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Glasgow's Champions Cup campaign 'hanging by a thread' after La Rochelle defeat

By PA
Glasgow Warriors v Stade Rochelais – Heineken Champions Cup – Pool A – Scotstoun Stadium

Glasgow’s hopes of reaching the last 16 of the Heineken Champions Cup hang by a thread following a 38-30 defeat to La Rochelle at Scotstoun.

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Leading 15-9 at the interval, the French visitors pulled away in the second half with two tries in five minutes from Pierre Bougarit and Pierre Boudehent.

Warriors responded with two late replies from Ollie Smith but it was not enough to overturn the result, and they must now rely on both Ospreys and Montpellier failing to get what they need from their final matches on Sunday, against Sale Sharks and Exeter Chiefs, respectively, if they are to progress.

La Rochelle dominated from the start and Warriors were reduced to 14 men after just five minutes when Fraser Brown was yellow-carded for dropping a maul.

Somehow the home side survived the early onslaught, though, and took the lead against the run of play through a Ross Thompson offside penalty.

But Scott Cummings was penalised for going off his feet straight from the restart and that allowed Pierre Popelin to square it with 10 minutes played.

La Rochelle continued to dominate and Glasgow did well to keep their line intact during the remainder of that period with a man less.

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Eventually the pressure told, with Raymond Rhule reaching out of a tackle from Sam Johnson and dotting down, before Popelin nailed the tricky touchline conversion for good measure.

Warriors managed to make it into La Rochelle territory for only the second time in the match after 25 minutes and once again they took something from it when Thompson slotted another penalty.

Then, with 32 minutes played, Thompson reduced the gap to a single point when Romain Sazy was penalised for being in front of the kicker.

It looked like Warriors were going to finish the half with a flourish when Josh McKay broke up the right, but he stepped inside instead of feeding Kyle Steyn on his outside and a dropped ball a few phases later allowed La Rochelle to clear down field.

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And when Paul Boudehent muscled over in the last play of the first period it gave the visitors a 15-9 lead at the break.

Warriors bounced back brilliantly in the opening minute of the second half, with Thompson jinking through a gap then sending McKay in for a fine try, and Thompson’s conversion put the hosts in front.

But Warriors then imploded, coughing up 20 points inside five minutes through tries for Bougarit and Pierre Boudehent, plus two conversions and two penalties from Popelin.

That made the gap an insurmountable 19 points with half an hour still to play.

Two late tries from replacement full-back Smith were not enough to secure a bonus point for the home side and Ihaia West scored a late penalty to round off a convincing win for La Rochelle.

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S
SK 2 hours ago
Lessons the Wallabies must heed to turn Lions heartbreak into future success

Brett I love your fresh take on the picture that needed to be painted and ultimately wasnt. I agree there just wasnt enough in it for the ref to call it back and ultimately the ref was consistent the whole night at the breakdown. Australia are damned disheartened now but look how close it came to beating a team Campo said would thrash them by 30. This is the perfect prep for the Rugby Championship and the Boks and NZ. The Boks will be able to bring a scary pack to face the Aussies but it will be just as scary as facing these lads and so the Wallabies for me are making progress. They are not quite the finished article and the soft moments and tries and passive defence just proves it. Schmidt was brought in to make Australia better, he was brought in to make sure Australia improved in time for the Lions to avoid an embarrassment and look he has done that and taken them close so while the result is gutting its a job well done so far. lets see if they can take one step further and pilfer a test off these patchy Lions. Just a quick word on refs and the laws. Can we please tell World Rugby to simplify the game. At least 5 or 6 laws were examined in the wake of the last minute cleanout and several said Tizzano should have been pinged, others say Morgan should have been pinged. If former players and refs cant agree on what the right call was then it means the game is too complex. The refs have a clear mandate to let the game flow. I agree with that but the laws must support the refs. Right now they do not and leave too many holes for the refs to plug. The result is a furore after every major engagement between nations where the refs are abused.

35 Go to comments
I
IkeaBoy 2 hours ago
'The Wallabies only have themselves to blame': How the Lions sunk Australia in Melbourne

I’m a proud Irishman with a weakness for the underdog. My only stake in the game was an Aussie win to take the series to a decider. Even overlooking the actual clear out - which was the only thing Piardi instructed the TMO to review - I think it’s very easy to be objective and say that Australia got done on the calls.


It’s a phase of play that unfolds in less than 10 seconds but is fairly easy to breakdown.


1 - Ryan (#19 Lions) is tackled legally, goes to ground in possession of the ball but makes no effort to release the ball. He has to immediately once he goes to ground. PENALTY.


2 - Tizzano (#21 Australia) is first man to the ball (from either team) and forms the ruck with his own hindfoot. Side entry doesn’t apply to him as the ruck is not formed at this stage but rather it’s formed by him. NO PENALTY.


3 - Even to completely ignore the actual clear out (penalty/no penalty), foul play can still have occurred without the need for a HIA. The fact that Tizzano is walking around and available for the next match doesn’t mean he didn’t get emptied. His mouthguard data does seem to have registered an almighty force though. 50/50.


4 - Both Morgan (#20 Lions) and Genge (#17 Lions) go to clear out but both do so by driving through the ruck off their feet and falling over the ball. Sealing. PENALTY


5 - I still don’t understand why none of the coverage picks up on this - Morgan holds Tizzano’s feet in a wrap on the pitch after the clear out. On the match clock it’s 79.03 to 79.07 before he releases. Playing the player off the ball. PENALTY


Piardi controls the narrative when reviewing with the TMO and starts on the wrong foot. The discussion is all on the basis that both sets of players arrive at the same time (which changes mitigation around foul play) which they don’t. They clearly don’t as Tizzano is first to the ball.


For 79 mins that match was brilliant. The crowd was brilliant. The atmosphere seemed brilliant. It’s a loss on the sport that a gang of mic’d up officials can not get it right.

179 Go to comments
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