The Scotsman

Heriot’s pour cold water on Currie’s burning ambition

● Goldenacre men take control from start and power through to final

- By WILLIAM PAUL at Goldenacre 0 Heriots’ Mark Bennett is tackled by Robbie Nelson.

The harsh lessons of two previous defeats to the Chieftains this season were translated into a performanc­e that propelled Heriot’s into the Premiershi­p grand final against Ayr next month.

The home team ran in five tries, including a first half double by winger Charlie Simpson, and conceded only two in a match they controlled from start to finish.

But coach Phil Smith was not completely happy.

“This was our third semifinal against them and it’s always been within a score,” he said. “Today I felt we were in control. I thought we defended really well but our attack was a bit stop-start, but you’re going to lose a bit of momentum after three weeks off. We’ve got a run of fixtures now – Hawick here next in the Scottish Cup semifinal – and maybe that will help us nail a few things. Our restarts were disgusting – they were rubbish – so we’ll fix that, and some of our set plays just need to be a bit tighter.”

Currie, the only non Super 6 club to reach the play-offs, saw Heriot’s get off to a flying start and were playing catchup for the rest of the game but couldn’t build the necessary momentum. They were not helped by a succession of injuries which saw their entire front row limp off the field in the first half, the damage done by a dominant and ruthless Heriot’s pack. At one stage in midfield with Heriot’s 13-5 ahead, Currie winger Ben Robbins got his fingertips to an intercepti­on but could not

hold on to give him a clear run to the line that would have put them into the lead at the break.

Instead, Heriot’s were home free, more or less, when a few minutes into the second half replacemen­t back row Jason Hill picked and went from the rear of a scrum for a third try that stretched the advantage.

Full back Ross Jones kicked a long range penalty to keep the scoreboard ticking over. Glasgow pro Tom Gordon went over for a second Currie try before Heriot’s got up to full speed again and opened up the space with a sweeping passing move that carried inside centre Bobby Kay up the pitch to dive over with a big grin on his face.

There were smiles all round as a fifth and last try was scored when a loose ball bounced into the hands of replacemen­t scrum half Alex Ball and he sprinted half the length of the pitch to score.

Currie coach Mark Cairns bemoaned the internatio­nalist allocation system which allowed Heriot’s to add three profession­als to their starting line up.

He said: “As a club we’ve had to be pretty resilient the whole season. It’s a shame that on the last outing for this team together that we’ve had all those things impede what could have been a much closer game. We’ve been competitiv­e with the top four teams for the last five years. We’re bitterly disappoint­ed not to make the final.”

“We defended really well but our attack was a bit stopstart… our restarts were disgusting”

PHIL SMITH

 ?? PICTURE: BRUCE WHITE/SNS GROUP/SRU ??
PICTURE: BRUCE WHITE/SNS GROUP/SRU

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom