Northern Edition

Select Edition

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

Bath muscle up late for remarkable comeback win over Gloucester

By PA
Finn Russell observes the Bath scrum. Photo by Patrick Khachfe/Getty Images)

Bath produced a stunning second-half performance to win a pulsating West Country derby against Gloucester 45-27 at a sold-out Kingsholm.

ADVERTISEMENT

Trailing 20-10 at the interval, after being comfortably second best in the first half, Bath turned the game on its head with their pack taking control to score four tries in a devastating 15-minute spell as their opponents imploded.

Ollie Lawrence scored two tries for Bath with Will Muir, Thomas du Toit and Beno Obano also touching down for the visitors. There was also a penalty try award with Finn Russell adding five conversions and a penalty.

Video Spacer

Video Spacer

Santiago Carreras, Chris Harris and Matias Alemanno scored Gloucester’s tries with George Barton kicking two penalties and three conversions.

Gloucester made an explosive start, with Jonny May heavily involved.

A pre-planned move saw the former England international tear through the Bath ranks to set up a period of pressure, with the wing soon producing another strong run which ended with Carreras being hauled down metres from the try-line.

Bath captain Ben Spencer was yellow-carded as he sought to slow down Gloucester’s possession and the hosts soon capitalised with a Barton penalty.

ADVERTISEMENT

Bath’s response was swift with a Russell penalty rewarding a powerful burst from Lawrence, meaning Spencer was able to return to the fray with no damage done to the scoreboard.

After 17 minutes, Gloucester’s early dominance was rewarded when Harris powered over after Bath’s defence had been dragged from side to side as the hosts’ skilful inter-play had them chasing shadows.

Bath then missed a golden opportunity for an immediate reply when another break from Lawrence set up a scoring chance for Miles Reid but the flanker stumbled when challenged by Carreras with the line beckoning.

It mattered little as Lawrence took matters into his own hands by brushing off Stephen Varney’s tackle to score Bath’s opening try, with Russell’s conversion bringing the scores level.

ADVERTISEMENT

However, Gloucester were soon back in front with more intricate back play creating the space for Carreras to walk over in the corner.

A Russell penalty attempt rebounded back off a post but Barton had no such issues as he slotted over from 30 metres out to give his side a deserved 20-10 interval lead.

After the restart Bath were quickly out of the traps and roared back into contention when Muir collected Max Ojomoh’s long pass before bumping off two defenders to score.

Russell converted before Bath took the lead for the first time when Du Toit finished off a succession of forward drives.

In the third quarter, it was one-way traffic as Gloucester could not get out of their 22 and it came as no surprise when Obano crashed over for Bath’s bonus-point try.

Gloucester conceded a fourth score in the space of 15 minutes, a penalty try being awarded with their flanker Jack Clement sin-binned for collapsing.

Gloucester showed some spirit with a try from Alemanno before Clement returned from the sin-bin in time to see Lawrence seal Bath’s victory with his second try of the night.

ADVERTISEMENT

LIVE

{{item.title}}

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

S
SK 34 minutes ago
Does South Africa have a future in European competition?

I think the way the SA teams see it Nick is that the URC is their bread and butter. The fans want the URC but also SA teams want to win the URC before they harbour European Ambitions. They also see the European competitions as a bridge too far. They cannot get a home semi or home final and they feel like they need those conditions to win it. This is a hangover from the Super Rugby days where SA teams never won a single title away from home. The fact that URC derbies are in close proximity to the European matches does not help. The SA derbies are huge money spinners for SA rugby and the unions. They usually get big crowds in for them for 30 thousand or more sometimes selling out a 40-50 thousand seater. The Champions cup really needs its own spot in the calendar for SA Rugby and moving the derbies seems like the easiest thing to control. This will also give the gravitas the fixtures deserve in the calendar. I cant wait for Sharks vs Toulouse but will it get the attention it deserves in Durban? The other problem I feel is that SA teams when using their depth do not box smart. They seem to have no plan aside from go to Europe and get smashed. Lets not forget the Sharks played Leicester with a decent team. Mchunu, Nyakane, the Hendrickse brothers and Buthelezi are all current Springboks and Venter is a former one. Hooker and Masuku attended the alignment camps and Jenkins was an important figure at Leinster. Richardson is a current Scottish international. They had some decent players on the pitch but they played really poorly and didnt use their strengths. The SA teams also need to work harder and show up and they need to find some belief because there is some strong depth there.

55 Go to comments
LONG READ
LONG READ Return of 30-something brigade provides welcome tonic for Wales Return of 30-something brigade provides welcome tonic for Wales
Search