Northern Edition

Select Edition

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

Worcester rout of Quins sends Exiles down, Exeter seal top spot

Jackson Willison scores one of his two tries against Harlequins

Worcester Warriors retained their Premiership status in style and sent London Irish down with a 44-13 thumping of sorry Harlequins, while Exeter Chiefs will finish the regular season top after beating Sale Sharks.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Warriors had the point they needed to stay up by half-time at Sixways Stadium on Saturday courtesy of tries from Bryce Heem, Jackson Willison, Darren Barry and Ben Te’o.

A Charlie Walker try and eight points from the boot of Marcus Smith left Quins 12 adrift at half-time, and Worcester crossed a further three times to consign the London side to an eighth defeat in their last nine Premiership matches.

Willison helped himself to a double either side of five-pointers from Francois Hougaard and Jamie Shillcock as Worcester avoided the drop with a game to spare, and sent the Exiles straight back down to the Championship.

Exeter cannot be caught at the summit after the defending champions ended Sale’s play-off hopes with a 34-19 win at Sandy Park.

Nic White, Lachie Turner, Jack Yeandle and Greg Holmes crossed for the rampant Chiefs, who stretched their winning run to eight matches in all competitions to go 13 points clear of Saracens. 

Bath came out on top in the West Country derby at Kingsholm, Tom Homer scoring a superb solo try in a 43-20 thrashing of Gloucester.

ADVERTISEMENT
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

f
fl 1 hour ago
What is the future of rugby in 2025?

Smith generally isn't well connected to his forward pods; doesn't do a great job of distributing to those around him; and has inferior positional and contestable kicking games than Ford and Fin.


When England have had success over the past few years, its been either through (i) defensive rugby backed up with smart tactical kicking or (ii) high possession attacking phase play based on quick ruck ball. George Ford was key to the implementation of (i) in the RWC, and in the 6N win over Wales, and to the implementation of (ii) in the 6N games against Ireland and France. Smith did great at (ii) when running at tired defenders at the end of the Ireland match, but has never successfully implemented that gameplan from the start of a test because he doesn't distribute or support his forwards enough to create consistent fast ball and build attacks over multiple phases. Instead, his introduction to the starting side has resulted in much more playmaking responsibilities being forced onto whoever plays 9. Alex Mitchell copes ok with that, but I think he looks better with a more involved playmaking 10 outside him, and it really isn't a gameplan that works for JVP or Spencer. As a result of that the outside backs and centres have barely touched the ball when Smith has been at 10.


This might not have been too much of a disaster, as England have seemed to be moving slightly towards the sort of attacking gameplan that France played under Labit and Quins play (I think this was especially their approach when they won the league a few years ago - but its still a part of their play now), which is based on kicking to create broken field rugby. This is (i) a sharp departure from the gameplans that have worked for England in the past few seasons; (ii) bears very little relation to the tactical approaches of the non-Quins players in the England team; and (iii) is an absolute disaster for the blitz defence, which is weak in transition. Unsurprisingly, it has coincided with a sharp decline in England's results.

68 Go to comments
TRENDING
TRENDING POTM Ben Curry peeved at post-match question POTM Ben Curry peeved at post-match question
Search