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Pat Lam provides update on Lion Ellis Genge after missing Quins win

By PA
Ellis Genge of Bristol Bears applauds the supporters followingg the Gallagher Premiership Rugby match between Bristol Bears and Bath Rugby at Principality Stadium on May 10, 2025 in Cardiff, Wales. (Photo by Dan Mullan/Getty Images)

Pat Lam says that Bristol will relish their Gallagher Premiership play-off task against title favourites Bath.

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Bristol booked an appointment with their fierce west country rivals on June 6 after beating Harlequins 52-26 in front of almost a 20,000 crowd at Ashton Gate.

“I don’t have to do anything (to motivate the team),” Bristol rugby director Lam told TNT Sports.

“The Bristolian players drive the week – I let the local boys sort it out. We have played them 14 times since we’ve been back in the Premiership, and won 11.

Fixture
Gallagher Premiership
Bath
34 - 20
Full-time
Bristol
All Stats and Data

“The two we have lost, one was in the 82nd minute and the other was by a point.

“Saying that, Bath have a phenomenal squad. Johann (van Graan) has done a brilliant job and it is going to be really tough for us, but we are going to embrace it.”

Tries in the first five minutes from prop George Kloska and lock Joe Batley sent Bristol on their way against Quins, before wing Kalaveti Ravouvou and number eight Viliame Mata also touched down.

Fly-half AJ MacGinty added three conversions, putting Bristol clear despite two tries by Quins’ England wing Cadan Murley and one Jamie Benson conversion.

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Quins threatened a major fightback when Alex Dombrandt and George Hammond crossed early in the second period – Benson added two more conversions – but Bristol coasted clear through a Gabriel Ibitoye double and scores from flanker Santiago Grondona and centre Benhard Janse van Rensburg, plus three more MacGinty conversions.

Lam added: “Us and Bath are the only two teams that have been in the top four throughout all 18 rounds of the Premiership.

“There are a lot of things for us to be proud of, but it’s play-off rugby now.”

Lam, meanwhile, confirmed that England prop Ellis Genge will be fit for the Recreation Ground showdown after missing Quins’ visit.

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“Ellis took a knock in training on Tuesday, and he didn’t train on Thursday. There was no point taking a risk,” Lam said. “He will be fine for next week.”

Quins finished seventh in the Premiership, 10 points adrift of the play-off places, and head coach Danny Wilson said: “We started the game terribly today and it put us in a bit of a hole.

“We were back in it at 31-26, but then Bristol capitalised on their opportunities.

“They are a very, very good side if you let them let rip. It has been a painful end to the season.”

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Hellhound 9 minutes ago
Springboks' dominance of the world rankings comes under increased threat

There is that yes, but to grow the game, you can't leave those teams down and out. In any sport, if a team loses, no one will be interested and no new talent will join the game. What is the aim? To grow the sport. Will any sport grow if you leave it unattended? What incentive is there for players and countries to play rugby? To spend money on rugby to grow the sport in your country? Especially if you never can compete against the top teams, not even the top 50 teams? There is no money for the players to play the sport as any other job will provide food, but rugby won't. Those players will stay amateur because they have to work a day job, play for their club and then their countries too, which don't pay much as the sport is not big enough. Those athletes leave sport or go to another sport. Chuck them out, dismiss them, give them no crumbs. Yeah, that's a way to grow any sport isn't it? By ignoring them, you think rugby will grow in those countries? They can't afford proper rugby fields, never mind to pay players to be professional athletes. Why would they encourage a sport that is costly to maintain with no incentive? Who runs a business at a loss? Why even bother to try and grow the game is smaller countries? Especially with that attitude of amateur players? Ever stop to think why they are so average? Why they are still amateur? Unlike the bigger nations, they can't afford to pay professional salaries. Those athletes will always stay amateur because they can't afford to make rugby their daily lives. They have to work to survive. They can't improve themselves on a rigorous training schedule like the top stars. The stars have one job. Rugby. They have 2 to 3 jobs, club rugby, national rugby and then their daily grind jobs, all to survive. Your thinking is wrong about this. It isn't enough to just show someone the sport. That isn't growth. It's lazy thinking.

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