Exiled England No.8 shines as Montpellier thump Harlequins
Zach Mercer gave England head coach Eddie Jones a reminder of his outstanding talent as he scored two tries to steer Montpellier to a 40-26 win over Harlequins in the Heineken Champions Cup round of 16.
The home side were 34-0 ahead eight minutes into the second half before English champions Quins finished with a flourish to score four tries and cut the deficit to 14 points ahead of next weekend’s return leg at the Twickenham Stoop.
Mercer was irresistible in the opening half, picking up from a close range breakdown to dive over for his first try and then racing 40 metres to the right corner for his second.
Playing directly opposite the current England number eight, Quins skipper Alex Dombrandt, he stood head and shoulders above everyone else on the pitch.
The visitors started well enough, but their handling and finishing was well below par and they failed to make the most of the chances they created in the opening quarter.
Error after error crept into their game and an attempt kick pass across their 22 in the 22nd minute led to Gabriel N’Gandebe profiting from a knock-down and racing the 25 metres to score unopposed.
Italian outside half Paolo Garbisi added the conversion and then improved Mercer’s first try to double the lead.
Worse was to follow when Cobus Reinach was put clear after a turn over for the Top 14 leaders came from a Danny Care kick that hit Joe Marler’s backside.
That extended the lead to 19 points and it was 26-0 at the break after Mercer had raced almost half the length of the field for a try that Garbisi again converted.
The Quins needed a fast start to the second half, but conceded a fifth try within 67 seconds of the re-start.
The home forwards went into pick and drive mode and it ended with former Saracens prop Titi Lamositele powering over to make it 31-0.
Garbisi then made it 34-0 with a penalty and the game looked dead and buried.
But Harlequins are not known as the comeback kings for nothing and while they conceded two penalties to Handre Pollard before the end, they conjured up four tries of their own to keep the tie very much in the melting pot.
George Hammond launched the fightback with a try in the 57th minute as he ran onto a kick through by Marcus Smith.
Then Andre Esterhuizen was sent crashing over from a quick tap penalty and Smith added the extras.
Three minutes later Louis Lynagh broke into the home half and sent Joe Marchant racing to the line and the conversion cut the gap to 15 points.
Lynagh then picked off a Pollard pass just outside his 22 and ran 70 metres to score at the posts.
Smith’s conversion meant there were only 11 points in it, but Pollard added a penalty at the death to make it a two score tie.
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Ford completely took the energy out the game for us, waving his hands telling people to calm down. Just for us to die off and lose the momentum.
Bringing him on all the time to ‘close out’ games is condescending to Smith. Get Ford out and let Marcus Smith & Fin Smith run the show. The future is them so give them the keys and let them get on with it.
Go to commentsTaking Marcus Smith off was a big puzzle and probably cost England the game. However, Abs created more opportunities and scored some tries but left a lot out there through sloppy execution, not playing to the ref and no enforcement of English off-side play. The fact the game was close all through made it worth watching but it was a frustrating pectacle. English succeeded in slowing the game down and were in the refs ear which Gardner allowed. I think Ireland or France will punish the sloppy execution more than England so still much for ABs to work on.
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