Johann van Graan's verdict on Bath’s impressive victory over Saracens
Johann van Graan hailed Bath’s mental strength and tactical nous after an impressive 25-16 victory over defending champions Saracens at StoneX Stadium.
The visitors went 7-0 down after an early Andy Christie try, but Tom de Glanville, Miles Reid and Ruaridh McConnochie put Bath in the driving seat at the break.
Alex Lozowski kicked a penalty to reduce the deficit to four points, but Thomas du Toit’s score secured the bonus-point win despite Chris Cloete’s yellow card in the closing stages.
The result leaves Saracens bottom of the Premiership table, while Bath go top after successive bonus-point triumphs.
“The two things that stood out for me today were our mental toughness, we came back straight away with two tries,” said Bath coach Van Graan.
“Then just before half-time, it started to rain, but we adapted our plan and I felt we played the second half in the right parts of the pitch.
“Saracens are a club that I respect so much for what they have achieved on the pitch, and it was a tough battle.
“We are very happy with the away win, since the first game in the Premiership Rugby Cup and last week, we know our ability to score tries is very important to us.
“The challenge for us is to make sure that we score more than we conceded, and we did that today, so I am very happy with the performance.
“It was a real 23 effort, even the three backs who came on for one minute, it is all about the squad.”
Despite seeing his Sarries side fall to back-to-back defeats, director of rugby Mark McCall was pleased his side improved on last week’s 65-10 loss against Exeter Chiefs at Sandy Park.
“We struggled at the scrum at times and gave away key penalties there, which gave them the platform to win the match really, but there was some good fight from the team after what happened last week,” said McCall.
“Every time we gave ourselves some field position or some glimmers of hope we kept on making mistakes, which is not surprising in those conditions.
“There is obviously disappointment overall, but some encouragement that we were a lot better and a lot more competitive than we were last week.
“Fair play to Bath, they were very good today, Finn Russell is obviously a good player, but I was more impressed with them as a team, to be honest.
“It is always difficult playing catch up when it was wet like it was, and you keep making simple or basic handling errors when we had some field position.
“We have to work hard and pull in the same direction, which we will, and try to get better week after week.”
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You have got to consider that if the situation was flipped and the French were held to a salary cap with no English equivalent, the English would laugh in their faces and tell them to get over it. As for Leinster (as a fan), the central contract system is a dream but is guilty of cutting out the other 3 provinces. At the end of the day, it comes across outside of the English border that the Premiership is drowning and trying to take everyone else with it rather than adapt. The English lose, the English want new rules. We've seen this repeat (and once it even led to the current Champions Cup) You make many good and informed points, but if the flip was on the other flop, it wouldn't be Rugby’s problem I suspect - it would be a French one.
Go to commentsSeems to have been a bright start but it tailed off. To win the big matches you have to get used to putting your foot on the throttle and your opponent’s necks in an 80 minutes performance which is what the All Blacks were renowned for. An example in the Women’s game is England v Ireland in the 6N match played at Twickenham in April. Watch on YouTube.
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