Waterboy incident ignites sideline brawl as Sale Sharks grab win over Gloucester
Sale Sharks claimed a first victory of interim head coach Paul Deacon’s reign as they beat Gloucester 22-19 at Kingsholm thanks to a late try. Substitute lock Josh Beaumont’s 79th-minute try, converted by fly-half AJ MacGinty, saw Sale home.
MacGinty also kicked five penalties, and Gloucester’s frustration boiled over in the final minute when a mass brawl broke out and centre Billy Twelvetrees was sin-binned.
First-half tries by prop Fraser Balmain and wing Louis Rees-Zammit appeared to set Gloucester up for victory, while fly-half Lloyd Evans booted three penalties.
But they were denied during the closing moments, and they remain bottom of the Gallagher Premiership after dropping there just hours before kick-off when Worcester were awarded four points due to their coronavirus-related cancelled game against Harlequins.
It was Sale’s first win since rugby director Steve Diamond unexpectedly left the club, and followed successive defeats against Toulon, Edinburgh and Wasps.
Gloucester boss George Skivington handed a first start of the season to lock Alex Craig, while scrum-half Stephen Varney returned in the solitary back division switch from the side beaten by Exeter on Boxing Day.
Sale, meanwhile, welcomed back captain Jono Ross following a three-week absence, while 20-year-old academy prop Bevan Rodd started alongside front-row colleagues Akker Van Der Merwe and Coenie Oosthuizen.
Gloucester were quickest out of the blocks as snow showers swirled around Kingsholm, dominating early territory and taking a fifth-minute lead when Evans landed a 35-metre penalty.
Sale stirred through the powerful work of their forwards, and they drew level 12 minutes later through a MacGinty penalty that rewarded sustained pressure.
Both sides went full bore in the close-quarter exchanges, and it was no surprise that the game’s opening try came from a driven maul.
The Gloucester pack established momentum close to Sale’s line, and Balmain touched down, taking the home side five points clear.
Although MacGinty’s second penalty cut the gap, Evans quickly restored it with a penalty after Ross was sin-binned by referee Karl Dickson following a high challenge on Gloucester prop Val Rapava-Ruskin.
And Ross had only been off the pitch for four minutes when Gloucester struck with an outstanding try from distance.
Scotland international centre Chris Harris was the architect, gliding clear of Sale defenders from just inside the Sharks’ half, before his pass sent Rees-Zammit clear and he applied a slick finish.
It was a setback for the visitors, yet they stuck to their task and MacGinty completed his penalty hat-trick just before half-time, making it 16-9 at the break.
MacGinty added another penalty early in the second period, and there was a renewed appetite among the Sale forwards with Ross back at the helm following his yellow card.
The Sharks then went desperately close to breaching Gloucester’s defence after an impressive surge led by their pack, but wing Tom Roebuck was just inches in touch as he stretched out with the ball over Gloucester’s line.
It was all Sale at this stage, and Gloucester did not help themselves when captain Lewis Ludlow was sin-binned for a technical offence, handing the Sharks a temporary one-man advantage.
A fifth successful MacGinty penalty made it a one-point game before Ludlow rejoined the action, and Gloucester’s first-half momentum had been lost as Sale could reflect on a dominant third-quarter display.
But another Evans penalty gave Gloucester breathing space, and Sale could find no way back until Beaumont’s close-range score that MacGinty converted.
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Clearly. Haven’t seen it but will take a look, if deliberate then deserved ban incoming…
Go to commentsKiss was doing very well indeed with Irish but Ulster had other off field issues going on, to say the least!!
Not sure it would be fair to judge McKellar on Leicester, it’s a tough gig with that dressing room and looked more like a poor fit more than anything else.
Would be a shock if O’Gara would touch it, he publicly dismissed Wales recently but covets France, England and Ireland - in that order.
Cotter would be interesting and he’s got qualities but he’s also got some elements of Eddie Jones about him believe it or not - he had the Scotland wc squad in camp, believe it or not, with the French foreign legion and ripping the heads off chickens!
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