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The 'big difference' between Sale this season and last

By PA
Ben Curry on the charge /PA

Sale director of rugby Alex Sanderson believes an attacking verve has helped Sale make a strong start to the Gallagher Premiership season.

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Sale ran in five tries to see off London Irish at the AJ Bell Stadium.

They made it five wins from five and hit the top of the table in the process with Sanderson now equipped with all the materials to build on last season’s sixth-placed finish.

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He said: “The defence has always been resolute and physical, but what they’re doing in attack nowadays, scoring 37 points is probably the big difference between this season and last.

“That’s what I’m talking about, the basics, you just have to convert when you’re five metres out, and the options were there. It’s a technical fix, it’s an easy fix.

“We were really mature in terms of some of the things that didn’t go our way. The team stuck to the task and they were playing in the right areas, used the conditions, it was a pretty cold and wet night out there.

“The kicks gave us those field positions and ultimately the points.

“Everyone works hard but seemingly things are clicking right now, the lads are talking about it, about being on the same page, not just socially and emotionally, but in terms of the game model and what they’re going after and it seems to flow a lot more and flow a lot better.”

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Sale were the better side throughout but the visitors managed to land two perfect counter-punches to stay in the game.

Ollie Hassell-Collins pounced on a spilled restart to reduce the deficit at 15-0 and Benhard van Rensburg responded with a score seven minutes after Sale’s third try.

But Roebuck dived in between the boot which, allied to Rob du Preez’s boot and a fifth from Ewan Ashman, proved too much for the visitors.

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London Irish director of rugby Declan Kidney said: “We have to give credit to Sale, they came out with a good game, and unless you’re on your game with them, you’re going to get results like that.

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“They probably won the gain line both in attack and defence and when you do that the game is always going to be that little bit more difficult for us and we need to look at that from our side, how we can change that, some decisions that we make.

“Most teams in this league get into a rich vein of form, they’re pretty much there at the moment. Once they got a foothold in the match, they had plenty to play for, so we just needed to put them under pressure in a few different aspects of the game.”

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NH 25 minutes ago
Harness Skelton's might and move Sua'ali'i: How the Wallabies can fix things for Test two

Nice one Nick. I was a fan of Joe’s appointment and think in general he has done well, and I even think the game plan last week was ok, but I am not sold he has gotten his selections right for this series. As everyone has detailed, the pack was too small last week. This week, he has brought in skelton and valetini which is an improvement physicality-wise but now the back 5 is out of balance with only one legitimate lineout option in Frost. The wallabies were poor in the lineout and it meant they couldn’t get into the lions 22 in the 1st half. Its also where most WBs tries originate from. Are they going to opt for a scrum every penalty they get? 3 man lineouts? And as you show, Suaalii is simply too hesitant in D. I guess drifting is better than biting in and taking yourself out of play, but he doesn’t do much more in that last clip. Maxy has 2 involvements in that play, suaalii none. At this rate, Chieka was quicker and better at integrating marika who had more to do to learn the game, than Joe with suaalii.


Do you think that Joe is hesitant to put Suaalii on the wing because he would be exposed in the backfield in terms of kicking, positioning etc? This is the only justification I can think of and also maybe why he has picked the likes of max, potter and kellaway over the likes of daugunu, pietsch and toole. The difference in selection philosophy between schmidt and rennie has come into clear focus to me recently in terms of brain vs braun, power vs graft, workrate vs impact. In my opinion, Schmidt needed to make a hard decision on starting skelton vs a backrow that had bobby and wilson in it and he hasn’t done that. I also feel like he is almost picking a team to minimise the loss rather than win. I think starting a tate, or a pietsch, or bell could’ve signalled some more intent.

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LONG READ
LONG READ 'The Wallabies need to convert much better - or Melbourne could be much worse' 'The Wallabies need to convert much better - or Melbourne could be much worse'