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Under-strength Harlequins hit back to stun Saracens at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium

By PA
Saracens v Harlequins – Gallagher Premiership Rugby – Tottenham Hotspur Stadium

Harlequins defied the absence of their England stars to stun Saracens 23-12 after coming alive in the second half of their Gallagher Premiership clash at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

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Marcus Smith, Chandler Cunningham-South and Fin Baxter were rested following the completion of the Six Nations last weekend, while Cadan Murley and Danny Care were injured, but their understudies rose to the occasion magnificently.

Trailing 12-0 until the arrival of the final quarter, they crossed through centre Ben Waghorn and then crept ahead through three penalties from replacement fly-half Jamie Benson.

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Will Porter put the icing on Harlequins’ first away win over their London rivals since 2012 by racing over in the 79th minute as the underdogs gave their play-off hopes a significant boost.

Saracens were poor in front of a crowd of 54,414 and the misery of their defeat was made worse by the fact it came despite fielding a full complement of England stars, apart from Ben Earl who had been ruled out by an infected knee wound.

Fixture
Gallagher Premiership
Saracens
12 - 23
Full-time
Harlequins
All Stats and Data

Initially Saracens appeared to have emerged from the Six Nations break in better shape by crossing after just five minutes when a quickly taken free-kick by Jamie George was followed by a strong carry from Theo McFarland, who dived over.

The move had begun when Alex Dombrandt threw an intercept pass and, while Quins almost cracked for a second time soon after, they regrouped well and spent the rest of the first quarter testing the home defence without success.

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Saracens’ ferocious breakdown work forced a timely turnover near their own posts, but they could not escape their half for any length of time as a ragged match continued to produce numerous unforced errors.

Quins were controlling territory and possession but points proved elusive, with one promising raid down the right wing hinting at a try, only to be foiled by alert defending.

For a second successive time Saracens’ scrum was driven backwards and the visitors’ attack was becoming bolder and more accurate, but still without reward.

To show them how it was done, the six-time Premiership champions struck on their next visit to the 22, with a sublime pass by Alex Goode out of the tackle collected by Fergus Burke and Tobias Elliot finishing in the corner.

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Saracens should have been over for a third try when Maro Itoje sent Juan Martin Gonzalez charging through a gap in midfield, but the move broke down when the Argentinian was penalised for not releasing under the posts.

Andy Onyeama-Christie came on for his first appearance since October having recovered from ankle surgery and the Scotland flanker had to slot in at inside centre after Nick Tompkins departed for an HIA.

Quins were finally off the mark in the 60th minute when Waghorn finished an athletic break by Oscar Beard and the score brought fresh belief to their play.

Over went three successive penalties from Benton – the second a monster kick – and for the first time Harlequins were in front.

They finished with their tails up as Porter went over late on.

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M
Mzilikazi 16 minutes ago
'Ulster, though no one wants to admit it, isn't much more than a development province right now.'

“I’d love to know the relevant numbers of who comes into professionalism from a club, say as an adult, versus early means like say pathway programmes “


Not sure where you would get that information, JW. But your question piqued my interest, and I looked at the background of some Ulster players. If you are interested/have the time, look at the Wiki site for Ulster rugby, and scroll down to the current squad, where you can then click on the individual players, and often there is good info. on their pathway to Ulster squad.


Not many come in from the AIL teams directly. Robert Baloucoune came from Enniskillen into the Ulster setup, but that was after he played Sevens for Ireland. Big standout missed in his school years is Stuart McCloskey, who never played for an age group team, and it was only after he showed good form playing for AIL team Dungannon, that he was eventually added late to Ulster Academy.


“I’m just thinking ahead. You know Ireland is going to come into the same predicament Aus is at where that next group of youngsters waiting to come into programmes get picked off by the French”


That is not happening with top young players in Ireland. I can’t think of a single example of one that has gone to a French club, or to any other country. But as you say, it could happen in the future.


What has happened to a limited extent is established Irish players moving offshore, but they are few. Jonathan Sexton had a spell with Racing in France…not very successful. Simon Zebo also went over to Racing. Trevor Brennan went to Toulouse, stayed there too, with his sons now playing in France, one at Toulouse, one at Toulon. And more recently the two tens, Joey Carbery to Bordueax, and Ben Healy to Edinburgh.


“I see they’ve near completed a double round robin worth of games, does that mean theres not much left in their season?”


The season finishes around mid April. Schools finish on St Patrick’s Day, 17 th Match. When I lived in Ireland, we had a few Sevens tournaments post season. But never as big a thing as in the Scottish Borders, where the short game was “invented”.

44 Go to comments
P
Poorfour 1 hour ago
Antoine Dupont undergoes surgery on injured knee ahead of long absence

So “it wasn’t foul play because it wasn’t foul play” is - to you - not only an acceptable answer but the only possible answer?


I would hope that the definition of foul play is clear enough that they can say “that wasn’t foul play - even though it resulted in a serious injury - because although player A did not wrap with the right arm, he entered the ruck through the gate and from a legal angle at a legal height, and was supporting his own weight until player B entered the ruck behind him and pushed him onto player C’s leg” or “that wasn’t foul play although players D and E picked player F out of a ruck, tipped him upside down and dropped him on his shoulder because reasons.”


Referees sometimes offer a clear explanation, especially when in discussion with the TMO, but they don’t always, especially for incidents that aren’t reviewed on field. It’s also a recognised flaw in the bunker system that there isn’t an explanation of the card decisions - I’d personally prefer the bunker to prepare a short package of the best angles and play back to the ref their reasoning, with the ref having the final say, like an enhanced TMO. It would cost a few more seconds, but would help the crowd to understand.


Greater clarity carries with it risks - not least that if the subsequent feedback is at odds with the ref’s decision they run the risk of harassment on social media - but rugby is really struggling to show that it can manage these decisions consistently, and offering a clear explanation after the fact would help to ensure better consistency in officiating in future.

9 Go to comments
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