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Brilliant Bristol run in six dazzling tries in Big Game mauling of Harlequins

about 9 hours ago
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This was the 17th annual Big Game but rarely can Harlequins have failed to live up to the billing of their Christmas extravaganza as sorely as they did here.Bristol, on the other hand, continue to dazzle in the way their hosts have recently struggled to.These two are probably the Premiership teams most renowned for dazzling.Indeed, they both enjoyed 60-point wins last weekend against lacklustre visitors from the deep south-west of France.But only one side brought it to the big, wide stage of Twickenham.

Much has been made of the way Pat Lam has his players making a thousand touches a week in training, but he does seem to be on to something.During Bristol’s utterly dominant first 50 minutes, front-five forwards put each other through gaps as if they were Fijians.One of Bristol’s team actually is, but Kalaveti Ravouvou, though brilliant, was no more light of touch than Ellis Genge or Joe Batley and their mates in the boiler room.We still talk about the Premiership semi-final of 2021, Bristanbul as it is known, so jaw-dropping was the comeback Harlequins summoned from somewhere, 28-0 down after half an hour of unplayable Bristolian genius, yet prevailing in extra-time.It was probably the greatest match in Premiership history, and there were high hopes for this one, but it takes two to tango.

Alas, there was only one team here.Harlequins David; Cleaves (Isgro 52), Beard, Northmore (Waghorn 52), Murley (capt); Smith, Porter (Friday 65); Hobson (Wenger 65), Walker (Riley 65), Williams (Delgado 54), Petti, Treadwell (Launchbury 65), Carr (Evans ht), Kenningham, Cunningham-SouthYellow card Walker 43Tries Isgro, Smith Cons Smtih 2Bristol Rees-Zammit; Boshoff (Heward 65), Van Rensburg, Williams, Ravouvou (Worsley 71); Jordan, Marmion (Randall 61); Genge (Woolmore 52; Genge 59), Oghre (Thacker 52), Chawatama (Kloska 52), Rubiolo, Batley, Owen (B Grondona 57), S Grondona, Harding (capt)Yellow card Jordan 58, Williams 71Tries Ravouvou, Batley, Oghre, Rees-Zammit, S Grondona, Genge Cons Jordan 4, WilliamsReferee Anthony WoodthorpeBristol had their bonus point by half-time again, but no repeat of that extraordinary playoff.How far away such heroics must seem to Harlequins, how far away the form of the champions they went on to become four years ago.“People always talk about Bristanbul and all that,” said Lam.“We’ve worked hard to make sure that doesn’t happen to us again.

The type of rugby we played – and on free-to-air TV too – was pleasing,That was something we did talk about,Let’s show young people that if you’re going to watch rugby, this is what it is,”If the difference between good and great rugby is precision, the Bears were the embodiment of that in the first half,Bristol had four visits to the Harlequins 22 in the first half and scored from each.

They scored from their fifth visit too, at the start of the second half to open a 33-0 lead.Harlequins were the opposite.They had nearly all the ball in that period and could not score a point, their efforts foundering time and again on a solid Bristol defence and their own loose handling.They spilled passes and balls in the tackle, right, left and centre.Bristol scored from their first attack, in the eighth minute.

A thing of beauty it was too,Genge put Batley through, Tom Jordan sent a fabulous pass out wide, where Ravouvou finished with power and precision,Batley scored himself early in the second quarter, collecting Ravouvou’s offload for Bristol’s second,Their third came five minutes later, Genge this time putting Gabriel Oghre through a hole to the line,And then it was Ravouvou’s turn again to dazzle with his hands, sending Louis Rees-Zammit, enjoying his first start at full-back, away on the overlap.

He chipped Nick David, his opposite number, who didn’t stand a chance, for the bonus-point try.George Hendy (pictured) scored two tries as Northampton produced an impressive display to defeat Sale 47-21 at Franklin’s Gardens.The thumping victory was enough to lift Saints up to second in the table, with just points difference separating them and the new leaders, Exeter, after they ran in seven tries, some of which were spectacular.Northampton began with tries from Henry Pollock, Hendy and Toby Thame and after Tom O’Flaherty struck for Sale, Kemeny’s sensational individual score put the hosts 26-7 ahead.Hendy scored his second before O’Flaherty and Arron Reed pulled back tries for the Sharks, with George Furbank and Tom Pearson then rounding things off for Saints.

One score stood out for Phil Dowson, Northampton's director of rugby.He said: “Josh Kemeny’s try had me off my seat, I thought it was exceptional and I think the athleticism Josh has is sometimes underestimated.He is very fast, he is very athletic and I think he has been one of our best signings.”Geoff Parling was pleased with how his Leicester players kept up the pressure against Gloucester on Friday despite the game being won with something to spare.The Tigers scored seven tries at Welford Road to move level on points with the pre-weekend leaders, Bath, who visit Newcastle tomorrow.

A 20-minute red card for the replacement hooker, Charlie Clare, was their only negative, but there were welcome returns from injury for Ollie Chessum and Jack van Poortvliet in a 45-14 win.Parling said: “We did plenty of good stuff and worked hard for each other.I’m really pleased to get not just the outcome, but to see lads still kick balls into the corner late in the second half, lads still working for each other.We were still hustling, we were still trying to get more points."Scores by James Thompson and Solomone Kata eased Leicester ahead before a penalty try on the stroke of half-time gave them a 19-0 lead.

