Stunning comeback from 14-man London Irish earns a draw at Saracens
A Kyle Rowe hat-trick set the stage for 14-man London Irish to snatch a sensational 34-34 draw against Saracens at StoneX Stadium.
The Exiles trailed 34-8 with 18 minutes remaining, having lost Adam Coleman to a first-half red card, but somehow came back to earn a draw, with Rory Jennings kicking the final conversion to seal the comeback.
The home side were on the scoreboard within the first five minutes, Tom Woolstencroft at the back of a rolling maul, with Alex Lozowski missing the conversion.
Paddy Jackson and Lozowski then exchanged penalties before the visitors were reduced to 14 men, Coleman given his marching orders after a high and dangerous tackle on Jackson Wray.
It took a while for Saracens to make use of their man advantage though, Rotimi Segun taking a pass following a lineout and dancing his way through the Irish defence from 15 metres out to score in the corner, with Lozowski again failing to add the extras as the scores stood at 13-3.
The floodgates opened for the home side after the restart, Segun sprinting away from his opposite number after the ball was spun through the backs to score in the corner.
Ben Earl then took an offload from Andy Christie to grab the bonus point under the posts, Lozowski converted both times to push the lead to 27-3.
Irish got their first try of the afternoon five minutes afterwards, Rowe powering through a pair of Saracens tacklers and stretching over from a yard out, but Jennings could not cut the lead any further as he pulled his conversion wide.
It was Mako Vunipola’s turn to get on the scoresheet for the home side, barrelling through the Irish defence from five metres out before Lozowski’s conversion pushed the score to 34-8.
Rowe responded with his second try of the day, weaving his way through the Saracens defence from the halfway line and escaping the grasp of four would-be tacklers before touching down before Jennings added the extras.
Nick Phipps then bagged another, taking the hand-off from Ollie Hassell-Collins and finishing under the posts with Jennings again converting.
Irish set the game up for a nervous final few minutes as they grabbed their bonus-point try, Matt Rogerson taking the ball from the back of a lineout and barging over from short-range, Jennings’ conversion was unsuccessful, leaving the gap at just seven points heading into the final five minutes.
The visitors had one final attempt to try and tie the game, and Rowe’s third try of the day in the corner left the result of the game hanging on Jennings’ boot, and he duly dispatched the extras to give Irish a thoroughly deserved draw.
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Go to commentsGreat to see Aki Tuivailala at the Crusaders. Played well for Waikato and NZ Under 20's. Hamilton Boys High has become a great feeder for the Crusaders . Plenty of great local talent coming through, such outstanding young lock Liam Jack. Nephew of All Black Chris Jack. His Dad Graham was in the NPC winning Canterbury team of 1997 . Locked the scrum with Reuben Thorne. Two of his team mates Dads were in that team too, Todd Blackadder, ( captain) , son is Ethan and Angus Gardiner son is Dominic.
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