TOMMY SEYMOUR is determined to end his best season for Glasgow on a silverware high.

The Warriors wing king's fantastic solo score against Treviso in Italy last month was named Try of the Season at the club's awards dinner last week.

Seymour is determined to play a key role in helping Gregor Townsend's side finally get the better of Leinster at the RDS on Saturday to claim Glasgow's first-ever RaboDirect Pro12 league title before signing off for a busy summer with Scotland.

As the 25-year-old looked back over a season where he has surpassed Stuart Hogg as the Scotstoun side's lethal weapon, he underlined his determination to rain on Leinster and Ireland legend Brian O'Driscoll's swansong with a title-winning performance.

Seymour said: "It has been my best season for Glasgow. I have been with Warriors since 2011, but this season has definitely topped the lot for me.

"Obviously we have been very close in the last two play-off semis with Leinster at the RDS, and in particular in last season's semi, we felt that if we had taken it to extra-time we had a real chance to go on and win.

"But what we have to do is put all of that experience to good use this time around.

"We know the environment we are going into, we know the team we are up against very well, so it is not a journey into the unknown and we know that these games with Leinster swing on very small margins.

"In the past we have not had the benefit of the tight calls over at the RDS and we will be going there with a bit of a chip on our shoulder.

"But we are very much going there with the belief that we can get the win."

Glasgow have won just once in 18 visits to Dublin. But the nature of the more recent reverses underlines just how little there is between the two sides, an agonising 28-25 defeat back in March another example of Warriors' heartache in the Irish capital.

But Seymour says that sense of injustice coupled with Glasgow's current record-breaking nine-game winning run will help them make the trip across the Irish Sea full of confidence.

He said: "In beating Munster in the semi-final I think we proved to ourselves just how far we have come this season.

"That was definitely a game we may have lost in that past yet we found a way to win it and that, on top of the consistency we have shown of late, is a big boost to us mentally going into our first final.

"But over my spell with Glasgow we have been in there challenging time after time and this season we feel like we are ready to take all of that experience and make it work for us."

Meanwhile, Scotland international winger Sean Lamont has signed a new contract to keep him at Scotstoun until at least 2016.

Fellow-winger Rory Hughes has followed suit by penning a one-year pro deal.