Kentish Gazette Canterbury & District

Sixth win keeps up momentum

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Canterbury’s bandwagon rolls on with a sixth consecutiv­e victory which was as convincing as the score suggests.

The city club’s domination of this game was almost total as they ran in six tries and wrapped up a bonus point before half time.

The final margin might well have been wider had it not been for some dogged, scrambling defence by Barnes and they certainly got plenty of practice as Canterbury took an early grip which they seldom relaxed.

Suprisingl­y, it took a quarter of an hour before the city side’s high tempo approach paid off with a try.

Barnes survived clean breaks by Dan Smart and JJ Murray but from one of the many penalties they conceded, a lineout catch and drive ended with Sam Kenny scoring and Tom Best slotting the conversion

Barnes were to see much more of the powerful prop as his ball carrying abilities frequently kept them occupied but despite that opening try, Canterbury’s pace and promise didn’t deliver the goods and Barnes enjoyed their most productive spell of the game, brief though it was.

A quick reply came from a Tom O’toole penalty goal and although there was a second, unconverte­d try from Martyn Beaumont, who picked up a pass off his bootlaces brilliantl­y, the home side cancelled that with one of their own.

A penalty for holding-on left the city team struggling to halt a well-organised driving maul before the ball was released to fly-half Gareth Williams-davies who finished smartly.

For a side which had been consistent­ly on the front foot, clearly edging the scrum and lineout battles and forging across the gain line, a four-point lead was a miserly return.

So Canterbury did something about it and scored twice in three minutes. A first phase attack from a scrum gave full back Aiden Moss the sniff of space to sweep through for try number three.

Then a laboured Barnes pass was read to perfection by JJ Murray whose intercepti­on, plus two Best conversion­s, saw Canterbury take an 18-point lead into the second half.

A home side starved of possession for their occasional forays now mounted a largely backs- to- the- wall exercise and they never shirked anything in protecting their line.

It limited the damage but that came at the cost of more penalties, a yellow card which some officials might have wielded much earlier and two more tries.

Scrum-half Smart immediatel­y punished the sin- binning with his 10th try of the season and as the clock ran down, Moss produced a spectacula­r finale.

Released down the right wing channel, the full back’s step and swerve left Barnes grasping only the cold December air. Replacemen­t Ollie Best topped up the day’s best try suitably with the final conversion. Canterbury: A.moss, G.hilton, JJ Murray (repl J.jones), W.farris, M.beaumont, T.best (repl O.best), D.smart, A.cooper, T.rogers (repl C.townley), S.kenny (repl J.green), T.edwards, T.burns (repl G.edwards), S.rogers, H.mccormickH­uston, M.cantwell.

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