Bristol Bears grab away win off sorry Northampton Saints
Bristol fought back from a 14-0 deficit for a 20-14 Gallagher Premiership victory to inflict another home defeat on Northampton at Franklin’s Gardens.
With half-an-hour remaining, a disjointed Bristol appeared likely losers but two tries in three minutes stunned the Saints, who followed up a home loss to London Irish with another shock defeat to dent their hopes of challenging Exeter at the top of the table.
Bristol’s tries came from replacements, Henry Purdy and Lewis Thiede, with Callum Sheedy converting both and kicking a penalty, while Ian Madigan also added a penalty.
Harry Mallinder crossed over for Northampton with James Grayson on target with three penalties.
With their first attack, Saints took the lead as number eight Teimana Harrison – on his 150th appearance for the club – made three powerful bursts into the heart of the Bristol defence before Rory Hutcinson provided Mallinder with an easy run-in.
The hosts then suffered a blow when promising lock Alex Moon was forced to leave the field with an injury but they overcame this setback to extend their lead when Grayson kicked a straightforward penalty.
Saints continued to dominate the opening half-hour as their opponents struggled with their handling as both Nathan Hughes and Sam Bedlow made unforced errors to prevent the visitors from building any momentum.
Another mistake from the Bears gave powerful wing Taqele Naiyaravoro the chance to hand off two defenders and – when Bristol were penalised – Grayson fired over his second penalty.
It took Bristol until the 35th minute to secure a platform in the home 22 but they could not capitalise on a succession of forward drives so Northampton deservedly held an 11-0 half-time lead.
The away side made a couple of changes at the break with Purdy and Joe Joyce introduced in an attempt to reverse their fortunes.
It did not produce immediate results as Grayson kicked his third penalty within three minutes of the restart, which resulted in the visitors making another change with hooker Will Capon coming on in place of Shaun Malton.
Bristol scored their first points nine minutes after the break when Sheedy kicked a simple penalty after Hutchinson was shown a yellow card for a high tackle on Joyce as the lock looked set to crash over under the posts.
A penalty try award was surely a consideration but the referee ruled there was a potential covering tackler.
Sheedy’s penalty was the only score of a featureless third quarter but – before Hutchinson could return from the sin-bin – Bristol capitalised when Piers O’Conor split the defence with an excellent break before Purdy seized on a gap to race over.
Sheedy converted with an excellent touchline kick before Bears scored a second try within minutes to stun Northampton.
Replacement scrum-half Andy Uren broke through the home ranks before Thiede forced his way over from close range and Madigan’s last-minute penalty completed Bristol’s comeback.
PA
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Yeah me too. I think the Welsh have it in them to make it a contest in the first half. Give the boks' second stringers a headache. Disrupting lineouts is one area the welsh could cause problems. Bok lineouts have been subpar.
And then fronting up in the collisions and at the rucks. If the boks get the ascendancy there too early, it could be a hiding. Jaden hendrikse had a tough game against the Scots - who were very good at disrupting the boks flow. The welsh would have taken note of this i'm sure.
But the bok bench will finish the welsh off i'm afraid.
Go to commentsYes, certainly. As an AB fan happy to be included in that top 3 of "matches that are routinely decided by one score" now, we were well outside that for a few years.
They have not had enough games yet. You can't undo so many poor years just like that. Asking for miracles like SA losing is not the way to get back to number 1.
They might get there as those bad years filter out of the rankings but it's guarenteed to be great fun going back and forth with SA once that happens.
Admittedly Foster only really had one bad year (21/22 season), but that's more likely because COVID stopped a lot of tough games from being played, and effected the other countries they did play far more than themselves.
A real shame we both don't get to see it unfold first with our regions teams in SR!
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