Late drama sees Ospreys earn draw at Scarlets
Jack Walsh held his nerve to convert a last-minute try from Rhys Davies and earn the Ospreys a 23-23 draw in a pulsating derby against the Scarlets in Llanelli.
The Ospreys looked set for victory when they led 13-6 before the Scarlets took the box seat to go 23-16 in front.
However, a last-minute yellow card for Sione Kalamafoni let the Ospreys off the hook, with debutant Walsh kicking the crucial conversion having stepped off the bench.
Sam Costelow scored 18 points for the Scarlets with a try, three penalties and two conversions, while Johnny Williams was also on the try-scoring sheet.
Gareth Anscombe scored 16 points for the Ospreys, contributing a try, a conversion and three penalties.
The Scarlets lost a couple of early line-outs to give away field position and their opponents made it count when Keelan Giles raced down the left flank to provide Anscombe with an easy run-in.
The fly-half converted and added a penalty before the Scarlets missed a chance for their first score when Costelow fired wide with a 40-metre penalty attempt. Minutes later he was presented with an easier opportunity and this time made no mistake.
That score was soon nullified by a simple penalty from Anscombe, with the Scarlets then suffering two further blows in quick succession.
First, flanker Tomas Lezana left the field with a leg injury to be replaced by Josh Macleod before Costelow was yellow-carded for a tip-tackle on Ospreys captain Justin Tipuric.
In Costelow’s absence the pressure on the hosts’ line was relentless as they conceded numerous penalties.
However, referee Adam Jones was lenient with the issue of further cards and the Scarlets were able to breathe a huge sigh of relief when Costelow returned with no damage to the scoreboard.
In the last minute of the first half Johnny McNicholl was felled by a challenge by Tipuric. McNicholl was pole-axed and the home crowd roared for a card, but the referee was content with a penalty which Costelow kicked to leave his side trailing 13-6 at the interval.
McNicholl failed to return after the interval, with further penalties from Costelow and Anscombe early additions to the scoreboard.
Giles was sin-binned for a deliberate knock on and the Scarlets capitalised by drawing level when Williams ran strongly to beat off weak tackles from Nicky Smith and Scott Baldwin and score a splendid individual try.
Giles returned in time to see the Scarlets take the lead for the first time when Costelow tore through a gap in a tiring Ospreys defence to score.
The game looked up for the Ospreys until Kalamafoni was yellow-carded for a deliberate knock on, and the visitors took advantage with a try from Davies from a driving line-out and Walsh’s conversion.
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Really interesting article.Canterbury and Crusaders lock Jamie Hannah, who debuted for the Crusaders before Canterbury , he is going places. Fellow Canterbury lock, who has debuted for the Crusaders in Europe, is big and athletic. His father Graham played in the NPC winning Canterbury side of 1997. His Uncle is former AB Chris Jack. Makos and Crusader no 8 Fletcher Anderson is developing fast with more experience. First-five James White did play well for Canterbury in the loss to Wellington. No harm in first-fives who can play fullback.
Go to commentsYep NZ national u85 team is touring there atm I think (or just has).
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