It may be a decade since Ulster Rugby became the first Irish side to win the HeinekenCup, but there is plenty of belief in the Class of 2009 that a repeat performance is not beyond the realms of possibility.
Back then Ulster lost one and drew one of their opening two fixtures before going on to European glory by beating Colomiers 21-6 in Dublin but with defending champions Leinster and double winners Munster both going down in Round 1 defeats to English opposition, it was left to Ulster to keep the Irish flag flying as they downed fellow former winners Bath Rugby 26-12 at Ravenhill. Now they will be out to keep that momentum rolling with a trip to Murrayfield to take on Edinburgh but they will be wary of a Scottish team wounded by the size of their 31-7 defeat by Stade Français Paris.
"We have had a good start but we have to keep our feet on the ground because Edinburgh is a place where we always have a tight game," Irish Grand Slam hero Stephen Ferris.
"They beat us at Ravenhill earlier in the season and the result there always seems to turn on a bounce of the ball or a kick from Chris Paterson. They are a dangerous side and we will need to close them down and play some more rugby like we did against Bath. It was a fantastic start for us and. we just need to keep the ball rolling now. Getting the result was the most important thing.
"We are playing some good stuff and teams are starting to respect us more. I don't think we were the underdogs going into the game. I saw in the paper that the bookies had us at 100/1 to win the Heineken Cup. That really annoyed me. We wanted to prove we are a team on the up and I think we did that. One of our goals is to get out of the group this season.
"Even though Edinburgh beat us at Ravenhill, we can take some encouragement from that game because we created a lot of chances. This is a different competition and people up their games for the Heineken Cup.
"I think it's a pretty even group and every side is going to be difficult to beat at home. We are riding on some momentum at the moment and we will look to take that to Edinburgh. But we have to stay on an even keel and not get ahead of ourselves - we have won one game, not the Heineken Cup."
David Humphreys, captain when Ulster lifted the Heineken Cup at Lansdowne Road back in 1999, is now the province's Operations Director and would have been delighted with the opening win. And current acting captain Paddy Wallace added:
"We need to win our home games and we have started on the right note. But we aren't out of our group yet and there is a lot of hard work ahead this week before going to Edinburgh."