Ulster maul Ospreys to secure another bonus-point victory
Ulster made it consecutive home bonus-point victories in the United Rugby Championship with a 36-12 win over Ospreys.
The Irish side outscored the visitors by six tries to two at Kingspan Stadium to secure a third win from five matches in the competition.
Hooker James McCormick opened the scoring for the home team with his first try in senior rugby on five minutes.
After a scrum penalty, Ulster kicked to the corner and from the resulting lineout the forwards set up a powerful driving maul with McCormick touching down.
Ulster crossed again six minutes later as a slick handling move involving Cormac Izuchukwu, Mike Lowry and David McCann created space for Jacob Stockdale and the Ireland winger went over in the corner, although John Cooney again was off target with the conversion.
Ulster used their maul to good effect again on 23 minutes. From a five-metre lineout, the forwards were about to rumble over the Ospreys line but Welsh scrum half Kieran Hardy came in from the side to stop the momentum illegally, the referee awarding the home side a penalty try and showing the pivot a yellow card.
Stockdale seemed to have sealed the bonus point two minutes later by finishing off a great move that started in Ulster’s half, but the try was chalked off for a forward pass in the build-up.
That bonus point try did arrive on 32 minutes when, following a series of pick and goes on the Ospreys line, flanker Marcus Rea barged over from close range with Cooney adding the extras.
In a rare sortie into the Ulster 22, the Ospreys opened their account with the clock in the red at the end of the first half. The visitors kicked a penalty to the corner and hooker Sam Parry dotted down, Dan Edwards’ conversion cutting Ulster’s lead at the interval to 24-7.
McCormick got his second try of the contest on 50 minutes, powering over from a tap penalty, before Keelan Giles notched an unconverted Ospreys try.
The home side replied immediately with Stockdale diving over from a tight angle for his second try, which Nathan Doak converted.
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Look ay how JS has turned Australia around in half the time. I get we have a learning curve for young players at test match level but we should not have it for our coaches. They are not good or experienced enough im afraid. You can’t learn on the job, this is England not your local club. We should have the tested and proven best at test or club level. And this is clearly not the case.
Go to commentsI'd well believe that Borthwick has the rugby brain for the job.
Unfortunately he's given all the key coaching positions to his totally unqualified mates and clearly can't execute whatever vision he has.
He could be the world's biggest rugby genius but he's obviously not a very good head coach at this level.
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