Fraser Dingwall: The Leinster lesson driving Northampton title push
Fraser Dingwall insists Northampton have taken the crucial step of believing they are ready to clinch the Gallagher Premiership title.
Saints secured their place in Saturday’s Twickenham final against Bath after edging past champions Saracens in a full-blooded play-off that saw their defence and set-piece make up for a subdued night in attack.
They were crushed by Saracens at the same stage in 2023 but have kicked on since, winning the regular league season and growing from the adversity faced against heavyweight European opponents Munster and Leinster.
“Last year we had the same tools but I just don’t think we had the belief,” England centre Dingwall said.
“This year we have faced so many challenges and so many big occasions that we have got belief in this group about what we are capable of if we trust it.
“You’ve got to believe in yourself. This season we have overcome so many big challenges like Munster away and Exeter away when we were down by 26 points and we came back.
“Against Leinster at Croke Park, I know we didn’t get the result but we took so many big learnings from that. We faced so many big challenges that there is now the belief in the group.
“Against Leinster, it took us too long to realise that we were capable of beating them. We probably turned up thinking, ‘This is Leinster, pretty much a full Ireland team’ and just sat back to see what they did rather than going at them from the off.”
Northampton have emerged as the Premiership’s standout team of 2023-24, in the process thrilling audiences with an emphasis on attack overseen by Fin Smith and George Furbank.
Furbank is among a host of players developed by the club’s academy, many of whom were present at Twickenham as teenagers when the Saints last reached the final in 2014.
“This group is pretty much built on the academy. I was at that final watching as a fan and there were so many boys in this squad watching that game as fans and it sticks in our memory,” Dingwall said.
“All we have ever wanted to do is recreate that. This final will be special for everyone, for boys playing their last game and boys for whom it is their boyhood club.”
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In your opinion because he's a Crusader. We talk about parochialism in our game but people like you and Jacko take it to a whole new level in your consistent antagonism to Crusader players.
Go to commentsProbably blooded more new players than any other country but still gets stick. If any other coach did same , they would get ripped to shreds. When you are at the top , people will always try to knock you down.
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