'Subconsciously it was there' - Sanderson admits huge fixture looms large
Sale director of rugby Alex Sanderson was pleased with his side’s second-half improvement in their 35-27 win over Newcastle.
The Sharks maintained their faint play-off hopes on Friday night after second-half scores from Ben Curry, Simon Hammersley and Ewan Ashman turned the game around.
But the hosts were flat for large parts of the first half, with the Falcons scoring an early try through George McGuigan and leading 15-14 at the break, with only two scores from Akker van der Merwe keeping the Sharks close.
And Sanderson, whose side face Racing 92 in the European Champions Cup quarter-finals next weekend, admitted his team were not at full throttle before the interval.
“We did well tonight,” he said. “I didn’t think we were necessarily trying to preserve ourselves in any way during the first half, but we weren’t quite there I suppose.
“We’ve talked about the Racing game during the week of course, and subconsciously it was there in the back of our minds I thought in the first half.
“You can’t really help that. We improved in the second half, though.
“We proved that we can move up the levels, and we need to maintain those levels for next weekend. We also scored some decent tries on the night too, which was pleasing.”
The Sharks were able to eventually turn the screw in the second half and ensure they moved into the Champions Cup qualification places.
Ashman crossed the whitewash 13 minutes from the end to secure a bonus point and give his side some breathing space for the first time.
Matias Orlando’s close-range score in the dying seconds ensured the visiting Falcons headed home with a try-scoring bonus point themselves.
Sale boss Sanderson now wants his team to maintain their momentum going into next week’s clash with Racing.
He added: “We’ll need all the ability and the energy we showed tonight when we head to France.
“We had a few lads out being tactically rested here tonight, so we’ll be at pretty much full strength.
“Certainly no-one in our camp thinks we can’t win over there next week.”
Newcastle director of rugby Dean Richards said he was pleased with the performance of his team despite the loss and that they will be motivated to pick up points their last two games.
The Falcons still have to face table-topping Leicester and Northampton before the end of the season.
“We competed well again, and I was pleased with the performance,” said Richards.
“Anyone who thought that we were going to come here and roll over and die has to think again.
“That was never going to happen and I think that showed.
“We certainly don’t want to finish bottom of the league standings, and that’s now motivation in itself to go on and win our last two games.
“Joel Hodgson played well, as did Mateo Carreras and Matias Orlando, and overall the whole team put in a shift.
“I can’t ask for any more than that.”
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It's that pass and step left/right thing he hasn't learnt to do yet.
Go to commentsMove on from the old guard. They are not world-beaters. Based on this development path and current selection policy they will suddenly realise in 2026 that they need to bring in players that are capable of being world-beaters by 2027, but it will be too late.
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