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Written by Alex Goff    Saturday, 08 October 2011 17:04    PDF Print Write e-mail
Middlesex Alone Atop New England Laurence
Clubs - Men's DII Clubs

The Middlesex Barbarians improved to 5-0 with a 31-13 defeat of previously undefeated Worcester Saturday in New England DII club play.

Worcester jumped out to an early lead thanks to a series of Middlesex mistakes, and their forwards punched it in for a 7-0 lead.

The two teams bashed at each other early, leading to penalty kicks on either side and a 10-3 score. After a period of pressure, Middlesex put the screws on in the scrum and earned a penalty try for their efforts. That tied the match 10-10 at halftime.

In the second half, the Middlesex defensive effort kept forcing turnovers, which led to tries.

New addition Jack Mahoney scored two tries and assisted on another, and led by co-Men of the Match No. 8 Matt Gottbrecht and center Mike Lyons, the Barbarians took a bonus-point victory.

"Our defense today showed me a new level of where this club can go to, ball retention not so much," said Middlesex Head Coach Josh Smith. “Today was a great day for our club sweeping 3 matches at home against a storied club like Worcester. We still haven't played close to our best.”

Middlesex now is alone on top of the New England DII Club Laurence Conference. Worcester is second at 4-1.

Meanwhile Portland remains in first in the Daly conference after another match between the top two teams. Portland edged Providence 23-18 to move to 5-0-1 and drop Providence to 4-2. Albany missed a chance to get a little closer to Providence, as they were upended by Newport 34-22.

 
Written by RUGBYMag Staff    Saturday, 08 October 2011 16:31    PDF Print Write e-mail
France Shocks England
International - Rugby World Cup

AUCKLAND, 8 Oct. - Imanol Harinordoquy gave a barnstorming display to earn the man-of-the-match award as France reached the Rugby World Cup semi-finals with a 19-12 win against England on Saturday.

Les Bleus avoided a third straight RWC loss to England with a classic performance that married France's twin traditions of backline flair and forward power.

Number 8 Harinordoquy and back-row colleagues Thierry Dusautoir and Julien Bonnaire bossed their English counterparts and gave creative players Jonny Wilkinson and Toby Flood a torrid time.

This dominance ensured England were unable to gain a toehold in the match until it was too late.

"They were magnificent," France coach Marc Lièvremont said of the back row. "I know Imanol quite well and at the beginning of the tournament he wasn't playing as well as I hoped.

"Imanol is a great competitor and so I left him on the bench so that he would be ready to start this match against his favourite rivals."

Lack of discipline

Lièvremont's side roared to a 16-0 half-time lead that they battled hard to protect in the second half, even though it took them until the 73rd minute to score their first points after the break with a drop goal from replacement Francois Trinh-Duc.

It was England’s lack of discipline that allowed France to build the platform on which they secured their half-time lead.

First Flood failed to release in the tackle to allow Dimitri Yachvili to slot the first points of the night after 11 minutes.

Then, when prop Matt Stevens was penalised for bringing down the scrum five minutes later, the diminutive scrum half added his second penalty for a 6-0 advantage.

"We controlled the match well at the beginning," Lièvremont said. "After they put pressure on us, we were able to relieve that pressure with our kicking game and that allowed us to get our game in order.

"I was very happy with the first half and it was a very good half in terms of discipline. The second half wasn't so good, but maybe it wouldn't have been the same feeling if England hadn't made it more difficult for us."

Pulled the strings

In only his third match at fly half for Les Bleus, Morgan Parra pulled the strings to great effect and played a hand in both of his side's tries.

The result made a mockery of claims the French were a side riddled with divisions and in disarray after losing heavily to New Zealand and surprisingly to Tonga in their final two pool matches.

"It's fantastic," backs coach Emile Ntamack said. "I am very proud of the boys tonight and the game they played.

"A week has passed since the very bad game against Tonga. Tonight was an incredible game. We have the potential and now we know that we can realise it."

England’s attack was based primarily on getting the ball to powerhouse centre Manu Tuilagi and while the young centre was able to break through the French defence all too often he was left isolated or unable to keep play going.

Even after full back Ben Foden finally got his team on the scoreboard after 55 minutes with his third try in as many matches against France, England still failed to come to life.

Chasing the game

"We created more chances to score than they did," England manager Martin Johnson said. "We probably had three or four chances that went missing.

"They took theirs and took theirs early, so it left us chasing the game. Today we let it out of our grasp too early."

Left wing Mark Cueto’s try with three minutes remaining gave England some hope. By then, though, France had done enough to become the second side not to finish top of their pool to reach the semi-finals after Wales knocked out Pool C winners Ireland earlier in the day in Wellington.

France and Wales now meet in the first semi-final at Eden Park on Saturday, 15 October.

"Most of us realised that we were missing out on the opportunity to play in a World Cup for our country and some may only have that chance once in a lifetime," skipper Dusautoir said.

"I don't know if we played wonderful rugby, but we had 22 players who want to go on and now we must concentrate on the semi-finals."

 
Written by Pat Clifton    Saturday, 08 October 2011 16:12    PDF Print Write e-mail
Bowling Green Wins Battle of Falcons
Colleges - Men's DI College

Bowling Green beat touring Air Force 40-27 at the Moose Rugby Grounds in Elkhart, Indiana Saturday. The match was part of a two-game swing through the Midwest for the Zoomies, who fell 19-17 to Notre Dame.

Played early in the morning so Air Force could make it back to South Bend for the Air Force vs. Notre Dame football game, the first half was spent with both teams feeling each other out and slugging it out in the trenches. Bowling Green finished the half in the lead 11 - 6.

