an early try for Tigers but their ill-discipline was punished by Ian Keatley, who kicked six penalties to keep the scoreboard ticking.
CJ Stander also went over from close range for Munster, who are now firmly in control of Pool 4 after back-to-back wins against the Tigers.
George Ford opened the scoring in just the second minute with a penalty but the Tigers were soon penalised at the other end and Keatley levelled from the tee.
A well-worked training ground move from a Tigers' lineout then saw Graham Kitchener send Tait through a big hole in the Munster defence for his first try in 36 matches for Leicester.
Ford added the extras but the home side's poor discipline allowed Munster back into the game with three easy penalties for Keatley making the score 12-10 at half-time.
Leicester's constant infringements were eventually punished by referee Mathieu Raynal as Dan Cole, after conceding his fifth penalty, was shown a yellow card.
Munster made their numerical advantage tell with a perfect start to the second half, as Peter O'Mahony stole a Tigers line-out and released Conor Murray to storm towards the line.
The Munster scrum-half was eventually brought down inches short of the line but Stander was on hand to pick and go and get the visitors' first try of the evening.
Leicester needed a spark and it came from winger Jonny May as he collected a loose ball in his own 22 and charged up field before kicking ahead to put the Tigers deep in Munster territory.
A penalty for the Tigers was soon sent over by Ford to bring the them back within six points.
Munster replacement John Ryan was then show a yellow card for an infringement at the ruck 10 metres from the Irish side's line and Ford made it 19-16 from the kicking tee.
Keatley missed his first kick of the evening with 64 minutes on the clock but made no mistake eight minutes later with Ryan back on the field, and the fly-half knocked over a sixth penalty in the dying moments to deny Tigers a crucial losing bonus point.