Scarlets Castres-side demons.
5 posters
Page 1 of 1
Scarlets Castres-side demons.
Castres 13 - 16 Scarlets
Castres and Llanelli have a fair bit in common being declining industrial hubs in a rural hinterland. The Scarlets and Castres shared a common desire at the Stade Pierre Antoine to play high tempo attacking rugby. Earlier results had fallen the Scarlets way and as they crossed the whitewash in the foothills of the Pyrenees they knew that a win, bonus point or no, could seal the consolation prize of Amlin Challenge Cup qualification. Castres had pride to play for, and displayed yet again that for French teams, that is all they need at home.
It was an even evening encounter in the South of France. The defences of both sides were well marshalled. A slice of good fortune handed England deaf rugby team representative Matt Gilbert his opportunity early in the first half. Rhys Priestland playing at full back tried to thread a dainty grubber kick through the solid Castres defence. It rebounded off a leg to the grateful embrace of Scarlet Wales international centre Jonathan Davies, who fed Number 8 Gilbert on the charge. He will tell you that fortune had nothing to do with him sprinting 40 yards up the touchline, swatting Marc Andreu aside as if he wasn't there, riding a strong cover tackle to get into the corner. Referee JP Doyle, the Irish English ref, must have regretted his decision to go the TMO. Communication between them suffered a gremlin forcing Mr Doyle to run to the half way line to conduct his discussions on what seemed to be a particularly straight forward decision, which surely could have been made by the proximate referee's assistant.
It wasn't long before Castres gave him a similar headache. In a far less clear cut case Castres left wing Marc Andreu touched down in the corner. This time though the treck to the half way line led to a finding that Andreu was in touch.
The half was full of attacking intent and towards the end of the half the Scarlets strung together a slick passing move reminiscent of previous campaigns, only to see pocket dynamo open side wing forward (the term 'flanker' just isn't him) Richie Pugh dragged down five meters out. The teams took to the changing rooms with Castres trailing 6-8.
The Scarlets had left 5 points either side of the posts in the first half and had lost Priestland to an ankle injury which will have Warren Gatland sweating before his trip to the Polish freezers. Castres seemed to sense a sniff of doubt that engendered in the visitors and camped in the Scarlets 22 early in the second half.
At the crucial moment with Castres seemingly having a run in under the posts Aaron Shingler intercepted the scrum half's pop pass. It is at times like this that a players class is determined. Faced with a ninety yard sprint, does he bust a gut to get there by hook or by crook? Shingler's answer was an emphatic yes. He kept Max Evans in his wake. The Scot could only attempt a desperate tap tackle. It brought Shingler down but over the line. Shingler is a folk hero at Parc Y Scarlets but this try surely cemented that status.
Castres however were not out of the chase and for much of the second half sent wave after wave of flowing attacking movements against the Scarlets' defences. A superb cover tackle by Liam Williams, reminiscent of JPR Williams, saved a sure try in the corner, dislodging the ball from the clutches of Romain Martial the substantial Castres winger as he crossed the line. Even Williams however couldn't keep Forestier, the forest sized Castres replacement prop, out from two yards.
Stephen Jones had taken over the kicking duties and it was his turn to be profligate in the second half, another five points going astray. Would this be the Scarlets downfall yet again? With the game in it's final ten minutes the scores were even at 13-13. The neutral might say befittingly so, but Stephen Jones is no neutral. It was from his hands that the hapless prostate Castres forward slapped the ball. What looked like a dramatic chance for Castres to take the match with a breakaway try actually resulted in Jones cooly slotting a penalty kick from 15 yards infield on the right. It took the Scarlets to 16-13 ahead with 2 minutes on the clock and ultimately into the quarter finals of the Amlin Cup. They now face a further foray to the South of France to take on Brive in the quarter finals on the weekend of the 6th April.
Teams:
Castres
15 Romain Teulet
14 Romain Martial
13 Paul Bonnefond
12 Pierre-Manuel Garcia
11 Marc Andreu
10 Seremaia Biakeinuku
9 Rory Kockott
1 Saimone Tamoepeau
2 Mathieu Bonello
3 Karens Wihongi
4 Scott Murray
5 Rodrigo Capo Ortega
6 Jannie Bornman
8 Chris Masoe (c)
7 Steve Malonga
Subs:
Brice Mach, Yannick Forestier, Micheal Coetzee, Mathias Rolland, Yannick Caballero, Thierry Lacrampe, Pierre Bernard, Max Evans.
