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Bath climb back to PREM summit after snatching late win over Exeter


Bath players celebrate - PA
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Bath lost a 26-point lead in an epic South-West derby only to snatch back victory in the most dramatic fashion in the closing seconds to beat Exeter 33-26 and move back to the top of the Gallagher PREM table.

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Exeter showed huge resilience to recover from a red card at the start of the game and drew level with just six minutes remaining, but a try after 33 phases by number eight Arthur Green saved Bath at the death.

The drama began in the opening seconds when Henry Arundell was upended by opposite number Cambell Ridl and referee Luke Pearce showed the left wing a red card, reducing the visitors to 14 players for 20 minutes at the Recreation Ground.

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Bath, fired up after their shock home defeat to Northampton last weekend, made the most of the numerical advantage by scoring four tries in rapid succession.

Prop Beno Obano was first over the line, finishing off a line-out catch-and-drive after Tom Dunn, debutant lock Enoch Opoku-Gyamfi and Alfie Barbeary had battered away.

Fixture
Gallagher Premiership
Bath
33 - 26
Full-time
Exeter Chiefs
All Stats and Data

A tapped penalty provided the second for Barbeary, showing his best form since last season’s PREM championship campaign.

No sooner had Finn Russell struck his second conversion than Barbeary was bullocking his way upfield from the restart, creating momentum for Bath to add a free-flowing third try for Santi Carreras.

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As Arundell returned after treatment and Exeter continued to concede penalties, Ollie Lawrence dotted down in the corner to reward another close-range drive from a line-out.

Russell was wide with the conversion but Bath had their bonus point and a 26-0 lead.

Once restored to 15 players, Exeter began to contest the breakdown more aggressively and Henry Slade punished the hosts’ indiscretions with his kicks to the corner.

Hooker Joseph Dweba first scored from a catch-and-drive and that try was quickly followed by a touchdown in the left corner by Olly Woodburn. Slade converted both scores and Exeter were suddenly back in the game at 26-14.

Bath thought they had a fifth try soon after the break but skipper Ben Spencer’s try was rubbed out for an advertant but helpful obstruction as Cameron Redpath made an opening in the visitors’ 22.

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Now it was Bath who were on the back foot, conceding a series of penalties that eventually forced them into desperate defence.

Led by their skipper, Dafydd Jenkins, the visitors surged to the home line and number eight Greg Fisilau plunged over for a deserved try after 67 minutes, but Slade’s conversion was well wide.

As the tension built, Bath were now hanging on for dear life but Immanuel Feyi-Waboso squeezed in for a dramatic try in the corner, which Slade converted to bring the sides level.

Somehow, Bath dug deep to build a prolonged attack at the other end.

Carreras was hauled down under the posts but replacement Green was in support to score under the posts before Russell added the conversion.

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3 Comments
u
unknown 143 days ago

headline a bit early i think

u
unknown 143 days ago

Hugely entertaining game. Barberry and Spencer had big games for Bath .. but Exeter showed great heart and spirit to come back from 26 - 0 to 26 - 26. Slade and Jenkins were massive for the Chiefs.

A
AD 143 days ago

Great game!

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AllyOz 52 minutes ago
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I work in an agricultural field and I afraid to admit that this is not just a rugby problem. It is an issue that I also see in our industry. I recently went to a major research institute in our agricultural industry, one where we used to export experts across several fields to the rest of the world. Australian farming practices in this area were world leading and Australians played a major role in global research across several diverse fields. But at that research centre, the head of every major team was foreign born and educated. The only exceptions were a couple of blokes who were due to retire in the next couple of years. I am not arguing against diverse backgrounds, but we used to produce our own people coming up through the system but now we don’t. For whatever reason, it is easier to bring people from outside. I imagine we still have a lot of people in many fields still doing world leading research or working as leaders in financial or other fields overseas, but our education system or our lifestyle in general doesn’t seem to support innovation or leadership in the way it used to. There was always a bit of a risk taking attitude, a have a go attitude, tied to a bit of larrikinism and irreverence perhaps, in the Australian spirit. It is not necessarily part of my own character but I have seen (and admired) it in others. It was there with the diggers in WW1 and I have also seen it in board rooms and finance and parts of agricultural research at times. But I think we are losing it. And rugby is not the first or the only casualty.

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