Northern Edition
Select Edition
Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

Saracens end London Irish’s play-off hopes to take top spot

By PA
Saracens huddle at the Stone X - PA

Leaders Saracens finished the regular season by ending London Irish’s hopes of a play-off spot with a commanding 45-21 victory.

ADVERTISEMENT

With Irish’s defeat, Northampton secured the last remaining play-off space to join Saracens, Sale and Leicester in the semi-finals.

Irish competed ferociously for the first hour but fell away badly for another away defeat at the hands of Saracens, having not tasted an away victory against them since February 2014.

Video Spacer
Video Spacer

Eroni Mawi scored two tries for Saracens with Alex Goode, Sean Maitland and Theo Dan also on the score-sheet. Owen Farrell converted four and added four penalties.

Matt Rogerson and Mike Willemse scored tries for Irish with Paddy Jackson kicking three penalties and a conversion.

Saracens
Press Association

Irish took a fifth-minute lead when Jackson kicked a 40-metre penalty after the hosts had infringed at a scrum.

ADVERTISEMENT

The visitors continued to be the better side in the opening stages with their opponents making uncharacteristic errors. Farrell’s restart went straight into touch and Maro Itoje knocked on when under no pressure.

It therefore came as no surprise when Irish extended their lead. A powerful burst from their number eight So’otala Fa’aso’o put the defence on the back foot before skipper Rogerson forced his way over.

Jackson converted and Irish deservedly had a 10-0 lead at the end of the first quarter.

A couple of careless handling errors from Irish full-back Ben Loader presented Saracens with a foothold in the match and they took it with Farrell kicking a simple penalty before looking to have drawn level.

Strong runs from front-rowers Mako Vunipola and Dan made inroads before Max Malins seized on a long pass to dive in under the posts but TMO reviews appeared to show that the wing had lost possession in grounding.

ADVERTISEMENT

However Saracens still picked up the next score with a second penalty from Farrell before taking the lead with the last move of the half.

Nick Tompkins and Ben Earl made ground along the left touchline to provide Goode with a run-in for Farrell to convert and give his side a 13-10 half-time advantage.

Within a minute of the restart, Irish lock Rob Simmons was sin-binned for a high tackle on Dan, the Australian lock’s fifth yellow card of the season, with Saracens immediately capitalising by moving the ball wide for Maitland to stroll over.

Two Jackson penalties in quick succession took him past 200 Premiership points this season and kept Irish in contention but Farrell responded with one for the home side.

With 18 minutes remaining, Dan finished off a driving line-out to put daylight between the sides before Mawi sealed victory with a similar effort.

There was still time for Farrell to kick a penalty and Mawi to add his second try.

Spirited Irish had the final say with a close-range try from replacement Willemse but it was still the most points that they had conceded in any game this season.

ADVERTISEMENT
Play Video

South Africa vs Black Ferns XV | Women's International | Full Match Replay

Play Video

England vs Spain | Women's International | Full Match Replay

Play Video

Classic Wallabies vs British & Irish Legends | Second Match | Full Match Replay

Play Video

Ireland vs Scotland | Women's International | Full Match Replay

Play Video

Should the Lions’ last-minute try have stood? | Whistle Watch

Play Video

Lions Share | Episode 6

Play Video

KOKO Show | July 29th | George Gregan Stops by to lift spirits after the MCG Madness

Play Video

Historic Lions Series win at the MCG | Ep 7: The Ultimate Test

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

0 Comments
Be the first to comment...

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Long Reads

Comments on RugbyPass

J
JW 2 hours ago
Mick Cleary: 'These blokes have done the jersey proud, with their buy-in and with their relish.'

Jesus PR that’s another great conclusion. I can definitely see it as blocker to bringing through new talent in time for the WC. NZ underwent a lot of change in 2018 following the Lions tour, in part thanks to key injuries. Despite the revenue spending Aaron Cruden (getting frail even at his young age then) and Lima Sopoaga (along with Julien Savea), 2 of the 3 1st5s in the Lions squad, both left before the 2019 WC for example. But when we apply your logic, their delayed departure prevented Richie Mounga and Damien McKenzie (the 15 who got injured and threw a spanner in the works) from brought through in what would possible now be considered the preferred WC preparation. Ditto on the win with a scramble of constant change their all the way through to their WC 3rd/4th playoff.


Theres certainly cause to account for certain circumstances eventuating being influenced by a Lions tour. But as both nations here select from domestic players only, theres also cause to put similar emphasis on the contracting model in general, as sometimes you can hold on too long. Ireland has a similar model, talking to another irishman here he suggests it has lead to selecting based on contracts, money being spent on a player centrally contracted. So I would not so much worry about fatigue (in part because some incomplete analysis I had done on all.rugby shows the Irish contingent have low minutes this year) but continuing to select underperforming and aging players. When in a pure context of building for a WC, one would normally want to move on an develop the future.

23 Go to comments
TRENDING
TRENDING The top five signings ahead of the new Gallagher PREM season The top five signings ahead of the new Gallagher PREM season