Northern Edition

Select Edition

Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

Two players sent off as Bath hit Sale Sharks for six

By PA
Finn Russell of Bath off loads the ball as Luke James (R), Rob du Preez and Arron Reed (L) tackle during the Gallagher Premiership Rugby match between Bath Rugby and Sale Sharks at the Recreation Ground on October 26, 2024 in Bath, England. (Photo by David Rogers/Getty Images)

Six-try Bath powered their way to a bonus-point victory over Sale to round off the first block of Gallagher Premiership matches in style.

ADVERTISEMENT

Both sides had a player sent off – Will Butt for Bath and Nye Thomas for Sale – but they were isolated incidents in a well contested and open match.

Just 65 seconds into the game, a deft inside pass from Bath tighthead prop Thomas du Toit sent Will Muir galloping through a gap in the Sale defence on an unstoppable trajectory to the try line. Finn Russell converted to get the home side off to a dream start.

Video Spacer

Louis Rees-Zammit – Walk the Talk trailer | RPTV

Video Player is loading.
Current Time 0:00
Duration 0:00
Loaded: 0%
Stream Type LIVE
Remaining Time 0:00
 
1x
    • Chapters
    • descriptions off, selected
    • captions off, selected
      Video Spacer

      Louis Rees-Zammit – Walk the Talk trailer | RPTV

      Wales try-scoring wizard Louis Rees-Zammit joins Jim Hamilton for an exclusive chat about life in the NFL. Watch the full show on RugbyPass TV

      Watch now

      Muir was just as alert in defence to foil a blindside thrust by Sale skipper Rob du Preez but the fly-half was able to land a 13th-minute penalty from 30 metres.

      His side was under pressure in the scrums, however, and conceding penalties, which put Bath in prime position for a second try on 19 minutes. The catch-and-drive from a line-out eventually saw skipper Miles Reid touching down, with Russell again adding the conversion.

      Fixture
      Gallagher Premiership
      Bath
      40 - 13
      Full-time
      Sale
      All Stats and Data

      Another penalty from Rob du Preez’s boot kept his team in touch after it was Bath’s turn to feel the pressure. But that was quickly answered on 26 minutes when Du Toit showed a remarkable turn of pace to a take a Louis Schreuder pass and score under the posts.

      Russell’s conversion was the last score of the first half as Sale stepped up their effort but without finding any reward.

      ADVERTISEMENT

      Five minutes after the break, Ted Hill scored the bonus-point try, a spectacular effort bursting through two tacklers and weaving past Gus Warr to the posts to make it another simple conversion for Russell.

      The joy was short-lived though as flanker Guy Pepper was helped off with a leg injury and centre Will Butt was red-carded for upending replacement lock Le Roux Roets at a ruck, letting him land on his head.

      With Sale suddenly energised, it was now Bath losing their discipline and the visitors capitalised with an expertly taken try at the flag by right wing Will Addison, courtesy of an equally well-judged grubber kick by Joe Carpenter. Rob du Preez converted from the touchline to make the score 28-13.

      Bath hit back on the hour, fashioning an opening for Muir but he was taken out in the corner by a double tackle from replacements Nye Thomas and Tom Curtis. Thomas was shown the red for a head-high challenge as a bloodied Muir received treatment.

      ADVERTISEMENT

      Retribution was swift as Bath worked replacement scrum-half Tom Carr-Smith over in the right corner and Russell’s conversion made it 35-13.

      A sixth try followed on 78 minutes as replacement prop Francois van Wyk burrowed under a pile of bodies to score – just as he did against Harlequins a week earlier. Russell’s conversion was wide to deny him a perfect record.

