Bristol Post

Terrific Curry twins give Sale the edge at Ashton Gate

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AFTER the disappoint­ing exit from the European Challenge Cup, the only real goal left for now is to secure a berth in next year’s Champions Cup. However, as both Leicester and Clermont had demonstrat­ed in the previous two games, having a power pack is essential if you want to go deep in any competitio­n and, sadly, Friday night against Sale Sharks proved that if you lose the physical battle then it is extremely hard to progress.

There were few positives to take away from the game apart from to admire the dominance of the Sale tackling and, in particular, the performanc­e of the Curry twins who were mainly responsibl­e for the Bears having very little go-forward, and given there was barely nothing between them it was apt they were awarded joint players’ of the match. Bristol huffed and puffed but found no way of taking the wind out of the visitors’ sails and it was somewhat ironic that the one Bear who did manage to make some serious metres was the supporter in fancy dress who went coast to coast from the Dolman to the Lansdown without any meaningful interventi­on from the stewards. Their lacklustre attempts at stopping him mirrored pretty much what was happening on the pitch.

The fixture was also billed as ‘Go Green for Ashton Gate’, but the only real recycling on offer was from the Sale pack and the introducti­on of the biodegrada­ble ‘self-destruct’ plastic cups simply served to to remind us of where Bristol’s season appears to be heading. It seemed bizarre that our strategy seemed to revolve around trying to beat them at their own game rather than playing to our own strengths and hunt for space out wide. Yes, it was a bit wet but constantly box-kicking or sending poor old Magnus Bradbury into ferocious contact was akin to forcing World War I infantry over the top and into a hail of machine-gun fire.

Sale simply picked us off with metronomic kicking from George Ford and three opportunis­tic tries from weary missed tackles. It was brutal, efficient and effective but as a spectacle for the home fans it was woeful and not ideal at a time when many are weighing up whether to renew season tickets or not for next season.

To coin a phrase, ‘we go again’ but we need to see some improvemen­t in the last two games to finish on a high.

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