Northern Edition

Select Edition

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

Falcons rise to the occasion at St James' Park

Newcastle players celebrate during their historic game at St James Park

Newcastle Falcons boosted their hopes of finishing in the top four of the Premiership with a 25-22 victory over Northampton Saints at St James’ Park on Saturday.

ADVERTISEMENT

A club record crowd of 30,174 attended the fixture at the home of Newcastle United, with the high-flying Falcons wearing a black-and-white striped kit to mark the special occasion.

Northampton scored three tries but a lack of discipline scuppered their hopes of an upset, Toby Flood kicking six penalties while also adding the conversion after winger Vereniki Goneva raced over.

Boosted by the return of their Six Nations stars, Saracens marked the first Premiership fixture at the London Stadium with a 24-11 win over London rivals Harlequins.

Liam Williams and Maro Itoje touched down in the first half as the hosts opened up an 18-6 lead at the midway stage of the capital clash.

While James Horwill responded with a try for Quins, a pair of second-half penalties from Alex Lozowski saw Sarries to victory in front of a sell-out crowd of 57,000.

Sale Sharks scored eight tries as they thrashed lowly Worcester 58-25 at the AJ Bell Stadium.

ADVERTISEMENT

Denny Solomona crossed for the 11th time in the Premiership season, leaving him one behind with Josh Adams – who touched down twice in a losing cause for the Warriors – at the top of the try-scoring charts.

With 11th-placed Worcester losing, bottom club London Irish closed the gap to their nearest rivals in the standings despite a 33-29 defeat away at Gloucester.

In their first game since the appointment of Declan Kidney as technical consultant, Irish burst out to a 17-0 lead but eventually had to settle for two bonus points in a losing cause, leaving them 10 adrift of the Warriors with just four games remaining.

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

T
TI 4 hours ago
All Blacks player ratings vs Italy | Autumn Nations Series

Rieko took literally years to turn from a defensive liability at 13 into a guy, who’s defensively sound as it befits the position. And it all came at the cost of him being much less of an offensive threat, than what he used to be. Proctor is a natural 13, he handles, passes, and kicks way better than Rieko ever will, he just isn’t as fast.


It’s unfair to judge Tupaea on the handful of games he’s had in 2022 before he got nearly crippled by a Wallaby lock. What could Tupaea/Proctor pairing be, if they got the same amount of chances as Jordie/Rieko?


Because no matter how you spin it, playing a player outside of his natural position is a poor asset management. No matter how talented he is, he still competes against players who had years and years of practice at the position. And if said guy is so talented that he actually CAN compete against specialists, imagine how much better still he could have been, if he had all those years to iron the toothing issues at the position. It just drives me mad.


Two things I hate in rugby union beyond description: aping after league, and playing players outside of their natural position. Especially considering, that they all admit they hate it, when they’re allowed to speak freely. Owen Farrell spent 80% of his international career at 12, saying every time when asked, that he is a 10 and prefers to play at 10. Those players are literally held at a gunpoint: play out of position, or no national jersey for you.

48 Go to comments
TRENDING
TRENDING All Blacks player ratings vs Italy | Autumn Nations Series All Blacks player ratings vs Italy
Search