Exeter crush Saints to strengthen position at the top
Exeter are flying at the top of the Gallagher Premiership after demolishing third-placed Northampton in an astonishing display at Sandy Park.
Forty points in just 27 minutes either side of half-time saw the pacesetters extend their lead from 3-0 to 43-0. They eventually won 57-7.
The Chiefs romped home with tries from Jonny Hill, Elvis Taione, Jannes Kirsten, Tom Hendrickson (2), Ben Moon, Tom O’Flaherty and Sam Simmonds. Joe Simmonds kicked a penalty and five conversions and his replacement Gareth Steenson responded with two conversions.
Fly-half James Grayson scored a try which he converted himself for Northampton, who would have gone top with a wni.
The start was sedate, with Simmonds’ 10th minute penalty the only score for 32 minutes. Then the floodgates opened.
A high kick from a ruck by scrum-half Nic White put the Saints under pressure and started Exeter’s try-fest when lock Hill jumped over the prostrate opposition and dived over.
Northampton wing Tom Collins was sin-binned for coming into a ruck from the side just 10 metres from his line – and as he put his tracksuit on, Chiefs took a quick tap penalty that hooker Taione touched down. Simmonds added the extras.
The visitors struggled to get any traction in the match, although scrum-half Alex Mitchell was a livewire at the back of the loose situations in the first period.
But Saints conceded yet another penalty, this time underneath their posts, as the clock hit 40 minutes.
Instead of going for the easy three points, skipper Simmonds chose to run it and their ambition was rewarded when lock Kirsten – named man of the match – stretched and touched the ball over the line. Simmonds’ conversion gave Chiefs a 22-0 lead at the break.
Nine minutes after the restart and Exeter had a try bonus point from a tremendous pass from centre Ian Whitten, making his 150th Premiership appearance, that saw centre Hendrickson cut the Saints midfield to ribbons and roar under the posts for the converted touchdown.
And when prop Moon ran in Exeter’s fifth try in the 57th minute, it was a case of how many the Chiefs would score, as their opponents struggled to keep them out.
For once, Northampton got to the home line and Grayson took advantage of a quick tap penalty to score and convert.
But seconds later, a brilliant turnover inside the Saints 22 let wing O’Flaherty seize the ball and run in from 15 metres to finish off an incredible show.
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I think the best 15 we have is DMac. Jordan at 14.
Go to commentsIt certainly needs to be cherished. Despite Nick (and you) highlighting their usefulness for teams like Australia (and obviously those in France they find form with) I (mention it general in those articles) say that I fear the game is just not setup in Aus and NZ to appreciate nor maximise their strengths. The French game should continue to be the destination of the biggest and most gifted athletes but it might improve elsewhere too.
I just have an idea it needs a whole team focus to make work. I also have an idea what the opposite applies with players in general. I feel like French backs and halves can be very small and quick, were as here everyone is made to fit in a model physique. Louis was some 10 and 20 kg smaller that his opposition and we just do not have that time of player in our game anymore. I'm dying out for a fast wing to appear on the All Blacks radar.
But I, and my thoughts on body size in particular, could be part of the same indoctrination that goes on with player physiques by the establishment in my parts (country).
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