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Four talking points as Northampton hold off a late Exeter rally

Angus Scott-Young celebrates Northampton's victory (Photo by David Rogers/Getty Images)

It’s still early days in the new 2024/25 Gallagher Premiership to suggest how the title race will ultimately play out, but an especially interesting week visiting old rivals Saracens awaits Rob Baxter’s Exeter now that they have chalked up a second successive league loss with their 24-30 defeat at Northampton.

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It was 2021/22 when the Chiefs last went LL in the opening two rounds of the English season, losing at Leicester and then at home to Northampton, the same two teams they have so far lost to this term.

They were third-round winners three years ago, their seasoned side picking off Sale away, but breaking this latest losing run with a Sunday service in London will be a considerably tall order for the now less experienced Baxter squad that only has Newcastle below them on the table.

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RugbyPass was at cinch Stadium @ Franklin’s Gardens for Saturday’s six-try clash of the clubs with the reimagined crests. It didn’t remotely promise a tight finish as Northampton were 30-10 clear on the hour and looking comfortable. Too comfortable it turned out to be.

Two late converted Immanuel Feyi-Waboso tries heralded a nervous conclusion where impressive host out-half Fin Smith was relieved to boot the ball into the stand with the margin cut to six points.

Gallagher Premiership

P
W
L
D
PF
PA
PD
BP T
BP-7
BP
Total
1
Saracens
2
2
0
0
10
2
Bristol
2
1
1
0
7
3
Harlequins
2
1
1
0
6
4
Gloucester
2
1
1
0
6
5
Bath
1
1
0
0
5
6
Leicester
1
1
0
0
4
7
Northampton
2
1
1
0
4
8
Sale
2
1
1
0
4
9
Exeter Chiefs
2
0
2
0
2
10
Newcastle
2
0
2
0
0

That confirmed the defending champions had secured a redemptive win following last weekend’s setback at Bath, the team they beat in last season’s final 16 weeks ago. Here are the RugbyPass talking points:

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Baxter’s half-full glass
It’s intriguing how a couple of late scores can lighten the mood. Exeter looked a very well-beaten docket when Smith scooped over his 60th-minute drop goal to leave a 20-point margin between the teams. The odds at that stage were for Northampton to press on and register a four-try bonus point, but that didn’t materialise.

Instead, the Chiefs finally twice made something stick in the opposition 22 and the anticipated 5-0 match points outcome became a 4-1 divvy-up that so pleased Baxter he would have been well within his rights to tuck into the leftover chocolate cake on the table beside him and celebrate at his post-game media briefing.

Exeter were encouragingly credited with a whopping 14 visits to Saints’ 22, compared to just eight for the hosts, but they had a frustrating ability to repeatedly mess things up until that late hurrah. They certainly aren’t the force of old, annual title challengers who knew the business of winning with their eyes closed.

Rather than rant and rave over current vulnerabilities, Baxter insisted his young outfit still had plenty of time on its side to come very good. Let’s hear him out: “We’re still a high error team at the minute. That’s the reality, that’s what is our bugbear.

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“Things like not holding the ball in contact, getting stripped, balls bobbling loose, just getting pulled away. The odd silly penalty. Even at the end, we kicked the ball straight off the field when we had a chance to get an exit and keep pressure on the opposition…

“People used to call us a machine in the past because we didn’t use to get those things wrong. We’re getting them wrong now so we have to find the power of the machine again.

“The one thing I know is when you have been through this process a couple of times like I have with a couple of groups of players, you do know it will get there eventually. I just have to be more boneheaded than the players, be more boneheaded on repeating the stuff that needs to be repeated until they actually understand it keeps you so safe and it keeps you so strong that eventually you just start winning games like today.

“We have ended up six points off having done some pretty odd things, made quite a lot of mistakes but we have created enough situations and the pressure of the game changes, everything flows and you can score quickly.

“I’m delighted for the players because they have had a bit of a tough look at themselves but a losing bonus point away from home is par. A lot of teams don’t pick up losing bonus points here. A good par performance, picked up a bonus point.

“If we had a win last week (they were beaten in the last minute by Leicester) we would be sitting here with five or six points. Most teams in this competition would take that – and we have been very close to achieving that over two weeks so overall we are doing okay.”

Mitchell wait goes on
It was at last Tuesday’s media briefing when Phil Dowson volunteered that Alex Mitchell, his unavailable No9, would be seeing a specialist about the neck issue picked up at training that has sidelined him from the opening rounds of the league.

Steve Borthwick’s first-choice England scrum-half was originally set to play against Bedford in Saints’ final pre-season outing on September 13. He had been named in the starting team but was a no-show come kick-off and has since missed Northampton’s two Premiership matches.

Dowson claimed post-Exeter there was no firm indication good or bad regarding the Mitchell investigation. “He saw the specialist on Thursday and so we are hoping to get a bit more clarity on that in the next week or so,” he said.

Reading between the lines, we definitely won’t be seeing him versus Harlequins next Friday night given the short turnaround, and the fear must be that something serious has happened and Mitchell unfortunately might not be ready for the start of England’s Autumn Nations Series at home to New Zealand on November 2. That would be a real pity.

Saints’ Quins-like ambition
Northampton were pleased with how their defence stood up to scrutiny until their late leakage. According to the RugbyPass match centre, just 19 of their 187 tackles were missed, a completion rate of 91 per cent. The Exeter rearguard were less busy, making 112 tackles. Twenty were missed, leaving them with an 85 per cent success.

Dowson insisted there were still a few things for Saints to defensively fix, including the yellow carded high shot from Rory Hutchinson that left them a man down for the final part of the match, but what the director of rugby wants to achieve in the long run is take a leaf out of the Harlequins playbook and go after an increased number of breakdown turnovers to lessen the defensive load over an entire match.

“One of the things we looked at in reviewing last season was we were very high in terms of time in defence and we did some really good defending but that drains people from an energy point of view and it also puts you under pressure.

“And so we wanted to be in a situation where we gave license to people to make decisions around the breakdown and loosen that off a little bit. Of course you want to do that without giving too many penalties away.

“We looked at Quins who have a very, very high number of turnovers and a very low number of penalties given away at the breakdown, so it can be done and that is something we have talked about in terms of when you are looking to try and get on the ball, the different ways of getting the ball back and encouraging players to make those decisions in training.”

Chiefs’ bomb squad
Curious how Baxter attempted a South African bomb squad-type tactic to energise Exeter, whipping off Scott Sio, Dan Frost and Ehren Painter at the interval and replacing this starting front row with Will Goodrick-Clarke, Jack Yeandle and Marcus Street.

The director of rugby insisted it wasn’t a case of administrating tough love following some first-half exasperation. “No, we are going to rotate the front row pretty regularly anyway,” he explained. “That’s a separate call just based on minutes and keeping them fresh and having an impact with other players.”

The previous weekend, Painter played only the first half as well with Josh Iosefa-Scott coming on for the entire second half. It was six minutes after that break versus Leicester when Goodrick-Clarke and Yeandle were introduced for Sio and Frost.

Another forward whose minutes have also been restricted is lock Rusiate Tuima. He had just 49 minutes at Franklin’s, just three more than at Sandy Park in round one.

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Pag The Fullback 90 days ago

Great article, thanks!

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AllyOz 18 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.

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