Alex Lozowski boots Saracens back to summit in breathtaking victory at Bristol
Alex Lozowski booted a penalty with the game’s final kick as Saracens claimed a thrilling 37-35 Gallagher Premiership victory over Bristol at Ashton Gate.
Bristol captain Fitz Harding scored three tries to put Bristol in the driving seat – scrum-half Harry Randall and wing Toby Fricker also touched down – but Saracens showed admirable resilience.
Lozowski struck three minutes into stoppage time as Saracens returned to the Premiership summit in breathtaking fashion.
Six days after losing to Harlequins, Saracens struggled at times to cope with Bristol’s exhilarating attacking game, but full-back Elliot Daly scored tries, with wing Rotimi Segun and flanker Toby Knight also scoring, while Lozowski kicked 17 points.
Fly-half AJ MacGinty landed two penalties and two conversions for Bristol, but they were ultimately pipped at the post in a Premiership clash of box-office proportions.
Bristol’s level of confidence was underlined from the kick-off as they launched an attack inside Saracens’ half and then scored an opening try after just 107 seconds.
Saracens were powerless to halt a short-range lineout drive, and Harding claimed the touchdown as Bristol delivered an immediate statement of intent.
Bristol lost lock Josh Caulfield with an injury – he was replaced by Joe Owen – but it did not disrupt their rhythm as a MacGinty penalty put them eight points ahead.
But Saracens worked their way into the contest after Bristol wing Gabriel Ibitoye was yellow-carded for pushing a player off the ball, and Knight went over from close range, with Lozowski adding the extras.
Both defences were under pressure, and Bristol struck again midway through a free-flowing opening quarter when replacement Benjamin Elizalde weaved his way through some weak tackling and sent support runner Randall over for an outstanding try.
It was non-stop entertainment, and another thrilling passage of play that began with Bristol attacking through full-back Rich Lane’s long-range break ended when Daly freed Segun, whose brilliant finish was turned into a seven-pointer and Lozowski’s conversion edged his team ahead.
Bristol almost regained the lead sis minutes before half-time, but Fricker was denied by Daly’s outstanding cover tackle, yet they were immediately back on the attack and Harding claimed his second try, converted by MacGinty.
Saracens still had a chance to get more points on the board by the interval, though, and an angled Lozowski penalty ended a pulsating opening 40 minutes with Bristol leading 20-17.
Bristol came out firing for the second period, and they conjured a stunning score after just 51 seconds after Ibitoye beat four defenders, offloaded with one hand, then Jenkins and Oghre combined before Harding completed his hat-trick.
MacGinty converted, and Bristol were at it again just four minutes later after Saracens fly-half Alex Goode had been sin-binned, striking from deep through another mesmerising move that was finished by Fricker.
But back came Saracens as Daly finished impressively, with Lozowski’s successful touchline conversion and a later penalty leaving his team 32-27 adrift midway through the third quarter.
A MacGinty penalty restored an eight-point advantage for Bristol, but Saracens remained in the contest as an absorbing encounter moved towards its closing stages.
And when Daly pounced for his second try with eight minutes left – again converted from wide out by Lozowski – the game was back in the balance.
And Lozowski settled the contest in dramatic fashion, holding his nerve as Saracens claimed a notable success on the road.
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Yep NZ national u85 team is touring there atm I think (or just has).
Go to commentsWhat are they gonna do with the 500k and what does that achieve? They could dump the whole side and pick amateurs and save 10million, but what is that going to achieve?
The problem it feels like to me is I didn't hear what Gatland is going to do in order to win the 6N next year. How is he helping the problem. It just sounds like they're expecting miracles and for Gatland to turn around the national teams results, but what good is that when you're not fixing any of the problems and you'll just be back where you were when Gatland and the old players leave?
I think you are totally wrong in your stance. Wales abosolutely need to spend that 500k by investing in their future, it just doesn't sound like theyre giving Gatland any more resources to do it with. They're not using that 500k very well.
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