A comfortable night was completed by second-half tries by Tom Whiteley, Tommy Reffell, Billy Searle and Chessum, with Josh Hathaway and Jack Clement scoring for Gloucester.Gloucester's director of rugby, George Skivington, said: “I didn’t see that coming.We’ve had a good six weeks and I thought we were in a good spot for it.Losing a couple of lads [to injury] early definitely wasn’t helpful, but our accuracy was really poor." PA MediaMatters deteriorated further for the home team.

Jack Walker was shown yellow two minutes into second half.While he was away, Santi Grondona finished from the attacking lineout that followed.We had to wait an hour for Harlequins to score the first of their two tries.Rodrigo Isgró leapt over a ruck between the posts, after a lengthy series of drives at the Bristol line.But that just inspired Genge to his most outrageous trick yet.

Gathering the ball about 40 metres out, he galloped down the right touchline and through the despairing David for the most popular try of the afternoon.Marcus Smith scythed through for Quins’ second in the last 10 minutes.But by then an impressive crowd was beginning to thin out.The flashing lights and pounding music that greeted the score felt somewhat in vain.Harlequins will not remember this latest Big Game fondly.

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Vonn’s Olympic comeback gathers pace with third in Val d’Isere downhill

Lindsey Vonn’s expectations have shifted so dramatically during her Olympic comeback that even a podium finish now comes with a sense of frustration.The 41-year-old American finished third in Saturday’s women’s World Cup downhill at Val d’Isère, France, extending a blistering start to the season that has already included a victory and a runner-up finish in the space of nine days. But after a small mistake on the lower section of the course cost her valuable time, Vonn left the finish area convinced she had let a potential win slip away.Austria’s Cornelia Huetter produced the cleanest run of the day to claim her first World Cup victory of the season, clocking 1:41.54 on the Oreiller-Killy course

about 16 hours ago
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Harry Brook’s moment of madness a fitting epitaph for England’s flawed cult of Baz | Barney Ronay

Tough on Harry Brook, yes. But we must also be tough on the causes of Harry Brook. No child is born playing performative reverse-hoicks with a Test match to be saved, just as most acts of cult-like behaviour have their roots in a smooth-talking cult-like instructor.For England the beginning of the end of the age of Baz started when the disciples of Baz began to deny such a thing even existed; to insist that the buckle-up-and-enjoy-the-ride stuff didn’t actually exist at all, but was instead a creation of another, much worse cult, also known in this world as “the outside”.With this in mind, Brook’s dismissal in Adelaide was at least a tell, a moment of anti-gaslighting

about 19 hours ago
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Pat Cummins primed to pop the corks after bursting England’s fragile bubble | Geoff Lemon

On a redundancy scale, attending the Adelaide Test and noting that Pat Cummins was good is in the realm of noting that the Torrens was wet or the cathedral was spiky. Still, on day four, any one of those obvious things might justifiably have caught an observer’s eye.Perhaps it’s more notable just how natural, how inevitable, it felt that Cummins was indeed bowling at his best in his first match back after a stress fracture cost him the first two Tests of this Ashes series and any match preparation before that.England supporters will spend four years until their team’s next visit pondering explanations for this poor showing, inevitably including much examination of the lack of chances for their bowlers to adjust to Australian conditions. Cummins spent five months in the gym and the nets without once seeing the middle of a ground, latterly powering through what might have been a few months of rehab in the space of a few weeks, then hit the pitch for a Test match like he had never been away

about 21 hours ago
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Crawley admits England ‘staring down the barrel’ but vows ‘we’ll never give up‘

Zak Crawley has promised England will still be hunting for victory on the fifth day of the third Test in Adelaide, despite slipping to 207 for six in pursuit of a record fourth-innings target of 435. “It’s an uphill battle from here,” Crawley said. “But the boys are going to give it a good crack tomorrow. We’re staring down the barrel, so it’s disappointing. But we’ll never give up

about 21 hours ago
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Red Roses and Lionesses made 2025 a watershed year for women’s sport in England

England women’s football and rugby teams did something they had never done before in 2025: win major trophies in the same year. The Red Roses lifted the Rugby World Cup and the Lionesses retained the Euros. And it was not just these two triumphs that underlined English prowess in women’s sport, with Arsenal winning the Women’s Champions League and Charley Hull reaching a career-high of fifth in the golf world rankings – the highest for an Englishwoman since the rankings began in 2006.The ripple effects of these victories and achievements have been felt across the country. Grassroots participation is rising, media coverage is expanding and more young athletes are aspiring to follow in the footsteps of the current stars

about 22 hours ago
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Australia close on Ashes victory over England on day four of third Test – as it happened

Ok, that’s enough from this page for one day, I’ll see you back here when the caravan pitches up in Melbourne. Time to redirect you to the more considered content from the likes of Geoff Lemon, Barney Ronay, and first, Ali Martin.“Maybe I’m clutching at straws but surely managing to take the third Test into the fifth day constitutes a moral victory for England in the Ashes?” pleads Colum Fordham. “Ah how sweet is the taste of victory!”Jim Lines asks the question that once began as a taunt but must now be given serious sporting (if not financial) consideration. “With the anomalous exception of 2010/11, the Aussie-hosted Ashes have been embarrassingly one-sided for decades

about 23 hours ago
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UK Foreign Office victim of cyber-attack in October, says Chris Bryant

1 day ago
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Society of Editors decries Starmer’s plan to reduce media scrutiny of No 10

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Reform-run Kent council accused of blocking scrutiny of claim it saved £40m

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Reform candidate who told Lammy to ‘go home’ questioned other MPs’ loyalty to UK

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Lib Dems call for inquiry into hostile foreign state interference to include US

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Farage avoids police investigation over alleged electoral law breach

2 days ago