Scarlets:
15 Rhys Priestland
14 George North
13 Scott Williams
12 Jonathan Davies
11 Liam Williams
10 Stephen Jones
9 Rhodri Williams
1 Phil John
2 Ken owens
3 Peter Edwards
4 Lou Reed
5 Dom Day
6 Aaron Shingler
8 Matt Gilbert
7 Richie Pugh
Subs:
Emyr Phillips, Iestyn Thomas, Rhodri Jones, Sione Timani, Kirby Myhill, Gareth Davies, Gareth Maule, Vili Iongi.
Castres and Llanelli have a fair bit in common being declining industrial hubs in a rural hinterland. The Scarlets and Castres shared a common desire at the Stade Pierre Antoine to play high tempo attacking rugby. Earlier results had fallen the Scarlets way and as they crossed the whitewash in the foothills of the Pyrenees they knew that a win, bonus point or no, could seal the consolation prize of Amlin Challenge Cup qualification. Castres had pride to play for, and displayed yet again that for French teams, that is all they need at home.
It was an even evening encounter in the South of France. The defences of both sides were well marshalled. A slice of good fortune handed England deaf rugby team representative Matt Gilbert his opportunity early in the first half. Rhys Priestland playing at full back tried to thread a dainty grubber kick through the solid Castres defence. It rebounded off a leg to the grateful embrace of Scarlet Wales international centre Jonathan Davies, who fed Number 8 Gilbert on the charge. He will tell you that fortune had nothing to do with him sprinting 40 yards up the touchline, swatting Marc Andreu aside as if he wasn't there, riding a strong cover tackle to get into the corner. Referee JP Doyle, the Irish English ref, must have regretted his decision to go the TMO. Communication between them suffered a gremlin forcing Mr Doyle to run to the half way line to conduct his discussions on what seemed to be a particularly straight forward decision, which surely could have been made by the proximate referee's assistant.
It wasn't long before Castres gave him a similar headache. In a far less clear cut case Castres left wing Marc Andreu touched down in the corner. This time though the treck to the half way line led to a finding that Andreu was in touch.
The half was full of attacking intent and towards the end of the half the Scarlets strung together a slick passing move reminiscent of previous campaigns, only to see pocket dynamo open side wing forward (the term 'flanker' just isn't him) Richie Pugh dragged down five meters out. The teams took to the changing rooms with Castres trailing 6-8.
The Scarlets had left 5 points either side of the posts in the first half and had lost Priestland to an ankle injury which will have Warren Gatland sweating before his trip to the Polish freezers. Castres seemed to sense a sniff of doubt that engendered in the visitors and camped in the Scarlets 22 early in the second half.
At the crucial moment with Castres seemingly having a run in under the posts Aaron Shingler intercepted the scrum half's pop pass. It is at times like this that a players class is determined. Faced with a ninety yard sprint, does he bust a gut to get there by hook or by crook? Shingler's answer was an emphatic yes. He kept Max Evans in his wake. The Scot could only attempt a desperate tap tackle. It brought Shingler down but over the line. Shingler is a folk hero at Parc Y Scarlets but this try surely cemented that status.
Castres however were not out of the chase and for much of the second half sent wave after wave of flowing attacking movements against the Scarlets' defences. A superb cover tackle by Liam Williams, reminiscent of JPR Williams, saved a sure try in the corner, dislodging the ball from the clutches of Romain Martial the substantial Castres winger as he crossed the line. Even Williams however couldn't keep Forestier, the forest sized Castres replacement prop, out from two yards.
Stephen Jones had taken over the kicking duties and it was his turn to be profligate in the second half, another five points going astray. Would this be the Scarlets downfall yet again? With the game in it's final ten minutes the scores were even at 13-13. The neutral might say befittingly so, but Stephen Jones is no neutral. It was from his hands that the hapless prostate Castres forward slapped the ball. What looked like a dramatic chance for Castres to take the match with a breakaway try actually resulted in Jones cooly slotting a penalty kick from 15 yards infield on the right. It took the Scarlets to 16-13 ahead with 2 minutes on the clock and ultimately into the quarter finals of the Amlin Cup. They now face a further foray to the South of France to take on Brive in the quarter finals on the weekend of the 6th April.
