Sale win at Gloucester to maintain pressure at the top
Sale maintained second place in the Premiership and moved four points behind Exeter after beating Gloucester 23-17 at Kingsholm.
For fading Gloucester, though, it was a fourth successive league defeat and they have not won in the competition since toppling Bath eight weeks ago.
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.
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Prop Fraser Balmain and centre Billy Twelvetrees touched down for Gloucester, while the latter added a penalty and two conversions.
But the Sharks were not to be denied, making it four wins from their last five Premiership matches and strengthening title play-off hopes.
Gloucester’s Wales Six Nations squad member Louis Rees-Zammit was sidelined by illness, so Tom Seabrook replaced him on the wing.
Sale showed three changes from the side that crushed Leicester last time out, with Rees-Zammit’s Wales colleague – prop WillGriff John – and flanker Ben Curry among those starting.
Gloucester ran out with the words “Be Kind” printed across the back of their shirts as part of the club’s campaign to raise awareness of mental health in partnership with the Samaritans.
Fly-half Danny Cipriani had helped drive the mental health initiative after the death of his ex-partner Caroline Flack.
Cipriani was heavily involved in Gloucester’s early attacking moments, chasing a kick that prompted some frantic Sale defending, and then looking to free his outside backs through a cleverly placed kick.
Sale then had the game’s first scoring opportunity, but Du Preez saw an angled penalty bounce back off the post and Gloucester cleared possession.
But Sale gained a flurry of penalties that meant Gloucester were pinned inside their own 22, and Du Preez took advantage to kick a 27th-minute opener and edge the Sharks ahead.
Twelvetrees, with the wind at his back, attempted a 50-metre penalty that hit the post, but Sale responded by scoring the game’s opening try five minutes before half-time.
A speculative Sale kick deflected off Gloucester flanker Ruan Ackermann and, after the ball rolled into Gloucester’s 22, James won the touchdown race.
Du Preez converted to open up a 10-point advantage, and Gloucester could not threaten the lead as they were left facing a testing second period with the elements not in their favour.
But Sale had no intention of loosening their grip, and they went further in front from an attacking line-out that ended with Evans touching down.
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Some silly trolling in the comments.
Go to commentsEverywhere you turn some irish journo is advocating Ireland as the greatest, reasoning that the wc is a 4 year cycle event so, they say wc doesn’t matter it’s the rugby in between that should account for the accolade. If there was no wc then some substance could be gained, however in my opinion the moment that defined Ireland’s fate against the abs was 37 phases of repeated head bashing against a brick wall. If a change in strategy or a tinker with the game plan was executed then things could've been vastly different. And to point a finger the let down was in the hands of the number 10.
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