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'I'm sure he'll handle pressure of a home crowd baying for blood'

(Photo by Paul Harding/Getty Images)

Harlequins have braced themselves for the challenge of trying to silence a partisan French crowd this weekend who are sure to give Georgian referee Nika Amashukeli quite a baptism of fire when he takes charge of this Sunday’s Champions Cup opener versus Castres. It was eleven months ago when rookie official Amashukeli was denied his refereeing debut in Europe’s premier club competition, pandemic restrictions resulting in the cancellation of Harlequins’ planned January trip to Racing.

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The Georgian has since gone on to referee a round of 16 Challenge Cup match between London Irish and Cardiff, while also making his tier-one Test level breakthrough by taking charge of the Wales-Canada and Ireland-Japan matches. However, a Champions Cup game in France will likely produce an atmosphere he hasn’t had to deal with previously.

“We are aware that the referee is going to play a key part in the game and we generally pride ourselves on our discipline,” explained Harlequins assistant Jerry Flannery ahead of their round one Champions Cup assignment. “It’s one of the strongest parts of our game and this referee, I watched him when he refereed Japan and Ireland and I thought he had a good game there. It was quite a one-sided game, I can’t see our game going the same way but I am sure he will handle the pressure of a home crowd baying for blood and he will make the right calls.

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      “The vision for the club is to be one of the most admired in Europe and you are only going to do that if you perform well in the European competition and the Champions Cup is the premier club competition in the northern hemisphere so I don’t think we have had to sell it to the players.

      “Some of the lads haven’t played away in France in the Champions Cup so we are just prepping them for that and the trick is when you play your first game away in France and Castres at home, they are a really proud team, they have had some good results lately but they are probably not where they would like to be in the league but they are going to go hell for leather on this.

      “What I have seen in the past from French teams, if they don’t go well in the initial couple of rounds they generally tend to field a weakened team. We’re not going to bet that, we are going to get the strongest Castres at their best after a great win against Racing. How we handle that, how we handle the referee, how the referee handles the crowd there, his decision making will be key.”

      Amashukeli is one of four first-time Champions Cup referees who will feature over the opening two rounds. Wales Craig Evans (Exeter-Montpellier), Italy’s Andrea Piardi (Ospreys-Sale) and France’s Tual Trainini (Harlequins-Cardiff) are the other whistle-blowing newcomers and while Harlequins will hope Amashukeli will hold his nerve at Castres, they head there very satisfied with the set-piece discipline in last Sunday’s narrow league loss at Leicester.

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      “We won four penalties at the lineout, we won three penalties at the scrum which is pretty impressive to go to Welford Road,” reckoned Flannery. “Just some of the stuff that we normally do very well, our aerial game and out structured are really, really strong and they were probably off a little bit but you fix those things in a week.”

      HARLEQUINS (vs Castres, Sunday)
      1. Joe Marler
      2. Jack Walker
      3. Will Collier
      4. Dino Lamb
      5. Stephan Lewies – Captain
      6. James Chisholm
      7. Tom Lawday
      8. Alex Dombrandt
      9. Danny Care
      10. Marcus Smith
      11. Cadan Murley
      12. Andre Esterhuizen
      13. Huw Jones
      14. Louis Lynagh
      15. Tyrone Green
      Reps:
      16. Jack Musk
      17. Santiago Garcia Botta
      18. Simon Kerrod
      19. Hugh Tizard
      20. Jack Kenningham
      21. Lewis Gjaltema
      22. Will Edwards
      23. Oscar Beard

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      N
      NH 28 minutes ago
      Harness Skelton's might and move Sua'ali'i: How the Wallabies can fix things for Test two

      Nice one Nick. I was a fan of Joe’s appointment and think in general he has done well, and I even think the game plan last week was ok, but I am not sold he has gotten his selections right for this series. As everyone has detailed, the pack was too small last week. This week, he has brought in skelton and valetini which is an improvement physicality-wise but now the back 5 is out of balance with only one legitimate lineout option in Frost. The wallabies were poor in the lineout and it meant they couldn’t get into the lions 22 in the 1st half. Its also where most WBs tries originate from. Are they going to opt for a scrum every penalty they get? 3 man lineouts? And as you show, Suaalii is simply too hesitant in D. I guess drifting is better than biting in and taking yourself out of play, but he doesn’t do much more in that last clip. Maxy has 2 involvements in that play, suaalii none. At this rate, Chieka was quicker and better at integrating marika who had more to do to learn the game, than Joe with suaalii.


      Do you think that Joe is hesitant to put Suaalii on the wing because he would be exposed in the backfield in terms of kicking, positioning etc? This is the only justification I can think of and also maybe why he has picked the likes of max, potter and kellaway over the likes of daugunu, pietsch and toole. The difference in selection philosophy between schmidt and rennie has come into clear focus to me recently in terms of brain vs braun, power vs graft, workrate vs impact. In my opinion, Schmidt needed to make a hard decision on starting skelton vs a backrow that had bobby and wilson in it and he hasn’t done that. I also feel like he is almost picking a team to minimise the loss rather than win. I think starting a tate, or a pietsch, or bell could’ve signalled some more intent.

      4 Go to comments
      LONG READ
      LONG READ Harness Skelton's might and move Sua'ali'i: How the Wallabies can fix things for Test two Harness Skelton's might and move Sua'ali'i: How the Wallabies can fix things for Test two