The Rugby Paper

Shark pups defend in force to deny Heem his moment

- By COLIN NEWBOULT

SALE have not been afraid of boasting about their production line of academy talent over the last few years and they showed why at Sixways on Friday.

Several teenagers took to the field at Worcester, including 17-year-old Cameron Redpath, and showed remarkable maturity to withstand a second half Warriors’ onslaught.

After being 21-7 behind at the interval, the hosts began the second period impressive­ly but struggled to penetrate the Salfordbas­ed outfit’s stout defence.

A fortuitous bounce, which landed kindly for schoolboy Ollie Lawrence, enabled the Premiershi­p basement- dwellers to get back into the contest, but Steve Diamond’s side secured the win via AJ MacGinty’s penalty.

“To have seven debutants on the field and two of the youngest ever, is a credit to the academy staff at the club, and none of them looked out of place,” Sharks’ coach Paul Deacon said.

Sale’s emotions were very much in contrast to the Warriors, who endured another frustratin­g evening.

They needed to find some confidence having suffered a wretched run of form and Sam Vesty – taking charge of the squad in the Anglo-Welsh competitio­n – opted for a mixture of youth and experience.

Bryce Heem, Nick Schonert, Tom Heathcote and Darren Barry provided the know-how while Will Butler, Huw Taylor and Tom Dodd added plenty of exuberance, but a new side only yielded the same result as their frailties were again exposed.

The set-piece, particular­ly in the second half, failed to offer a stable platform and the defence – a constant area of concern this season – allowed the opposition to stretch their legs.

To compound Worcester’s disappoint­ment, they dominated much of the contest and created plenty of opportunit­ies, but those chances were regularly spurned.

On his return, Heem looked especially sharp and tore into an inexperien­ced Sharks’ outfit, but there were knock-ons aplenty and it halted their momentum.

Sale were not much better at times, producing mistakes which were symptomati­c of a frustratin­g game, but they were far more clinical.

They scored three times in the opening period with Will Cliff and Ben Curry in particular showing their range of skills.

Cliff and half-back partner MacGinty dictated proceeding­s and, following a period of pressure in the Midlanders’ 22, TJ Ioane touched down from a maul.

Vesty’s team hit back through a well-worked Michael Dowsett score but the Cliff-Curry duo soon took command. The ubiquitous flanker created the Sharks’ second try, breaking the line and finding his scrum-half, before the same players combined for the back-rower to score.

Worcester improved after the break, getting over the line via Lawrence and a late Tom Howe effort, but MacGinty’s penalty four minutes from time ultimately clinched the win for Sale, much to the annoyance of the Worcester faithful.

 ?? PICTURES: Getty Images ?? Skilful: Will Cliff breaks away to score for Sale
PICTURES: Getty Images Skilful: Will Cliff breaks away to score for Sale
 ??  ?? Going down: Dean Hammond of Worcester is upended
Going down: Dean Hammond of Worcester is upended

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