Northern Edition

Select Edition

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

Dragons fail to fire as Connacht run in five tries for win

By PA
Caolin Blade of Connacht. Photo By Tyler Miller/Sportsfile via Getty Images

Replacement Matthew Devine’s last-minute intercept try topped off a comfortable 31-7 United Rugby Championship win for Connacht over Dragons.

ADVERTISEMENT

Paul Boyle, Caolin Blade and captain Cian Prendergast crossed during the first half at Dexcom Stadium, as the Westerners led 19-0 in search of their third win in six games.

It took 73 minutes before the bonus point was registered through Cathal Forde, and despite Taine Basham’s consolation score, Devine made sure to have the final say.

Pete Wilkins’ side applied the early pressure via a scrum penalty. Some close-in carries led to Boyle bashing his way over, supported by Dylan Tierney-Martin. Forde converted.

Dragons drew encouragement from Aneurin Owen’s well-won penalty, while Ewan Rosser and the returning Aaron Wainwright both got their hands on the ball before the attack petered out.

Indeed, the hosts were clinical soon after, Shayne Bolton’s burst out wide putting them on the front foot, and Bundee Aki’s instinctive offload, in front of the posts, sent Blade over to make it 14-0.

22m Entries

Avg. Points Scored
3.8
8
Entries
Avg. Points Scored
0.6
11
Entries

Connacht’s maul defence frustrated the Welsh outfit twice, and Angus O’Brien’s 50:22 kick also amounted to nothing. His half-back partner, Dane Blacker, was then swatted out of the way by Prendergast for a try before half-time.

ADVERTISEMENT

Even the introduction of Rhodri Williams, fresh from his shock Wales call-up, could not inspire a score for Dragons. Aki broke up their attacking pressure with a turnover.

Basham could not link with his support on a pacy break, but Connacht got the scoreboard moving again late on.

Scrum-half Devine brilliantly slipped out of two tackles to release Forde for the try-line, with the centre also adding the conversion.

Basham showed impressive strength to reply for Dragons, following another O’Brien 50:22 kick, only for Devine to soon scamper clear from just inside his own half.

ADVERTISEMENT

Louis Rees-Zammit joins Jim Hamilton for the latest episode of Walk the Talk to discuss his move to the NFL. Watch now on RugbyPass TV

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

A
AllyOz 19 hours ago
Does the next Wallabies coach have to be an Australian?

I will preface this comment by saying that I hope Joe Schmidt continues for as long as he can as I think he has done a tremendous job to date. He has, in some ways, made the job a little harder for himself by initially relying on domestic based players and never really going over the top with OS based players even when he relaxed his policy a little more. I really enjoy how the team are playing at the moment.


I think Les Kiss, because (1) he has a bit more international experience, (2) has previously coached with Schmidt and in the same setup as Schmidt, might provide the smoothest transition, though I am not sure that this necessarily needs to be the case.


I would say one thing though about OS versus local coaches. I have a preference for local coaches but not for the reason that people might suppose (certainly not for the reason OJohn will have opined - I haven't read all the way down but I think I can guess it).


Australia has produced coaches of international standing who have won World Cups and major trophies. Bob Dwyer, Rod Macqueen, Alan Jones, Michael Cheika and Eddie Jones. I would add John Connolly - though he never got the international success he was highly successful with Queensland against quality NZ opposition and I think you could argue, never really got the run at international level that others did (OJohn might agree with that bit). Some of those are controversial but they all achieved high level results. You can add to that a number of assistants who worked OS at a high level.


But what the lack of a clear Australian coach suggests to me is that we are no longer producing coaches of international quality through our systems. We have had some overseas based coaches in our system like Thorn and Wessels and Cron (though I would suggest Thorn was a unique case who played for Australia in one code and NZ in the other and saw himself as a both a NZer and a Queenslander having arrived here at around age 12). Cron was developed in the Australian system anyway, so I don't have a problem with where he was born.


But my point is that we used to have systems in Australia that produced world class coaches. The systems developed by Dick Marks, which adopted and adapted some of the best coaching training approaches at the time from around the world (Wales particularly) but focussed on training Australian coaches with the best available methods, in my mind (as someone who grew up and began coaching late in that era) was a key part of what produced the highly skilled players that we produced at the time and also that produced those world class coaches. I think it was slipping already by the time I did my Level II certificate in 2002 and I think Eddie Jones influence and the priorities of the executive, particularly John O'Neill, might have been the beginning of the end. But if we have good coaching development programmes at school and junior level that will feed through to representative level then we will have


I think this is the missing ingredient that both ourselves and, ironically, Wales (who gave us the bones of our coaching system that became world leading), is a poor coaching development system. Fix that and you start getting players developing basic skills better and earlier in their careers and this feeds through all the way through the system and it also means that, when coaching positions at all levels come up, there are people of quality to fill them, who feed through the system all the way to the top. We could be exporting more coaches to Japan and England and France and the UK and the USA, as we have done a bit in the past.


A lack of a third tier between SR and Club rugby might block this a little - but I am not sure that this alone is the reason - it does give people some opportunity though to be noticed and play a key role in developing that next generation of players coming through. And we have never been able to make the cost sustainable.


I don't think it matters that we have an OS coach as our head coach at the moment but I think it does tell us something about overall rugby ecosystem that, when a coaching appointment comes up, we don't have 3 or 4 high quality options ready to take over. The failure of our coaching development pathway is a key missing ingredient for me and one of the reasons our systems are failing.

131 Go to comments
TRENDING
TRENDING TJ Perenara's Black Rams Tokyo pull off big scalp in day of League One upsets TJ Perenara's Black Rams pull off big scalp
Search