Planet Rugby

Munster win battle with Saracens

08th December 2012 19:56

Conor Murray of Munster passes the ball

Cleared away: Conor Murray

Munster emerged on top in a classic Heineken Cup clash against Saracens at Thomond Park on Saturday with a 15-9 win.

Both sides committed multiple errors in attack as both defences excelled, Saracens struggling to execute at the lineout in one of the most physical encounters witnessed so far this season.

Owen Farrell missed four shots at goal on a bad night for the England fly-half to deprive Saracens of a famous victory, with Munster's win leaving Pool 1 of the Heineken Cup wide open after Racing Métro's victory over Edinburgh.

The physicality of James Coughlan alongside Peter O'Mahony proved to be the difference but Saracens came away from Thomond Park with an important losing bonus point ahead of next weekend's return fixture.

Munster started in ferocious fashion, scrum-half Conor Murray bursting through the Saracens defence but his pass to David Kilcoyne went forward under pressure in front of the posts.

Ronan O'Gara then added the first points of the afternoon in the fourth minute to give Munster an early lead, before Owen Farrell failed to convert his first opportunity of the match, a poor strike seeing the ball come off the pad of the post.

Munster conceded six penalties within the opening 20 minutes as they persistently infringed at the breakdown whilst on the attack to deprive them of valuable scoring opportunities.

A brawl moments later saw both Rhys Gill and Donnacha O'Callaghan sent to the sin-bin as the tension between the two sides boiled over.

A penalty this time against Saracens at the breakdown presented O'Gara with a second opportunity to kick at goal, which he duly took to stretch the lead to 6-0 coming up to 30 minutes gone, both sides returning to 15 men as Gill and O'Callaghan returned.

The visitors struggled to maintain their accuracy at the lineout when in Munster territory, but Saracens won a penalty from a scrum deep in Munster's half for Farrell to kick their first points of the match.

O'Gara responded after Munster won a penalty at the lineout, leaving the scoreline at 9-3 just before half-time.

Saracens were handed an early opportunity to put points on the board at the start of the second half with another Farrell penalty, but the England's fly-half's attempt fell short.

Farrell however was given an immediate opportunity to bounce back and did so from a much easier angle to close the gap to 9-6.

The heavens opened as Munster stole a scrum against the head in the Saracens half and won a penalty kick for O'Gara to increase the lead once more.

Confusion in the Saracens defence after a Munster box kick led to the ball being hacked on by O'Callaghan with Munster winning a scrum on the edge of the Saracens 22, winning another penalty from the resulting attack as Steve Borthwick was warned by referee Pascal Gauzere. O'Gara made no mistake with his shot at goal.

A loose pass however from Conor Murray sent Munster back pedaling with Doug Howlett penalised at the resulting ruck, but Farrell was unable to convert the resulting penalty.

Both defences continued to hold firm forcing the opposition into marginal errors in attack, but a driving maul from Saracens within the Munster 22 resulted in an overlap down the right hand side, only for openside flanker Will Fraser to be bundled into touch inches from the line.

Owen Farrell moving infield to fly-half gave Saracens fresh impetus in attack but Munster continued to force them into errors, with Farrell then missing another penalty kick at goal to leave him with only two attempts from six and keeping Saracens out of losing bonus point range.

A lineout outside the Munster 22 handed Saracens one final chance to get more points on the board and from a penalty at the lineout Farrell was successful with his seventh attempt of the afternoon, leaving the score at 15-9.

The scorers:

For Munster:
Pens: O'Gara 5
Yellow Card: O'Callaghan

For Saracens:
Pens: Farrell 3
Yellow Card: Gill

Munster: 15 Felix Jones, 14 Doug Howlett (capt), 13 Keith Earls, 12 James Downey, 11 Simon Zebo, 10 Ronan O'Gara, 9 Conor Murray, 8 James Coughlan, 7 Peter O'Mahony, 6 Dave O'Callaghan, 5 Donnacha Ryan, 4 Donncha O'Callaghan, 3 BJ Botha, 2 Mike Sherry, 1 David Kilcoyne.
Replacements: 16 Damien Varley, 17 Wian du Preez, 18 Stephen Archer, 19 Billy Holland, 20 Peter Butler, 21 Duncan Williams, 22 Ian Keatley, 23 Casey Laulala.

Saracens: 15 Alex Goode, 14 Chris Ashton, 13 Owen Farrell, 12 Brad Barritt, 11 David Strettle, 10 Charlie Hodgson, 9 Neil de Kock, 8 Ernst Joubert, 7 Will Fraser, 6 Kelly Brown, 5 Mouritz Botha, 4 Steve Borthwick, 3 Matt Stevens, 2 Schalk Brits, 1 Rhys Gill.
Replacements: 16 John Smit, 17 Mako Vunipola, 18 Petrus du Plessis, 19 George Kruis, 20 Andy Saull, 21 Richard Wigglesworth, 22 Joel Tomkins, 23 Chris Wyles.

Referee: Pascal Gauzere (France)

Comments

TVaddict says...

Well I'd started to think I wouldn't live to see the day when a referee would actually penalise an Irish team for infringements at the breakdown. Yes, the ref still missed a load, but he did better than anyone else I've seen. I guess he missed the memo which states Irish teams are allowed to throw themselves off their feet over the ball, or handle the ball off their feet, or wander offside to stop other players getting to the ruck. That last point is one I can't stress enough. Why are they continually allowed to stop opposition players from getting to the ruck when they're about a meter offside? Seriously, watch Donnacha Ryan during that game and so many rucks he's holding back one or two players from getting to the ruck. I'm not blaming Munster for getting away with it, every team cheats if it can can, but the referees need to be stronger on this as it's ruining the game. Started with the Crusaders, then the All Blacks picked it up, and now the Irish teams. I know I've ranted about this before but it needs to be refereed properly!

As for the game itself, well wasn't it boring? Two teams who constantly infringe at the ruck and referee actually willing to call them up on it. There should have been another yellow card for both teams in the second half from the number of penalties alone. Both teams deserved to lose it, so it's a shame that wasn't an option really. Farrell's kicking and a poor lineout lost Saracens that game.

Munster's tackling was ferocious but unlike Ulster a lot of it illegal. Lots of shoulder charges, especially off the ball (that one of Goode the most obvious), and high tackles. That tackle on Brits was illegal (no not a spear tackle), he lifted the player off the floor and didn't support him getting back to ground.

A game to forget.

Posted 20:28 08th December 2012

Stoigen says...

Put the whistle down referee! It kills games.

Posted 20:12 08th December 2012

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