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Late rally lifts Edinburgh to victory over Cardiff

By PA
EDINBURGH, SCOTLAND - DECEMBER 16: Edinburgh's Duhan Van Der Merwe celebrates after scoring a try during the EPCR Challenge Cup match between Edinburgh Rugby and Castres Olympique at DAM Health Stadium on December 16, 2023 in Edinburgh, Scotland. (Photo by Peter Summers/Getty Images)

Edinburgh claimed a second victory of the season in the United Rugby Championship as they got the better of a hard-fought contest with Cardiff 27-8 at the Hive Stadium.

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The Welsh side were 5-3 up at the break, but the power of forward replacements such as Pierre Schoeman and Hamish Watson ground them down in the second 40 as the home team emerged with a try bonus.

The visitors shaded a first half which saw Edinburgh captain Grant Gilchrist and then Cardiff flanker Thomas Young sin-binned, for head contact in a tackle and killing the ball respectively.

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Edinburgh opened their account through Ross Thompson, who made no mistake with the penalty they were awarded.

Midway through the first half, the home team were awarded another penalty in front of the posts and this time opted for a scrum, but a knock-on let Cardiff off the hook.

Fixture
United Rugby Championship
Edinburgh
27 - 8
Full-time
Cardiff Rugby
All Stats and Data

Cardiff were off the mark after half an hour when Young finished off in the left corner from a Rory Jennings pass after a penalty had been sent to touch. Callum Sheedy failed with his conversion attempt.

With Gilchrist then sent off the field and Edinburgh down to 14 men, Cardiff thought they had made their pressure tell when Young grounded.

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However, the score was disallowed for offside against the forward, who was himself yellow-carded just as Gilchrist returned.

Edinburgh ran the penalty and thought they had regained the lead when Duhan van der Merwe touched down in the left corner, but that score was also chalked off, for a forward pass, and the half came to an end with Cardiff still 5-3 up.

Edinburgh dominated the early part of the second half and went back in front when Van der Merwe dived acrobatically to score in the corner despite the attentions of Cardiff full-back Cam Winnet.

Thompson converted to make it 10-5, but a penalty by Sheedy soon narrowed the gap back to two points.

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As the game entered its final quarter, Edinburgh stretched their lead when substitute Schoeman finished off with a powerful run off the back of a lineout maul. The conversion attempt missed.

Then Edinburgh added another try when Graham dotted down from a Price pass after a break by Watson. Thompson again failed to add the extras.

Josh McNally was yellow-carded as Cardiff’s defence was stretched and, after Ben Muncaster had put a foot into touch just before grounding, an overthrow at the lineout was seized on by Ewan Ashman through for the bonus-point score. Thompson’s conversion completed the scoring.

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J
JWH 2 hours ago
Bad blood swirls as the All Blacks head north

Yeah that used to be the whole identity of the ABs! You don't have to be bigger, faster, or stronger, just work harder, use your brain, and the tries will come to you!


However the game has changed, but this gameplan still could work in modern rugby, just needs the right players to play it. For example, DMac. He is an excellent player with space and time, however you often don't get any, let alone one or the other. That's why he is so prosperous at 15, but has failed to convert that into form in the 10 jersey.


There is also a noteable lack of form, fitness, determination, and overall lacklustre skills in the bench. Luke Jacobson is quite possibly one of the worst All Blacks of all time, along with Sowakula. Not to disrespect him, as he is a premier rugby player, but he just cannot upskill into the international level like that. A bit similar to Akira Ioane. Another further comment is the backs on bench, particularly TJ Perenara and Sevu Reece/Mark Telea. They have all been below average. I hope TJP continues his mentor role with little to no game time, as I think he does have some good experience he could pass onto Ratima & Roigard. Sevu Reece and Mark Telea, who have come off of above average SRP seasons, have failed to make impacts on games. Telea is good on offense, rubbish on defense. Reece is okay on offense, good on defense. Really, neither of them shine to me. Somebody like Reiko Ioane or Emoni Narawa or Leicester Fainganuku would be preferable.


However, I will say that the ABs tight five group is being seriously underrated by some international fans, as their work against both the Argentinian and South African packs were enormous, holding their own and even dominating in parts of the game. Tamaiti Williams, Tupou Vaai, and Asafo Aumua have all been good, and Tosi is now finding his legs. They are lining up to be the best pack for the rest of the decade, especially considering their workrate around the park and set-piece work. These are the new multi-role tight fives that Foster and Hansen have been looking for, and Robertson is picking them up near their prime. All Razor has to do is find some backs (10 & 13 in particular) as well as loosies (7) to work around them.

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