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Bath bench press Northampton Saints in wild Champions Cup ride

Kepueli Tuipulotu of Bath Rugby celebrates scoring his team's fifth try during the Investec Champions Cup match between Bath Rugby and Northampton Saints at Recreation Ground on April 10, 2026 in Bath, England. (Photo by David Rogers/Getty Images)
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Northampton were denied an Investec Champions Cup semi-final spot for the third successive season after Bath won an all-time tournament classic 43-41 following a late yellow card for Saints’ England star Henry Pollock.

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Bath triumphed following a mesmeric 11-try encounter at the Recreation Ground, and they will now face holders Bordeaux-Begles or six-time champions Toulouse.

The winning score came via a Ted Hill touchdown that Finn Russell converted three minutes from time – and shortly after Northampton went down to 14 players when Pollock departed.

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Attacking rugby was showcased in all its glory as the top two teams in this season’s Gallagher Prem cut loose, with Northampton posting five first-half touchdowns from Pollock, Fraser Dingwall, Tom Lockett, Josh Kemeny and Ollie Sleightholme, all converted by Fin Smith.

It looked as though two Smith penalties after the break would thwart a Bath fightback as drama continued right to the end, but it was not to be following Bath tries for Hill, Kepu Tuipulotu, Finn Russell, Henry Arundell, Francois van Wyk and Tom Dunn, while Russell booted five conversions and a penalty.

Attack

139
Passes
133
104
Ball Carries
98
279m
Post Contact Metres
282m
9
Line Breaks
9

Northampton flew out of the blocks, capitalising on a third-minute yellow card for Bath number eight Miles Reid by scoring immediately when Pollock smashed his way through three defenders for a try that Smith converted.

Bath were all over the place, with Saints cutting them open just four minutes later as scrum-half Archie McParland’s one-handed pass created space for Smith and Tommy Freeman before Dingwall finished off a scintillating move.

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Smith again added the extras, but Bath’s response proved a rapid one when Dunn took a quick penalty and crossed from close range. Russell’s conversion made it 14-7 halfway through a breathless opening quarter.

And there was no end in sight to the try spree, particularly from Saints’ viewpoint, as Lockett collected Smith’s long pass for their third touchdown, then Kemeny completed a sweeping 60-metre attack that had its origins from a charged down Bath kick inside Northampton territory.

Champions Cup
Sam Underhill fumbles the ball – PA

Smith booted two more conversions, and after Russell’s opportunist try that he also converted, Saints struck again through Sleightholme, who cashed in on poor Bath defending to take his team merrily past 30 points.

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With Smith maintaining his 100 per cent conversion rate, Bath were leaking scores at an alarming rate, yet they regained their composure and took the first-half try-count to a staggering nine when Arundell and Van Wyk crossed in quick succession, making it 35-26 at the interval.

Bath’s England flanker Sam Underhill failed a head injury assessment just before the break, and Northampton quickly got the scoreboard moving again through a Smith penalty.

But even though they held a 12-point lead with 25 minutes left, Saints knew there was still much work to be done, and Freeman made a try-saving tackle on Bath captain Ben Spencer before Northampton lock JJ van der Mescht was sin-binned following repeated infringements.

And he had barely left the pitch when Tuipulotu powered over for a well-worked touchdown, setting up a fittingly thrilling final quarter to an epic encounter.

Smith and Russell exchanged penalties as the clock ticked down, then Pollock saw yellow and Hill’s late show unforgettably sealed the deal.

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19 Comments
E
Eric Elwood 44 days ago

Impressive by Bath to manage that win. Key was staying relatively close to NH by H/T.

All excellent tries by NH including the block down, excellent finishing, and apart from Sleightholme’s which was poor by Bath.

That they managed to win against Northampton after falling 21 behind bodes very well.

They are contenders.

P
PMcD 43 days ago

I actually thought the Sleightholme try was more down to his power to stay on his feet and drive forward, which has improved significantly during this layoff.


I was slightly surprised Saints started him in this game but he’s clearly ready, which bodes well. It’s only 1 game but I think he has come back a better player, which is a real positive.


Was always a great natural finisher but he’s added a lot more power to his game, without losing his pace, which can only help.

P
PMcD 44 days ago

Possibly one of the best all time games at The Rec.


Saints were sensational, especially in attack but Bath didn’t panic, trusted their forwards and clawed their way back in that game.


What a game. That will live long in the memory.

M
Monoped cdo. 44 days ago

Not sure who wrote this article if indeed it wasn’t AI. Given we were finalists last year I fail to see how we were denied a semi final place last year?

P
PMcD 43 days ago

This would have made Saints third consecutive semi final if they won.

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Eric Elwood 44 days ago

I think the intended meaning was that NH were denied a 3 in a row of semi final appearances rather than you were denied a semi final appearance for the third time in a row. The AI may need comms lessons.

B
Btodd13 44 days ago

Great game, although as a saints fan tough to watch in the end. Could argue that they shouldn't have let a 21 point lead slip which is fair although bath are exceptional. Not sure how barbeary didn't get a yellow mind you and for the life of me should the TMO not be checking decisions that ultimately can and do decide a game? Pollock shouldn't have seen a yellow and the bath player was sealing off the ruck but we just go with the ref in those game deciding instances?

P
PMcD 44 days ago

I think Saints would have edged that if they started with both Mitchell & Coles - truth be told, there’s never usually much between these two sides but they do play totally different styles of rugby and you can’t help but applaud that Saints back line attack.


Once Borthwick starts picking them, England will get much better.

u
unknown 44 days ago

Bath fan here. Agree with the Pollock card as careras sealed off. The kemmeny try was off the back of a blatant high shot on ewels. Not sure who deserves it more

T
TheNotoriousFig 45 days ago

I think the luck of the bounce favored Bath. Northampton ran some great lines. Fun game for a neutral.

N
NHinSH 45 days ago

Cracking game, real shame that refereeing error for Pollocks yellow impacted the game so much

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PMcD 44 days ago

Reid’s yellow was tight, especially as he got the ball at the beginning, the Ewels high hit was missed, the Underhill high hit was missed (who failed the HIA) and Saints were lucky with the number of penalties given the precedent Brace had set with Miles Reid in the opening 2 mins, so whilst I don’t think it was a great officiating performance overall, he was equally bad for both teams over the 80.


P.S Pollock had a blinding game, he was the best back row on that pitch by some margin.

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