Northern Edition
Select Edition
Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

Two-try Christie an inspiration as Saracens secure stylish win

By PA
Saracens' Andy Onyeama-Christie celebrates after scoring his team's fourth try at Kingsholm (Photo by David Rogers/Getty Images)

Saracens kicked off their Gallagher Premiership season in impressive style with a bonus-point victory over Gloucester at Kingsholm.

ADVERTISEMENT

Without departed skipper Owen Farrell, new recruit Fergus Burke slipped seamlessly into his shoes to guide the visitors to a morale-boosting 35-26 success.

Andy Onyeama-Christie scored two of their tries and Ivan van Zyl and Tobias Elliott the others, with Burke kicking two conversions and two penalties.

Freddie Thomas, Freddie Clarke, Jack Clement and Seb Blake scored tries for Gloucester, with George Barton adding three conversions.

Val Rapava-Ruskin was a late withdrawal for Gloucester having aggravated a knee injury, with Mayco Vivas stepping up from the bench.

Ruck Speed

0-3 secs
59%
43%
3-6 secs
26%
39%
6+ secs
15%
18%
106
Rucks Won
103

The first 15 minutes were largely featureless with neither side able to threaten the try line as referee Craig Maxwell-Keys awarded seven penalties to prevent any flow to the game.

Gloucester full-back Barton enlivened proceedings with a couple of penetrative runs but losing lineouts on their own throw did not help the home side’s cause.

ADVERTISEMENT

The game sprang into life when Saracens moved the ball along the line for Elliot Daly to chip ahead and the ball bounced favourably for Rotimi Segun to collect and score.

Worse was to follow for Gloucester when first van Zyl intercepted a telegraphed pass from debutant Gareth Anscombe to race 45 metres, before Burke and Daly created space for Elliott to leave Anscombe and Ollie Thorley floundering.

Gloucester badly needed a score before the interval and got one when Tomos Williams quickly took a short penalty to dash into the opposition 22. The scrum-half was hauled down just short of the line but the hosts maintained the pressure for Thomas to crash over.

Barton’s impressive touchline conversion left his side 17-7 adrift at half-time. However, Gloucester made a disastrous start to the second half.

ADVERTISEMENT

Ruan Ackermann lost the restart kick for Saracens to build up pressure and Onyeama-Christie finished off an unstoppable forward drive.

The home side changed their whole front row in an attempt to reverse their fortunes but Saracens responded by bringing on three international forwards in Jamie George, Ben Earl and Nick Isiekwe and it paid dividends with a penalty from Burke extending their lead.

The hosts kept in contention with replacement Clarke scoring with his first touch, but their hopes were short-lived when another pre-planned lineout move put Onyeama-Christie in the clear and the flanker raced away to score his second.

Burke missed the conversion but added a simple penalty before Anscombe was replaced by Charlie Atkinson.

Gloucester showed considerable spirit to score tries from Clement and Blake to earn a deserved bonus point but their rally came too late.

Related

ADVERTISEMENT

Classic Wallabies vs British & Irish Legends | First Match | Full Match Replay

Did the Lions loosies get away with murder? And revisiting the Springboks lift | Whistle Watch

The First Test, Visiting The Great Barrier Reef & Poetry with Pierre | Ep 6: The Ultimate Test

KOKO Show | July 22nd | Full Throttle with Brisbane Test Review and Melbourne Preview

New Zealand v South Africa | World Rugby U20 Championship | Extended Highlights

USA vs England | Men's International | Full Match Replay

France v Argentina | World Rugby U20 Championship | Extended Highlights

Lions Share | Episode 4

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

0 Comments
Be the first to comment...

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Features

Comments on RugbyPass

S
Soliloquin 2 hours ago
Competing interests and rotated squads: What the 'player welfare summer' is really telling us

I don’t know the financial story behind the changes that were implemented, but I guess clubs started to lose money, Mourad Boudjellal won it all with Toulon, got tired and wanted to invest in football , the French national team was at its lowest with the QF humiliation in 2015 and the FFR needed to transform the model where no French talent could thrive. Interestingly enough, the JIFF rule came in during the 2009/2010 season, so before the Toulon dynasty, but it was only 40% of the players that to be from trained in French academies. But the crops came a few years later, when they passed it at the current level of 70%.

Again, I’m not a huge fan of under 18 players being scouted and signed. I’d rather have French clubs create sub-academies in French territories like Wallis and Futuna, New Caledonia and other places that are culturally closer to RU and geographically closer to rugby lands. Mauvaka, Moefana, Taofifenua bros, Tolofua bros, Falatea - they all came to mainland after starting their rugby adventure back home.

They’re French, they come from economically struggling areas, and rugby can help locally, instead of lumping foreign talents.

And even though many national teams benefit from their players training and playing in France, there are cases where they could avoid trying to get them in the French national team (Tatafu).

In other cases, I feel less shame when the country doesn’t believe in the player like in Meafou’s case.

And there are players that never consider switching to the French national team like Niniashvili, Merckler or even Capuozzo, who is French and doesn’t really speak Italian.

We’ll see with Jacques Willis 🥲


But hey, it’s nothing new to Australia and NZ with PI!

109 Go to comments
TRENDING
TRENDING John Barclay makes concerning Owen Farrell observation despite Test spot calls Barclay makes concerning Farrell observation despite Test spot calls