Battling Harlequins fall just short as Clermont Auvergne set up all-French final
Harlequins could not stop Clermont Auvergne from setting up an all-French European Challenge Cup final with La Rochelle as they were beaten 32-27 at the Stade Marcel Michelin.
Paul Gustard’s side produced a fine display and did little wrong, but still turned around 18 points down with first-half Clermont tries coming from Fritz Lee and Damian Penaud, with Camille Lopez kicking two drop-goals.
Mike Brown crossed for Harlequins, but Clermont’s power game proved too much as Morgan Parra also added two conversions and two penalties.
After the break Harlequins went for broke and added three more tries through Chris Robshaw, James Lang and a late Alex Dombrandt effort.
Ultimately it was not enough, but the English side can take real heart from their performance ahead of their final three games of the Gallagher Premiership.
Clermont were straight on the front foot and Lopez opened the scoring as he stepped back into the pocket and struck a sweet drop-goal with his left foot.
Marcus Smith responded for Harlequins with a penalty and his team ended the first quarter level as forwards Kyle Sinckler and Rob Buchanan both made strong carries.
The visitors were dealt a blow with the temporary loss of former England prop Joe Marler who was forced off for a head injury assessment.
Lopez then dropped another goal which was quickly followed by a Parra penalty and although Marler did return to the field, Clermont soon moved further clear.
Number eight Lee crashed on to a pass from Parra and spun out of the tackle to make it to the line. Parra added the conversion for a 16-3 lead.
Soon after, flying France wing Penaud then collected his own kick following a George Moala break to score Clermont’s second try and Parra again converted.
Harlequins were up against it, but they hit back just before the break when Smith’s superb break and pass on the loop around found full-back Brown, who fended off Penaud to make the line.
Smith could not convert and Parra’s penalty made it 26-8 at the break.
Clermont dominated the early second-half possession and Parra added two more quick penalties as he continued his perfect evening’s work from the tee.
Harlequins wing Ross Chisholm had a try ruled out after Dombrandt was rightly judged by the TMO to have just been in touch, but captain Robshaw soon responded.
The flanker was driven over the line with the help of Matt Symons beneath the posts and Smith could not miss with the conversion.
Clermont’s remarkable strength in depth was shown when Parra was replaced at scrum-half by Scotland international Greig Laidlaw as both sides made use of their benches.
Smith then kicked ahead and when Clermont full-back Setariki Tuicuvu failed to deal with it, Lang pounced just two minutes after entering the action.
Smith converted and all of a sudden the momentum – against all the odds – was with Harlequins.
Gustard’s side were right up for the challenge and were forcing Clermont into rare mistakes.
Laidlaw then failed to settle the French nerves as he missed with a late penalty and Dombrandt was driven over the line to reduce the gap further still.
Smith’s drop goal conversion hit the post as Harlequins – for whom Semi Kunatani made a remarkable impact off the bench – fell just short against a Clermont side who still have not lost at home this season.
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I think it's the least likely possibility Ed.
Go to commentsScotland should win this one, considering they are the settled team compared to Australia. However, that is no guarantee that they will win. The Aussies tails is up, and they are throwing everything at the opposition.
When the Aussie fans cracked up and got angry when Joe Schmidt was appointed, I said to them to be patient, that he will get them on the right track. They said that he is not Australian and he won nothing. Second best. I should mind my own business because I don't know the Aussie ways, which is true as I'm SA.
However, now that he is bringing in results, they are all changing their minds. Joe is all in when he coaches a team. There is no team he supports more than the team he coaches. His quality is shining through properly now.
It's going to be a very tight game, much tighter than people realise. Both teams is playing exciting rugby right now. They both want to win. I'd even go as far as marking this game as the top game of the weekend.
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