Northern Edition
Select Edition
Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

Wallaby sees red and Chris Ashton scores as Leicester beat London Irish

By PA
Curtis Rona of London Irish walks to the bench, after being sent off during the Gallagher Premiership Rugby match between Leicester Tigers and London Irish at Mattioli Woods Welford Road Stadium on March 12, 2022 in Leicester, England. (Photo by Matthew Lewis/Getty Images)

Curtis Rona’s first-half red card derailed London Irish’s bid to become the first team in 12 matches to defeat Leicester at Mattioli Woods Welford Road as they were beaten 47-28.

ADVERTISEMENT

Steve Borthwick’s table-toppers were just two points ahead when the Australian’s shoulder connected with Jasper Wiese’s head, resulting in his dismissal shortly before the half-hour mark.

With the man advantage, Tigers cashed in as Harry Potter crossed and a penalty try award secured a 10th Premiership try-scoring bonus point of the season.

Video Spacer

Back in the Game – RFU

Video Player is loading.
Current Time 0:00
Duration 1:00
Loaded: 0%
Stream Type LIVE
Remaining Time 1:00
 
1x
    • Chapters
    • descriptions off, selected
    • captions off, selected
    • en (Main), selected
    Video Spacer

    Back in the Game – RFU

    Paddy Jackson’s hat-trick of penalties kept the Exiles in touch before Henry Arundell’s try early in the second half, while his side was temporarily down to 13 men, cut the deficit to five points.

    But Tommy Reffell’s neat finish, Nemani Nadolo’s second of the encounter and Chris Ashton’s first Tigers score wrapped up an emphatic victory before Matt Cornish grabbed a late consolation try.

    Related

    It was a late call-up to the starting line-up that provided the spark for London Irish to open the scoring after just two minutes as England U20s full-back Arundell broke from deep. Agustin Creevy’s reaching offload gave Bernhard Janse van Rensburg a walk-in.

    The response was swift as Tigers scored twice in the space of 10 minutes, starting with Freddie Burns locating Nadolo on a straight line to stroll in for his seventh try of the season. Burns’ conversion levelled the scores before Matt Scott reeled in an ambitious Janse van Rensburg pass for an interception score.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Arundell’s sprightly break from deep should have led to a score but his pass to an unmarked Ollie Hassell-Collins was poor. Jackson did gain some consolation by landing a penalty.

    The visitors were then left a man short as Wiese’s burst was thwarted by the shuddering combination of Albert Tuisue and Rona – the latter’s upright position into the collision left referee Karl Dickson with no option but to award a red card.

    The imbalance immediately told as Potter’s looping pass saw Nadolo power through and offload back to his wing partner for the Tigers’ third try, before the bonus point was registered as a powerful rolling maul was stopped illegally resulting in a penalty try.

    Reduced to 13 men following Adam Coleman’s subsequent sin-binning, Irish nevertheless scored 10 points as Jackson landed a third successful penalty on the stroke of half-time before Arundell scorched home in the opening passage of the second half.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Normal order was resumed as Burns’ chip was expertly dotted down by Reffell before Matias Moroni fed Nadolo to power over. Ashton pulled in Burns’ looping pass to draw level with Mark Cueto in second on the all-time Premiership tryscorers’ list with 90, and two behind leader Tom Varndell.

    Cornish’s late effort gave hope of a point for the away side but Leicester held firm despite losing Nadolo to a late yellow card for a botched interception attempt.

    ADVERTISEMENT
    Play Video

    South Africa vs Black Ferns XV | Women's International | Full Match Replay

    Play Video

    England vs Spain | Women's International | Full Match Replay

    Play Video

    Classic Wallabies vs British & Irish Legends | Second Match | Full Match Replay

    Play Video

    Ireland vs Scotland | Women's International | Full Match Replay

    Play Video

    Should the Lions’ last-minute try have stood? | Whistle Watch

    Play Video

    Lions Share | Episode 6

    Play Video

    KOKO Show | July 29th | George Gregan Stops by to lift spirits after the MCG Madness

    Play Video

    Historic Lions Series win at the MCG | Ep 7: The Ultimate Test

    Trending on RugbyPass

    Comments

    0 Comments
    Be the first to comment...

    Join free and tell us what you really think!

    Sign up for free
    ADVERTISEMENT

    Latest Long Reads

    Comments on RugbyPass

    J
    JW 1 hour ago
    Mick Cleary: 'These blokes have done the jersey proud, with their buy-in and with their relish.'

    Jesus PR that’s another great conclusion. I can definitely see it as blocker to bringing through new talent in time for the WC. NZ underwent a lot of change in 2018 following the Lions tour, in part thanks to key injuries. Despite the revenue spending Aaron Cruden (getting frail even at his young age then) and Lima Sopoaga (along with Julien Savea), 2 of the 3 1st5s in the Lions squad, both left before the 2019 WC for example. But when we apply your logic, their delayed departure prevented Richie Mounga and Damien McKenzie (the 15 who got injured and threw a spanner in the works) from brought through in what would possible now be considered the preferred WC preparation. Ditto on the win with a scramble of constant change their all the way through to their WC 3rd/4th playoff.


    Theres certainly cause to account for certain circumstances eventuating being influenced by a Lions tour. But as both nations here select from domestic players only, theres also cause to put similar emphasis on the contracting model in general, as sometimes you can hold on too long. Ireland has a similar model, talking to another irishman here he suggests it has lead to selecting based on contracts, money being spent on a player centrally contracted. So I would not so much worry about fatigue (in part because some incomplete analysis I had done on all.rugby shows the Irish contingent have low minutes this year) but continuing to select underperforming and aging players. When in a pure context of building for a WC, one would normally want to move on an develop the future.

    23 Go to comments
    TRENDING
    TRENDING Report card: Player ratings for 27 British and Irish Lions involved in Tests Report card: Player ratings for 27 Lions Test players