Saracens clinch semi-final spot despite eight minutes with 13 players
This Gallagher Premiership has been quite the entertaining caper since its post-Guinness Six Nations resumption, the seven-way bottleneck for the four play-off spots giving an added meaning to so many matches.
Ashton Gate on Saturday afternoon was in keeping with this must-watch pattern, with two in-form title contenders putting their recent hot steaks on the line.
Something had to dramatically give and it did, the bragging rights emphatically going the way of now semi-final qualified Saracens on a 41-20 scoreline even though they had an eight-minute second-half period reduced to 13 players due to the quick-succession sin binnings of Maro Itoje and Ben Earl.
Coming into this round 17 litmus test, hosts Bristol had been transformed, Pat Lam finally managing to relocate the elusive 'Lamball', the swashbuckling, attack-from-anywhere rugby that went missing following their spectacular 2021 semi-final crash versus Harlequins. Six wins and the mantle as the league’s leading try-scorers had them flying in 2024.
Meanwhile, Saracens had been as good as the warning issued by Mark McCall at Leicester when Saracens were beaten in the league in early January.
The defending champions arrived into this encounter on the back of four wins in five, two either side of the end-of-March loss to Northampton However, with Bath and Sale both chalking up Friday night Ws, the second place the Londoners occupied before this penultimate round of matches started had become fourth.
The pressure was on the visitors to get back up the table, especially given that Bristol were fifth, two points off, and in hot pursuit of McCall and co.
On a scorcher of a day in BS3 in front of 20,942, they demonstrated why they are defending champions – initially during a first-half where an early 3-13 deficit was defiantly transformed into a 23-13 interval lead with box-of-tricks Owen Farrell and the two-try Itoje to the fore, and then when two players short in the second period.
Although Lam was heard in his seat adjacent to the media box on eight minutes shouting “Stop kicking the f***ing ball away” when it was booted from his team’s half rather than carried towards the halfway line, Bristol looked promising for the opening quarter.
A fifth-minute Joe Batley try and eight points from AJ MacGinty kicks gave them a 10-point lead 22 minutes in.
However, just when they were on the cusp of escaping Siva Naulago’s deliberate knock-on yellow card without suffering any major damage, an Ellis Genge spill inside his team’s 22 ended with the slick-hands Itoje one-twoing with Juan Martin Gonzalez to score.
That shattered the Bristol momentum and they could only watch in despair some minutes later when a Gonzalez lineout steal and a resulting monster 50:22 by Farrell from his own 22 ignited the pressure that produced Itoje’s second try off a pick and drive.
Add in two penalties and a conversion from Elliot Daly, who took over the kicking from the five-point Farrell who had a groin issue off the tee, and the half finished with Saracens very much on top and trooping off feeling cock of the Ashton Gate walk after Ben Earl tidied up a botched Bristol lineout overthrow when defending near his line.
A home onslaught was only to be expected on the resumption and it came, multiple penalties upping the ante.
However, it initially ended with two Bristol players down injured – including MacGinty who required a HIA – and Naulago spilling near the line in a play that finished down the other end with Saracens bagging the 48th-minute turnover penalty scored by Daly after a poach from Gonzalez.
Itoje’s yellow for high-tackling Steven Luatua offered Bristol a 50th-minute lifeline that was further energised two minutes later when Earl also saw yellow for breakdown infringing.
A converted Harry Thacker maul try immediately followed and with the margin now just six points and plenty of time remaining on the twin sin-binning, the scene was set for the home side to dominate.
They abjectly didn’t. McCall shrewdly changed four of his pack in one go and Saracens soon had Daly on the kicking tee to punish an in-at-the side from Magnus Bradbury after a carry to the ruck from sub Eroni Mawi.
Other subs also chipped in, the pressure mounting with Theo McFarland sent on at the end of the Itoje card. Rotimi Segun was soon gleefully in at the corner for the unconverted try that pushed Saracens 34-20 clear.
Then, after the contest was restored to 15 versus 15, Gonzalez raced in unopposed to bag the bonus point try following a scintillating Lucio Cinti break. Daly added the extras to complete the 41-20 scoreline, the fizz in the Bristol crowd had now turned very flat and that was that.
This will be remembered as a champion effort from the champions just went it crucially mattered at the business end of the season. Through to the semi-finals, their next quest is to clinch a home semi when they host Sale next weekend.
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I guess the other option would be to start ALB, he's looked good in the 12 so far when he starts and sets up those outside him. But that would mean putting the vice captain on the bench, which is unlikely. Another option would be to drop Reiko to the bench and play Proctor, though he's gone home so that's not going to happen either.
Both of those players just offer more of the soft distribution skills good centres learn from playing their careers there. Unfortunately that's what's lacking with the current combo.
Go to commentsWhatever let's see if this load of waffle is still valid in 2 years time. ABs will rise we have a lot of new talent coming through. The NPC was the highest standard for years. The game is changing to suit the fast pace we like to play. We get to play the Springboks more, including the franchises, which will make us better! Overall I am optimistic. I will add having watched the England game multiple times we made most of the play. England are an awesome physical team, but you can expect the All Blacks to get better and better at executing the chances. It could easily have been 5 tries to one instead of 3 to 1.
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