Furious Chris Boyd: Ref 'didn't have enough nuts'
Northampton director of rugby Chris Boyd suggested referee Adam Leal “didn’t have enough nuts” to award a penalty at a crucial stage of a 30-6 Gallagher Premiership defeat by Saracens.
Saints dominated the first-half at Franklin’s Gardens and were camped in the 22 for an extended period, opting for three successive scrums under the posts as Saracens repeatedly infringed.
But on the third scrum Leal awarded the penalty against Northampton, allowing the visitors to escape and leaving Boyd frustrated.
“He didn’t have enough nuts did he? I mean it was a clear hinge. There was only one side under pressure in that series of scrums,” he said.
“But anyway. I certainly think we took the right option. We could have taken three points there but we spent a long time down there. For us to come away with three points would have been a victory for them.”
The first-half finished 6-6 and when Saracens found a new gear by scoring tries through Alex Lozowski, Tom Woolstencroft and Maro Itoje, they emerged conclusive winners.
“I didn’t fear anything that Saracens did. At the end of the day we only got six points and they got 30,” Boyd said.
“We had half a dozen opportunities in the first-half, they had three and scored three tries. That’s the difference between the two sides.
“There’s some credit for Saracens. They have a very good defence and their game is a kicking-based game. We lost the kicking battle often and we didn’t want to get sucked into that kicking game.
“Obviously the rain didn’t help for us because it was greasy and hard to handle. If you lose the aerial ping pong against a team with a good kicking game, you tend to not get territory. But they also defend very well so credit to them.”
Saracens were a different team in the second-half as Saints were made to pay for their inability to get over the whitewash.
“We showed a lot of fight, grit and resolve and we had to tweak a few things in our kicking game and that allowed the rest of our game to lift,” said boss Mark McCall, who expects club captain Owen Farrell to return from his ankle injury against London Irish on January 23.
“We had a lot more energy in defence and we attacked a lot better in the second half and the set-piece went to a different level. Just a really good, hard-fought away win.
“When you’re under the pump as we were, in front of a great crowd as Northampton have, in your 22 as often as we were, you need your senior players to step up and I thought across the board ours did. I thought Maro had a big game.”
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Ireland have every right to back themselves for a win. But the key variable has little to do with recent record etc.
The reality is that Ireland are a settled team with tons of continuity, an established style, and a good depth chart, whereas NZ are fundamentally rebuilding. The questions are all about what Razor is doing and how far along he is in that program.
NZ are very close to really clicking. Against England all of the chatter is about how England could have closed out a win, but failed to do so. This has obscured the observation that NZ were by far the more creative and effective in attack, beyond the 3-1 try differential and disallowed tries. They gave away a lot of unnecessary penalties, and made many simple errors (including knock-ons and loose kicks). Those things are very fixable, and when they do so we are once again going to be staring at a formidable NZ team.
Last week we heard the England fans talking confidently about their chances against NZ, but England did not end up looking like the better team on the field or the scoreboard. The England defense was impressive enough, but still could not stop the tries.
Ireland certainly has a better chance, of course, but NZ is improving fast, and I would not be surprised at a convincing All Black win this week. It may turn on whether NZ can cut out the simple mistakes.
Go to commentsFair to say that NZ have come to respect Ireland, as have all teams. But it's a bit click-baitey to say that the game is the premier show-down for NZ.
SA has beaten NZ four times in a row, including in the RWC final.
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