Teams:
Castres
15 Romain Teulet
14 Romain Martial
13 Paul Bonnefond
12 Pierre-Manuel Garcia
11 Marc Andreu
10 Seremaia Biakeinuku
9 Rory Kockott
1 Saimone Tamoepeau
2 Mathieu Bonello
3 Karens Wihongi
4 Scott Murray
5 Rodrigo Capo Ortega
6 Jannie Bornman
8 Chris Masoe (c)
7 Steve Malonga
Subs:
Brice Mach, Yannick Forestier, Micheal Coetzee, Mathias Rolland, Yannick Caballero, Thierry Lacrampe, Pierre Bernard, Max Evans.
Scarlets:
15 Rhys Priestland
14 George North
13 Scott Williams
12 Jonathan Davies
11 Liam Williams
10 Stephen Jones
9 Rhodri Williams
1 Phil John
2 Ken owens
3 Peter Edwards
4 Lou Reed
5 Dom Day
6 Aaron Shingler
8 Matt Gilbert
7 Richie Pugh
Subs:
Emyr Phillips, Iestyn Thomas, Rhodri Jones, Sione Timani, Kirby Myhill, Gareth Davies, Gareth Maule, Vili Iongi.
Last edited by Glas a du on Mon 23 Jan 2012, 9:53 am; edited 2 times in total (Reason for editing : because Adam told me to and I'm a good boy.)
Glas a du- Posts : 15843
Join date : 2011-04-28
Age : 48
Location : Ammanford
Re: Scarlets Castres-side demons.
Oooo good, I like it. One thing I will say though, is that I think a bit more needs to be mentioned about how good Castres were in the 2nd half. I mean the Scarlets were hanging on for near life and were almost out of it, so maybe a bit more mentioning that about Castres would be good.
And trust you to get a line like that in about Richie Pugh!
Loved the Shingler section though, v good.
And trust you to get a line like that in about Richie Pugh!
Loved the Shingler section though, v good.
Guest- Guest
Re: Scarlets Castres-side demons.
I'll tweak it tomorrow when I have access to a tidy computer, editing something that long on the iBone is a nightmare!
Glas a du- Posts : 15843
Join date : 2011-04-28
Age : 48
Location : Ammanford
Re: Scarlets Castres-side demons.
A well put together piece Glas. Easy to read and one really gets a feel for the game if you hadn't seen it or been there (like me). Some great descriptions of players and the play.
Typo para 5, second sentence "Casters" after the polish freezer reference.
Typo para 5, second sentence "Casters" after the polish freezer reference.
Pal Joey- PJ
- Posts : 53530
Join date : 2011-01-27
Location : Always there
Re: Scarlets Castres-side demons.
Cheers Breaker, will see to it.
Glas a du- Posts : 15843
Join date : 2011-04-28
Age : 48
Location : Ammanford
Re: Scarlets Castres-side demons.
just a quick comment - can you put the final score at the top, and the two teams at the bottom?
Re: Scarlets Castres-side demons.
Certainly, tomorrow OK?
Glas a du- Posts : 15843
Join date : 2011-04-28
Age : 48
Location : Ammanford
Re: Scarlets Castres-side demons.
Good article by the way - we have had some great pieces written this week.
Re: Scarlets Castres-side demons.
Adam, made the suggested amendments, what next?
Glas a du- Posts : 15843
Join date : 2011-04-28
Age : 48
Location : Ammanford
Re: Scarlets Castres-side demons.
If all of the suggested changes have been incorporated, feel free to move it to the 'ready to publish' section
Re: Scarlets Castres-side demons.
One thing that would need to be amended is examples such as 'Earlier results had fallen the Scarlets way' which should have the apostrophe added (making it 'the Scarlets' way').
Luckless Pedestrian- Posts : 24902
Join date : 2011-02-01
Age : 45
Location : Newport
Re: Scarlets Castres-side demons.
and the comma after "for" and before "and" in the 1st paragraph. Maybe a semi colon?
Pal Joey- PJ
- Posts : 53530
Join date : 2011-01-27
Location : Always there
Glas a du- Posts : 15843
Join date : 2011-04-28
Age : 48
Location : Ammanford
Similar topics
» Scarlets Castres-side demons.
» Can the Scarlets Castres side their inhibitions...
» Castres v Scarlets
» test side made up of players that were harshly left out of the side, or werent picked somehow
» Scarlets v Ulster (SUFTUM) 29th October 2011 at Parc Y Scarlets KO 3.00pm
» Can the Scarlets Castres side their inhibitions...
» Castres v Scarlets
» test side made up of players that were harshly left out of the side, or werent picked somehow
» Scarlets v Ulster (SUFTUM) 29th October 2011 at Parc Y Scarlets KO 3.00pm
Page 1 of 1
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum