My first
live game of rugby for over a month took me to Tata Steel in Port Talbot. The
remnants of Storm Hannah had left a blustery but sunny day with a strong breeze
blowing off the sea down the pitch. Pontypool were defending their unbeaten record,
Tata Steel sitting comfortably mid-table were playing their last home game of
the season with nothing to lose. Another tricky hurdle for Pooler as they pick
their way towards the all-important play-off for potential promotion.
Pontypool
played against the wind in the first half and as per common practice in these
conditions needed to dominate possession and be sure to stay in touch on the
scoreboard. For the first twenty minutes they managed to do just that. The
frustration was that despite excellent field position and a series of short
range lineouts and scrums they were unable to register any points. To make
matters worse when Tata Steel got a foothold in the Pontypool half , outside
half Rogers danced like Anton du Beke as he jinked, sidestepped and sashayed
through a bemused Pooler defence to score a brilliant solo try. Sadly for him
it was not a “seven” as the conversion failed. Against the run of play the home
side were in the lead at 5-0.
Pontypool
needed to respond. A dust-up following a ruck led to yellow cards for Pooler
hooker Hughes and Tata No 8 Griggs. With both sides shorthanded, it was Pooler
who seemed to prosper. They seized control of the game and a dropped goal by
Meek was followed by short range tries by Quick and Nash as Pooler’s forward
power began to tell. Both tries were wide out and with the adverse wind it was
virtually impossible to kick a conversion. Nevertheless at halftime Pontypool
were leading 5-13 and must have been reasonable satisfied with their work.
With the
strong wind now at their backs Pontypool looked set to dominate proceedings in
the second half. They were soon on the offensive and from another powerful
forward surge Nash bagged his second try. This time the conversion from Meek
sailed over and the lead had grown to 5-20.
Tata Steel
had clearly decided at half time that they would run the ball at every
opportunity. They had some talented backs and the Pooler defence was left
flatfooted at times. Griggs closed the gap by scoring under the posts after an
excellent passage of play by Tata who broke out from their own half (12-20).
Pontypool
responded with more forward power. A great run by prop Seward established a
position deep in the home twenty two and Nash completed his hat trick from
short range. This try was unconverted which left the score at 12-25.
As we went
into the final quarter, Tata Steel continued to throw caution to the wind as
they threw the ball about with gay abandon. A speculative long pass in the
windy conditions led to an interception by Pontypool debutant Marcus Jones
who galloped under the posts. Pontypool were surely home and dry at 12-32.
Injuries
had left the Pontypool backline looking distinctly uncoordinated and vulnerable
with substitutes playing in unfamiliar positions. Tata Steel continued to run
the ball and shocked Pontypool with two tries in as many minutes as their backs
ran riot. The tries by Brooks and Llewellyn were both converted and the home
side sensed an upset as the gap was reduced to a single score at 26-32. All the
momentum was with Tata and moments later they were nearly through the defence
again only for the critical pass to go astray.
Pontypool
needed to regain their poise and a penalty allowed them to do just that. The
kick from Lewis put them deep in the Tata twenty two and yet again the Pooler
forward power came up trumps. This time it was Seward who powered over and the
conversion from Lewis opened up a decisive thirteen point lead at 26-39 with a
few minutes remaining.
There was
just time for a cameo performance for coach Leighton Jones who rolled back the
years as time ran out. Pontypool had been given an almighty scare but had kept
their run going. Final score Tata Steel 26 Pontypool 39.
Not the
most commanding of performances from Pontypool against spirited opposition. The
forwards did their work effectively but a backline beset by injuries and
rejigged a number of times found life difficult against the lively Tata backs.
Congratulations to Jamie Jeune on his 250th appearance for the club.
Pontypool
have now accumulated 96 points in the Championship with two home games against
Rhydyfelin and Trebanos remaining. Bedlinog, Newcastle Emlyn, Newbridge and
Rhydyfelin will be relegated from the Championship. Let us hope our old friends
and rivals at Newbridge can bounce back.
It is
still very much in the balance as to who Pontypool will play in the promotion
play-off. Both Bridgend and Bedwas had good wins yesterday with Llanelli not
playing. If I were the betting kind (and
thank the Lord I’m not sir), my money would be on Bedwas to be relegated, Bridgend
safe and Llanelli in the play-off.
Did my
eyes deceive me or did I see that the WRU was putting forward yet another new
competition were the top six sides in the Premiership would play the top six
sides in Scotland. If the clubs are cash strapped this seems like financial
madness. Why don’t the WRU do the sensible thing and settle on a Premiership of
fourteen or even sixteen clubs? We all know that a league of twelve is too
small to fill an eight month season.
I didn’t catch
any of Judgement Day but I understand the Dragons finally came good and
thwarted the Scarlets’ European ambitions. In the other match the Ospreys edged
out the Cardiff Blues. I have to confess that with the lack of free TV coverage
I have not really kept abreast of regional rugby this season. Strangely I do
not seem to have missed it.
Pontypool
play Rhydyfelyn under lights at Pontypool Park on Wednesday evening. I am
looking forward to a good performance as Pooler build up towards the big one.
Come on
Pooler!
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