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Beno Obano: ‘It genuinely felt like grief’

By Jon Newcombe
Beno Obano leaves the field at Twickenham following his red card (Photo by David Rogers/Getty Images)

Beno Obano says he spent most of the summer being down-in-the-dumps, dwelling on being sent off in the Gallagher Premiership final.

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The June showpiece was only 22 minutes old when after lengthy consultation with the TMO, referee Christophe Ridley reached inside his pocket and produced a red card for a high shot on Juarno Augustus.

14-man Bath fought valiantly in Obano’s absence, while the prop cut a disconsolate figure on the sidelines, but ended up losing 21-25.

Obano found one of the biggest disappointments of his career hard to shake off, but has now put that behind him to play some superb rugby, including a brace of pick-and-go tries in Bath’s huge West Country derby win against Gloucester last Saturday.

“It’s weird because it genuinely felt like grief, I had quite a lot of grief over the summer. But I guess now when other things happen or tough things happen, and they are just not as bad as that, you are able to deal with them a lot easier. You basically scar over and build mental callouses and become stronger as a result,” the England international said.

“I don’t think that is the toughest thing that is ever going to happen to me in my life. I was pretty miserable for a long time but now I am all good, We’ve got a new season, new things to build to, and stuff to try and win.”

For Bath, that means winning the Premiership above all else.

The most-dominant club of the amateur era hasn’t been crowned champions since 1996 but they started the current campaign as one of the favourites.

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However, after the first four rounds the feeling that this season would be too tough to call seems to be bearing out.

Bath are one of five teams in the 10-team competition to have a won three, lost one record and are third in the table.

“We have definitely got the talent in the team to compete with anybody, I think. It is just a matter of doing it and executing it at the highest level, consistently,” said Obano, who turns 30 next Friday.

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Bath’s next challenge is Harlequins away, in Saturday’s tea-time fixture.

“I always enjoy playing in London, it is home for me. So every time I get to go back to London a lot of people want to come to the game and stuff,” he said.

“Quins are tough. I don’t think we have ever had an easy game at the Stoop, or against Quins in general, for as long as I have played.

“It is a matter of us executing. We spend our time focusing on other teams, we just focus on what we can do better and when we do that I don’t know who can beat us when we do our stuff well.”

Related

Women’s Rugby World Cup England 2025 ticket application opens 5 November (22 October for Mastercard holders). Register your interest now.

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