The Alex Sanderson verdict on the latest title-chasing Sale win
Alex Sanderson has set his sights on a home tie after Sale Sharks secured their place in the Gallagher Premiership play-offs. Sharks' 36-20 victory over Bristol at Ashton Gate confirmed a top-four finish, and they need one more win from remaining games against Gloucester and Newcastle to guarantee a play-off encounter on home soil.
“It is tough against the best teams away from home,” Sale rugby director Sanderson said. “You want to maintain form – you have to, going into finals. Us maintaining form means we win again and get a home semi-final. That is the basics of it.
“We needed that tonight. We have been nearly there, nearly there, and we have had enough of saying that. It was a good time to find a bit of form.
“It is confirmation of our belief. That was a more complete performance, and the big players finding form at this time in the season is crucial.”
England centre Manu Tuilagi was a key performer in Sale’s win, and a new contract with the Sharks could be finalised within days.
Sanderson added: “It is not signed, not sealed, but it has been delivered. There were other moving parts with regard to the salary cap which slotted into place today [Friday]. I have been there before when the rug gets pulled from under your feet, and a French or Japanese team come in with £1million.
“I am never going to stand in his way if that is what is right for him and his family. It’s right for him to stay with us for all the reasons.”
George Ford was the architect of Sale’s impressive win, kicking four penalties, a drop-goal and three conversions for a 21-point haul.
Skipper Ben Curry, lock Jean-Luc du Preez and scrum-half Gus Warr scored tries for Sale, while Bristol replied with touch downs from wings Siva Naulago and Gabriel Ibitoye, a penalty and two conversions by former Sharks fly-half AJ MacGinty, plus a James Williams penalty.
Paying tribute to the England international Curry brothers Ben and Tom, Sanderson said: “They are probably playing some of their best rugby. They are loving it, coming to their maturation. What are they? 24 now.
“Tom has had his recognition, and Ben is richly deserving getting his. It’s fitting they got men of the match tonight. I can’t wax more lyrically about them. They are good lads, great to work with. Super enthusiastic. Both could have a captain’s armband, but Ben is carrying that torch and Tom is supporting him, which is great.”
Bristol, who saw prop Ellis Genge yellow-carded following a high tackle on Sale flanker and his England teammate Tom Curry, are now effectively out of the playoff race.
“Whenever we play Sale it comes down to the physical battle, and 100 per cent they won that,” Bristol rugby director Lam said. “We made it difficult for ourselves. We gave 12 points away before they even got in our 22. All in all, it was disappointing.
“When you have got a kicker like George Ford, and in those (wet) conditions, three points are like five points. For us now, it is about making sure we secure Champions Cup (qualification) for next season.”
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SCW really dislikes Eddie, doesn't he?
His words in 2019 before the RWC final that he now says should have resulted in Eddie's firing:
"Was Saturday’s sensational World Cup semi-final win over New Zealand England’s greatest ever performance? Yes, unquestionably, would be my answer."
So let's fire the coach one game later? Duh!
Go to commentsIreland have every right to back themselves for a win. But the key variable has little to do with recent record etc.
The reality is that Ireland are a settled team with tons of continuity, an established style, and a good depth chart, whereas NZ are fundamentally rebuilding. The questions are all about what Razor is doing and how far along he is in that program.
NZ are very close to really clicking. Against England all of the chatter is about how England could have closed out a win, but failed to do so. This has obscured the observation that NZ were by far the more creative and effective in attack, beyond the 3-1 try differential and disallowed tries. They gave away a lot of unnecessary penalties, and made many simple errors (including knock-ons and loose kicks). Those things are very fixable, and when they do so we are once again going to be staring at a formidable NZ team.
Last week we heard the England fans talking confidently about their chances against NZ, but England did not end up looking like the better team on the field or the scoreboard. The England defense was impressive enough, but still could not stop the tries.
Ireland certainly has a better chance, of course, but NZ is improving fast, and I would not be surprised at a convincing All Black win this week. It may turn on whether NZ can cut out the simple mistakes.
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