Watch: Saracens hooker Woolstencroft joins Premiership elite with second-half try hat-trick
Tom Woolstencroft was the toast of rugby hookers everywhere on Wednesday night after the stand-in Saracens captain bagged a second-half try hat-trick in his team's 36-20 Gallagher Premiership win over Gloucester. It was quite the feat for the soon-to-be 26-year-old, who is usually the Saracens back-up to England international Jamie George.
Having joined the club in 2018 after initial stints at Bath and London Irish, scoring tries have not been the hooker's forte as prior to Wednesday he had only ever scored twice in his 49-game top-flight professional career.
Those scores came in 2018/19 league appearances versus Leicester and Northampton, but that gave no inkling to the scoring prowess he delivered in the second half at Allianz Park in what was his first Saracens start since the lockdown resumption of the Premiership.
Not only did he become just the fifth hooker in Premiership history to bag a hat-trick, joining the likes of Jamie George, Luke Cowan-Dickie and Harry Thacker, he also became just the fourth captain to ever score a league hat-trick, following in the esteemed footsteps of Gary Armstrong (1999), Jeremy Guscott (1999) and Nili Latu (2016).
No wonder Saracens boss Mark McCall was keen to heap praise on Woolstencroft in the aftermath, saying: "He is a top player and is as competitive as there is. He is brilliant around the field, really good over the ball and carries the ball well. He is someone we want to keep at the club for a long time.
“He’s a very calm player, he leads by example and he showed that today with his performance. The forwards felt at half-time that they had the upper hand in the scrum and the maul and they made that count in the second half, I’m really pleased with our pack."
Latest Comments
was I right to infer that you assumed a 1:1 correspondence between points and places?
If so why were you so evasive about admitting that?
I've typed out a reply regarding the pool format but I won't send it if you don't answer my question.
Go to commentsFoster should never have been appointed, and I never liked him as a coach, but the hysteria over his coaching and Sam Cane as a player was grounded in prejudice rather than fact.
The New Zealand Rugby public were blinded by their dislike of Foster to the point of idiocy.
Anything the All Blacks did that was good was attributed to Ryan and Schmidt and Fozzie had nothing to do with it.
Any losses were solely blamed on Foster and Cane.
Foster did develop new talent and kept all the main trophies except the World Cup.
His successor kept the core of his team as well as picking Cane despite him leaving for overseas because he saw the irreplaceable value in him.
Razor will take the ABs to the next level, I have full confidence in that.
He should have been appointed in 2020.
But he wasn’t. And the guy who was has never been treated fairly.