“We actually were camped out quite a bit in their end, so we were disappointed to be only up 11-6 at half. They did some pretty good defending and we made some mistakes going in,” said BGSU coach Tony Mazzarella, whose team reeled off five-consecutive tries in the second half en route to a 40-6 lead.

“We kind of put it together the first 20 minutes of the second half. We took the foot off the gas a bit but still played pretty well.”

Bowling Green No. 8 Mike Ziegler, an Ohio University transfer, continued to impress as he added two tries to his team-leading total of nine so far on the season. Wing Sam Polzin added a try and conversion kick while fullback Matt Marquette and prop Steve Fritsch contributed solo tries.

With BG substituting heavily in the late stages of the contest, the AF Falcons punched in three converted tries before the BG defense stiffened up and let the game get away from them.

The match was a milestone of sorts for the BG Falcons - they had played AF four times in the past - the 1987, 1988, and 2008 sweet sixteens and on a 1991 tour to California - and had never beaten their Falcon counterparts. Former BG coach Roger Mazzarella (who had all four of the losses) commented that, "It was nice to get that monkey off our backs".

BG resumes Midwest league play next week at Ohio State.

 
Written by RUGBYMag Staff    Saturday, 08 October 2011 11:21    PDF Print Write e-mail
Wales over Ireland in Quarterfinals
International - Rugby World Cup

WELLINGTON, 8 Oct. - A Wales side playing "without fear" defended their way to a Rugby World Cup semi-final by standing up to a muscular Ireland to win the first quarter-final 22-10 on Saturday.

Wales coach Warren Gatland said the younger players in his side were unaffected by the past and benefited from the solid foundation of hard work laid down in the pre-season.

"They have no baggage and there's no fear factor," Gatland said. "We are in New Zealand and not in the bubble of Wales and listening to any of the negativity that is sometimes generated back home.

"We've worked so hard in the last three, four months. We aren't ready to go home yet."

Wales's three tries to Ireland's one was a true reflection of the attacking abilities of the two sides, although not of Ireland's first-half dominance of territory and possession at Wellington Regional Stadium.

Three times they shunned early penalty shots at goal to look for tries, but Wales were equal to them.

"We spent a lot of time in that first half in their 22 and we only came up with three points in the half," said Ireland captain Brian O'Driscoll.

"It hurts a bit when you're going in at half-time having the opportunities and knocking on the door but not really getting any points out of the territory."

Caught napping

Ireland had 60 per cent of the territory and 57 per cent of possession in the first half but their bludgeoning and battering of the Wales defence produced a solitary penalty goal after Wales had opened the match with a spectacular Shane Williams winger's try.

Ireland drew level early in the second half when wing Keith Earls somehow managed to keep his feet in play while sliding over in the corner.

But the match turned Wales's way when man-of-the-match Mike Phillips caught Ireland napping down the blindside of a ruck - a trademark of the France-based scrum half's play.

When Wales outside centre Jonathan Davies scored by first eluding some tiring forwards in front of him and then clapping on the pace to outstrip the cover defence, the match - and a place in the semi-finals for the first time since 1987 - was theirs.

The try had in part been created by a typically powerful run further infield by Davies's centre partner Jamie Roberts, who soaked up defenders all night.

In the second half, the territory evened out at 50-50 and Ireland's control of possession was pared back to 54 per cent, but by then the Irish had run out of time and ideas and been let down too often by their handling.

Typically gracious

Wales had to make 141 tackles in the match and missed only 11, while Ireland made 93 but missed 14. Ireland's lineout also faltered at crucial times, losing three on their own throw.

Shane Williams was bullish about Wales's chances of further progression, saying: "Some people thought I was being funny when I said we were coming here to win it, but I wasn't."

A majority of the crowd of 35,787 were solidly behind Ireland, but their support was not enough to stave off a fifth defeat in five quarter-final appearances at Rugby World Cups.

O'Driscoll was typically gracious in defeat, acknowledging that Wales had taken their opportunities where his side did not.

"It was a great opportunity for us winning the group, but they showed they are worthy semi-finalists, good luck to them.

"We needed to deliver a performance similar to the one against Australia or the one against Italy last week. We didn't do that today, we knocked on way too much ball.

"Collectively and personally I won't get this opportunity again and that really sucks. But you know, life goes on."

 
Written by Pat Clifton    Saturday, 08 October 2011 15:47    PDF Print Write e-mail
Salisbury Sobers Maryland
Colleges - Men's DI College

Salisbury, ranked third in DII, wasn’t in need of a confidence boost, but they got one by upending Maryland, ranked 12th in DI-AA, 30-27 Saturday.

A DI team losing to a DII opponent is far from a rarity, but Maryland isn’t a DI-AA rummy. The Terps are defending Atlantic Coast champs and just a week removed from upsetting Tennessee, who returns to DI-AA this season after competing in the inaugural College Premier Division (DI-A) campaign.

“It’s usually a big game for us every year to play Maryland. We’ve been playing them every year, but I think this was the highest they’ve been ranked when we played them,” said Salisbury coach Bill Creese, “and them coming off the big win against Tennessee was definitely a push for us.”

For several Sharks, so was getting another crack at Maryland flyhalf Matias Cima, former star of Gonzaga High School. “Some of my guys played against Matias in high school and never got to beat him at Gonzaga, so they’re pretty happy now, too,” Creese added.

Salisbury led 15-12 at halftime and Maryland scored first in the second half to take the lead, but it was short lived, as Salisbury put in a pair of tries and seal the victory.

Dotting down twice for the Sharks was No. 8 Jake Fields. He also scored a hat trick against Mason earlier this season, and his emergence as a playmaker has given comfort to Salisbury, which lost very little from its semifinalist squad from a year ago.

“Our biggest loss last year was our eightman, and our new eightman has stepped up,” said Creese. “I think (the guys) want to redeem themselves, especially with the little bodies that they lost.”

 


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