London - Leicester has secured a place in the Heineken Cup quarter-finals with a 62-15 victory over Benetton Treviso at Welford Road.
The Tigers rattled up nine tries, with Jordan Crane scoring a hat-trick and Scott Hamilton adding a brace, while Toby Flood converted seven plus a penalty for a 17-point haul.
Brothers Manu and Alesana Tuilagi, Thomas Waldrom and replacement Steve Mafi also crossed, while the visitors spared their blushes with two second-half tries through Brendan Williams and Tobias Botes.
But Tigers were unable earn a vital home draw in the last eight after finishing level on points with Perpignan in Pool Five, the French side having the better head-to-head record, meaning Richard Cockerill's side must travel to Leinster in April.
They did not hit top gear against a limited Treviso outfit, but last weekend's victory over the Scarlets in Llanelli had set them up for a last-eight spot, an opportunity Leicester did not spurn.
The Italian champions went ahead after just 32 seconds through fly-half Kristopher Burton's drop-goal, giving Leicester an immediate reminder that Treviso did not intend to merely make up the numbers.
Flood hauled Leicester level through a ninth-minute penalty, and Treviso showed the first sign of cracking when Tigers resorted to their traditional forward power.
Referee Romain Poite had no hesitation in sin-binning Treviso prop Lorenzo Cittadini when he tackled Crane from an offside position, and alarm bells were ringing throughout the Italian camp.
Crane claimed a 17th-minute pushover try, and although Flood could not convert, Leicester were up and running, 8-3 in front.
Treviso, temporarily a man down, could not cope with escalating Tigers territorial dominance, and they conceded a second try when Crane blasted through in midfield to set up attacking options either side of him.
Hamilton proved the beneficiary, gliding over on an outside angle for a well-worked score that Flood converted, putting Leicester 15-3 in front after 25 minutes.
Treviso just had no answer, and after they lost a second player to the sin-bin - flanker Valerio Bernabo - Leicester's ruthless pack prospered again as Crane lunged over from five metres.
Another Flood conversion left Treviso 19 points adrift - and Tigers one try from a bonus point - before a heated exchange involving both packs resulted in Poite warning Louis Deacon and Cittadini.
Leicester now had momentum, and the all-important fourth try was sealed as half-time approached.
Treviso could not handle Leicester's array of off-the-ball runners and Alesana Tuilagi touched down, with Flood's conversion taking Tigers 26 points clear at the interval.
The one-way traffic continued as Crane added his third touchdown, then Waldrom crossed - Flood converting both tries - before Treviso managed a consolation try by full-back Williams.
Treviso substitute Tobias Botes added another score for the visitors, but Leicester had long since entered auto-pilot mode, their job emphatically done in terms of qualification which was underlined through further touchdowns from Manu Tuilagi and Mafi.
The Tigers rattled up nine tries, with Jordan Crane scoring a hat-trick and Scott Hamilton adding a brace, while Toby Flood converted seven plus a penalty for a 17-point haul.
Brothers Manu and Alesana Tuilagi, Thomas Waldrom and replacement Steve Mafi also crossed, while the visitors spared their blushes with two second-half tries through Brendan Williams and Tobias Botes.
But Tigers were unable earn a vital home draw in the last eight after finishing level on points with Perpignan in Pool Five, the French side having the better head-to-head record, meaning Richard Cockerill's side must travel to Leinster in April.
They did not hit top gear against a limited Treviso outfit, but last weekend's victory over the Scarlets in Llanelli had set them up for a last-eight spot, an opportunity Leicester did not spurn.
The Italian champions went ahead after just 32 seconds through fly-half Kristopher Burton's drop-goal, giving Leicester an immediate reminder that Treviso did not intend to merely make up the numbers.
Flood hauled Leicester level through a ninth-minute penalty, and Treviso showed the first sign of cracking when Tigers resorted to their traditional forward power.
Referee Romain Poite had no hesitation in sin-binning Treviso prop Lorenzo Cittadini when he tackled Crane from an offside position, and alarm bells were ringing throughout the Italian camp.
Crane claimed a 17th-minute pushover try, and although Flood could not convert, Leicester were up and running, 8-3 in front.
Treviso, temporarily a man down, could not cope with escalating Tigers territorial dominance, and they conceded a second try when Crane blasted through in midfield to set up attacking options either side of him.
Hamilton proved the beneficiary, gliding over on an outside angle for a well-worked score that Flood converted, putting Leicester 15-3 in front after 25 minutes.
Treviso just had no answer, and after they lost a second player to the sin-bin - flanker Valerio Bernabo - Leicester's ruthless pack prospered again as Crane lunged over from five metres.
Another Flood conversion left Treviso 19 points adrift - and Tigers one try from a bonus point - before a heated exchange involving both packs resulted in Poite warning Louis Deacon and Cittadini.
Leicester now had momentum, and the all-important fourth try was sealed as half-time approached.
Treviso could not handle Leicester's array of off-the-ball runners and Alesana Tuilagi touched down, with Flood's conversion taking Tigers 26 points clear at the interval.
The one-way traffic continued as Crane added his third touchdown, then Waldrom crossed - Flood converting both tries - before Treviso managed a consolation try by full-back Williams.
Treviso substitute Tobias Botes added another score for the visitors, but Leicester had long since entered auto-pilot mode, their job emphatically done in terms of qualification which was underlined through further touchdowns from Manu Tuilagi and Mafi.