Leicester give Steve Borthwick perfect send-off with victory over Clermont
Victory #Victory
If this is his last game in charge, Steve Borthwick left Welford Road with a familiar sign-off – discipline, commitment and the result. Just about. Popular opinion no doubt has it that the end of the Eddie Jones era will mean that England unfurl their wings and fly, but those who know Borthwick may be less quick to jump to that conclusion.
But if results are your thing, England could do worse should the seemingly inevitable be announced this week. Leicester dispatched a young Clermont Auvergne, who got a whole lot younger early on with injuries to two key players of experience, by scoring two tries in the first half – from two lineouts, not altogether surprisingly. They were disciplined, conceding only six penalties, three of which accounted for nine of Clermont’s 16 points, and let the French side in only at the very death for a try off an attacking scrum by Sébastien Bézy that earned the visitors a bonus point.
Jasper Wiese was typically bold and direct, opening the try-scoring at the end of the first quarter, with a fearsome charge off the fringes of a lineout. Julián Montoya touched down a few minutes later from the even more familiar sight of an advancing Tigers lineout and drive. Those two scores formed the backbone of Leicester’s win. They were unlucky not to score a rather more fluid effort for Harry Potter in the second half, called back for an earlier forward pass.
That said, Clermont were not exactly lucky themselves, unable to finish off several scything breaks by their quicksilver backs. At times they made Leicester look pedestrian, Bautista Delguy, Alex Newsome and Cheikh Tiberghien enjoying at least one dazzling run apiece, but the Tigers managed to regroup and deny them each time.
They join the frontrunners in Pool B with two wins from two. Domestically, Borthwick will leave them as champions of England. Their defence so far has hardly been authoritative, with only four wins from nine, but in the traditional mid-table bun fight that is still enough to leave Leicester one place and two points off the playoffs. Again, workmanlike and of substance – but England fans should not expect to be thrilled.
Not that coaching a club side bears much resemblance to coaching an international one. As England coach, Borthwick would find himself in the spotlight more often than he might like. One accusation that could not be levelled at Jones is that his press conferences were boring. Suffice it to say, Borthwick is rather less flamboyant on that front. The shift from a Johnson to a Starmer seems en vogue these days in more than just politics.
“I understand why everyone has to ask the questions,” was as close as he came afterwards to breaking down in tears and confessing all. “And I know you understand I’m going to keep saying, ‘I want to enjoy today’s win.’”
Clermont, meanwhile, are not ripping up trees either. The team that have regularly assumed the unwanted mantle of everyone’s second favourite, given how often they have missed out in Europe, are not quite the force they were, languishing in 10th in the Top 14. Here they lost their captain, Arthur Iturria, to a hamstring injury after five minutes, then another France international, Paul Jedrasiak, to a brain injury in the 12th. A third international forward, Étienne Falgoux, was then removed, this time voluntarily, on the half-hour.
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A length-of-the-pitch try finished by the Scotland wing Sean Maitland gave Saracens a 28-20 Champions Cup victory at Lyon, despite going down to 14 men when the replacement prop Alec Clarey was sent off for a high tackle.
The Saracens lineout was their saviour, twice stopping Lyon going for victory from five-yard set pieces in the dying minutes. Victory was sealed by an Elliot Daly penalty as the clock ticked past 80 minutes.
Jamie George and Ben Earl scored the earlier Saracens tries, while Owen Farrell kicked two conversions and two penalties. Hamza Kaabeche scored two tries for Lyon, with Fletcher Smith also crossing and scoring one penalty and one conversion.
The Edinburgh coach, Mike Blair, praised his team’s ability to win ugly after their 31-20 bonus-point win at home to Castres.
Blair said: “Today was one of those days where we created a fair bit but the ball wasn’t sticking. Sometimes you have days like that and I’m just pleased it came on a day where we were still able to get five points in the bag.
“We found a way to win. We came across some adversity just before half-time, but to not concede in those minutes was really good and meant we could go into the changing room with our chests out after playing into a tough wind and being a point up.”
A high-tempo game remained scoreless until midway through the first half, when Edinburgh finally made their pressure tell, Bill Mata forcing his way over, with Emiliano Boffelli converting.
Castres hit back through Pierre Colonna’s unconverted try and the hooker’s side then took the lead after half an hour with another five-point score when the scrum-half Julien Blanc finished on the right.
Edinburgh regained the lead through a penalty try, awarded after Quentin Walcker came in from the side and pulled the maul down. The loosehead prop was sent to the sin-bin for the offence but the 14 men had the last word in the first half when Julien Dumora found the target from a penalty to take the score to 14-13.
Edinburgh increased their lead early in the second half when Charlie Savala finished off in front of the posts from a pass by James Lang.
The hosts were soon under renewed pressure but they got the bonus try when a James Lang kick ahead was fumbled by Martin Laveau then touched down by Ben Vellacott. Boffelli converted.
Castres hit back immediately, with Adrien Seguret dashing through a gap in the defence after Edinburgh failed to deal with the restart. Ben Botica converted, but the home side weathered the storm, and a Boffelli penalty minutes from time completed the scoring.
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Each player was replaced by a youngster, but the future may yet be bright for the Auvergnats. Their tyros handled Leicester’s lineout routines, which were given quite the airing, with confidence, not conceding again after those two tries. The aforementioned backs – and others – ran with incision. Newsome, the Australian, was denied a try after one brilliant run by heroic defence from Dan Kelly and Charlie Atkinson.
Atkinson is enjoying himself, having been picked up by Leicester from the Wasps fire sale. He landed every kick once again and has already been called up to the England squad by Jones. His chances will hardly suffer should the identity of the next national coach be confirmed as expected.
Will England’s? Unlikely if this autumn is used as the benchmark. But do not expect 2023 to turn into a festival of tries and flamboyance.