'We felt we were Real Madrid going into that game, and we got put on our backsides'
Steve Diamond says there is no danger of his Sale Sharks players getting carried away after they moved four points behind Gallagher Premiership leaders Exeter.
Sale’s fourth win in their last five league starts – a 23-17 success against Gloucester at rain-swept Kingsholm – kept them in second place and underlined strong title play-off hopes
But Sale Sharks rugby director Diamond said: “We won’t get ahead of ourselves.
“We got a good hiding two weeks ago at Saracens in similar conditions. I think we felt we were Real Madrid going into that game, and we got put on our backsides.
“We had a good chat about it, because we are a good team.
“Last week, Leicester came to us in very similar conditions and we controlled the game, and we knew if we could just control the field position tonight and possession as much as we could, we would be all right.
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“We are definitely not getting carried away. There is no altitude sickness around the place.
“I predicted before the game it was going to be six points either way, and I was right.”
Diamond confirmed that Sale are set to announce three new signings – two forwards and a back – in the next week or two as their campaign continues to gather impressive momentum.
“I thought we carried well tonight, the half-backs looked after the ball well, and I am delighted,” he added. “It is a difficult place to come.
“Everyone is keen and everyone is buzzing. You have got to play well to stay in the team, and I don’t think any other coach wants it any other way.”
Sale’s wet-weather game in miserable conditions served them well as they gained an impressive victory through tries from centre Luke James, lock Bryn Evans and wing Marland Yarde, with fly-half Rob du Preez kicking two penalties and a conversion.
Prop Fraser Balmain and centre Billy Twelvetrees touched down for Gloucester, while the latter added a penalty and two conversions.
It was Gloucester’s fourth successive league defeat, and they have not won in the competition since toppling Bath eight weeks ago.
“We always stay in the fight. We never give up and always give ourselves a chance to win the game,” Gloucester head coach Johan Ackermann said.
“But unfortunately, there were a few symptoms from the last couple of weeks where we lost ball at crucial stages and gave away four or five penalties that got them territory.
“If you look at tonight’s penalties, there was a scrum penalty, a high-tackle penalty, an offside penalty. It’s a concern it is not on one area, so we will just keep working on it.
“Hopefully, something somewhere will turn for us. We have to stay positive and stay united as a group and keep believing.”
Press Association
Latest Comments
Steve Borthwick appointment was misguided based on two flawed premises.
1. An overblown sense of the quality of the premiership rugby. The gap between the Premiership and Test rugby is enormous
2. England needed an English coach who understood English Rugby and it's traditional strengths.
SB won the premiership and was an England forward and did a great job with the Japanese forwards but neither of those qualify you as a tier 1 test manager.
Maybe Felix Jones and Aled Walter's departures are down to the fact that SB is a details man, which work at club level but at test level you need the manager to manage and let the coaches get on and do what they are employed for.
SB criticism of players is straight out of Eddie Jones playbook but his loyalty to keeping out of form players borne out of his perceived sense of betrayal as a player.
In all it doesn't stack up as the qualities needed to be a modern Test coach /Manager
Go to commentsBut still Australians. Only Australia can help itself seems to be the key message.
Blaming Kiwis is deflecting from the actual problem.
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