      Related

      ADVERTISEMENT

      Kubota Spears vs Saitama Wild Knights | Japan Rugby League One 2024/25 | Full Match Replay

      The gruelling reality behind one of the fastest sports in the world | The Report

      Boks Office | Episode 40 | The Steven Kitshoff Special

      Perry Baker in the house | HSBC Life on Tour | Los Angeles

      O2 Inside Line: All In | Episode 6 | Le Crunch

      The Unexpected Journey to USA 7s Glory | Aaron Cummings | Sevens Wonders

      USA vs Japan | Full Match Replay

      Yokohama Canon Eagles vs Shizuoka BlueRevs | Japan Rugby League One 2024/25 | Full Match Replay

      Confidence knocks and finding your people | Flo Williams | Rugby Rising Locker Room

      Tackling reasons for drop-out in sport | Zainab Alema | Rugby Rising Locker Room

      Jet Lag: The biggest challenge facing international sports? | The Report

      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

      B
      BigGabe 1 hour ago
      'Love him or hate him, Henry Pollock has got the rugby world talking.'

      Well, I would disagree with your take that you don’t take the p*** out of the opposition.


      Sledging and posturing is very much a part of the game - “four more years”/"just a **** richie mccaw”/any swan dive celebration/English yelling when they win minor penalties/etc etc. Cricket has much the same when a wicket keeper chats in a batsman’s ears, but no one complains about it. Just because we can’t hear what goes on a ruck or maul, or see what goes on, doesn’t mean it doesn’t go on. Sport is emotional. Let’s not pretend that rugby has a history of behaving like absolute gentleman before the final whistle goes off.


      The spirit of rugby…now this is an interesting one. What does that mean? 2-3 years ago, the 6-2/7-1 split was against the spirit of rugby, but now it is used by club and country. Does this mean the spirit of rugby can change? In 1974, the Lions had an infamous Call 99. Today, teams are still getting into fights. Other sports don’t do this. Is this the spirit of rugby? I think this phrase is one of those useful ones that means everything and nothing and can be used by both sides of the fence, as well as the fence itself, to justify what they want to see. But perhaps we should not be looking at Pollock, but at ourselves. Are we (you) all not giving a self-described wind up merchant exactly what he wants? I think this conservative group of sports fans needs to realise that just bc they have viewed rugby a certain way for a long time, does not mean that it necessarily needs to be viewed that way for ever and ever amen. That’s gatekeeping and the generations to come don’t like or respect it. As rugby culture breaks into new markets, it needs to constantly adjust.

      9 Go to comments
      N
      Nickers 2 hours ago
      USA team in Super Rugby Pacific is not the answer right now, but this is

      The question for any expansion is - what is the point?


      On one hand talking about expanding for commercial reasons, but then saying younger squad members would play giving big names a rest making it more for development purposes?


      The problem with SRP is it serves two masters - fans who want a good competition to watch, but also the national teams in developing players so they can go on to become international players.


      The case for maximising young player development:


      A major problem NZ and Australia have is at U20s. AR and NZR would be best served by investing in proper U20 super rugby competition that runs in conjunction with Super Rugby, rather than the one-off carnival style thing that happens at the moment. 20 year olds coming out of France and England in particular, but also France are noticeably more developed than the equivalent players from NZ, Australia and even SA.


      NZ and Australia probably both have one too many teams in SR. If you’re taking a long term view they are best served by cutting teams from the comp now and improving the quality even more. Although MP have been good this year there is also an argument for cutting them too, and reducing to 8 teams that all play each other home and away in a round robin. It would be a ridiculously strong competition with a lot of depth if all the best players are redistributed.


      This in conjunction with a full U20s competition (possibly playing just one round rather than 2) would make NZ and Australia international teams much stronger with a lot more depth.


      But that solution would make less money and cost more.


      NPC would need to be fully amateur or semi-pro at best in this model. If you cross reference the losses NZR posted today with the costs they have previously published about operating the NPC, you can attribute a huge amount, if not all of the losses, to the NPC. At the moment this is putting way too much money into a failing high performance competition at the expense of development.

      12 Go to comments
      LONG READ
      LONG READ 'Love him or hate him, Henry Pollock has got the rugby world talking.' 'Love him or hate him, Henry Pollock has got the rugby world talking.'
      Search