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Wasps player ratings vs Exeter Chiefs - Premiership Final

Wasps' Joe Launchbury appears dejected after the final whistle during the Gallagher Premiership Play-Off Final at Twickenham, London. (Photo by Mike Egerton/PA Images via Getty Images)

It was always going to be a big ask of Wasps, who lost Brad Shields, Kieran Brookes, Simon McIntyre and Alfie Barbeary who were ruled out due to contact tracing protocols, while Malakai Fekitoa missed out through a groin injury picked up in the semi-final against the Bristol Bears.

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Wasps had won on just two of their last seven appearances at Twickenham, which didn’t bode for a tilt at the might of Exeter at HQ, but that didn’t stop them pushing Exeter right to the limit. They could have just been happy to be there, but they came to win.

WASPS PLAYER RATINGS

15 MATTEO MINOZZI
The little Italian looked like a drowned rat at times and didn’t get the better of Chiefs’ kick to contest strategy. Not the horse for this particular course. Looked relieved when he came off – 5

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Dylan Hartley on THAT Prem Final red card…

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      Dylan Hartley on THAT Prem Final red card…

      14 ZACH KIBIRIGE
      Proved a safe pair of hands under the high ball despite the horrid conditions, although unable to play himself into the game – 5.5 

      13 JUAN DE JONGH
      The former Springbok posed a constant threat and kept Exeter’s defence honest throughout the first half, when he got the ball that is. Remained hungry – 6

      12 JIMMY GOPPERTH
      The veteran New Zealander was the first to draw blood on the scoreboard and was the cool headed sharp shooter to Umaga’s young gunslinger – 7.5

      11 JOSH BASSETT
      Another victim of the conditions, Bassett was left mopping up a lot of the aerial bombardment, an area of the game which had more or less become a lottery – 6

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      10 JACOB UMAGA
      Hard not to view his duel with Simmonds as a mock audition for Eddie Jones’ next flyhalf idol. Greasy, windy conditions didn’t suit him off the boot but his remarkable 31st minute try more than made up for any early inaccuracies – 7.5

      9 DAN ROBSON
      The England nine tested Exeter’s backline with some smart kick choices in the opening minutes. He was as sharp a tack throughout and a standout for the men from Coventry – 8

      1 TOM WEST
      The durable prop only missed one game since the restart of the season, and was maybe the best scrummager of eight props on show – 7

      2 TOMMY TAYLOR
      A real ding-dong battle with Luke Cowan-Dickie. Came off early, spent through exertion – 6

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      3 JEFF TOOMAGA-ALLEN
      Got the better of  the very early scrum exchanges, but that changed as the big front-rower seemed to run out of puff – 4

      4 JOE LAUNCHBURY (C)
      A huge turn over in the 12th minute felt massive at the time gifted Wasps a hard-fought exit from their 22. Fought his heart out and utterly dejected at the end – 7

      5 WILL ROWLANDS
      The hulking Welshman didn’t put in a highlight reel performance. It was a night for grim, sodden, piano shifting stuff and that he did do – 5

      6 JACK WILLIS
      None of the fancy stuff for the young tyro but lots of graft and smarts at the breakdown. A brilliant steal in the 47th minute saved an almost certain Chiefs try – 7

      7 THOMAS YOUNG
      Carried well through contact but Wasps didn’t get the rub of the green when it came to referee Craig Maxwell-Keys – 6

      8 TOM WILLIS
      The other Willis brother did not look altogether out of place considering he was playing in a Premiership Final, but a defensive lapse did gift Slade an easy try. Got replaced by Gaskell minutes into the second half and looked a bit sore walking off – 5

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      16 GABRIEL OGHRE
      A real impact off the bench, not least single-handedly stopping a Chiefs rolling maul on its way to Wasps’ try line. Two awful lineout throws maybe cost Wasps the title – 4.5

      17 BEN HARRIS
      Clearly delighted to deal out some damage when he came on. A memorable tackle helped Wasps level it at 13 – 13 in the 59th minute – 7.5

      18 BIYI ALO
      It was even stevens at the scrum by the end and giant prop played his part – 6

      19 JAMES GASKELL
      A solid if not remarkable shift after replacing Willis – 6

      20 BEN MORRIS
      Not on long enough to rate.

      21 BEN VELLACOTT
      Not on long enough to rate.

      22 LIMA SOPOAGA
      Was outstanding when he came on and one wonders should he have started – 8.5

      23 MICHAEL LE BOURGEOIS
      Not on long enough to rate.

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      Poorfour 10 minutes ago
      300,000 tickets sold and counting for 'era defining' Rugby World Cup

      I suspect the major holdback is still for other unions to sell their tickets. One thing I did notice and didn’t know how to quantify is that the major areas of availability seem to be the standing sections in the grounds that have them.


      If we assume that those are a) around 5-10% of the total tickets (a guess) and b) there are still around 10-15% held back, then 80% of the available seats would get us to c350k.


      I agree with you that the 400k target is very attainable, and this article: https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/articles/c9dqn0g2jdgo


      reminded me that we have the Women’s Soccer Euros a month or two ahead of the RWC. A good run there could well stoke additional interest for the rugby, especially as the broadcasters and the sports themselves seem to be getting their act together in terms of promoting a summer of women’s sport.


      But even without that, what’s clear is that the tournament has already met its planned sales and that the matches will be well attended, with the bigger ones almost certainly selling out. I imagine that financially we’re now well into upside territory.

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