The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Howe at last favoured by fates in dramatic fashion

-

The fates in rugby sometimes have to be almost insufferab­ly cruel before they can be kind, and Howe of Fife can tell Hamilton plenty about that after Saturday’s finish at Duffus Park, writes Steve Scott.

Howe won their first league game in two days short of a full calendar year in the most dramatic way possible, an intercepti­on try returned 60 metres by centre Duncan McIntyre on the last play of the game, breaking a 26-all tie.

If that wasn’t cruel enough for the Bulls, it was the second week running it had happened to them. They lost 35-34 to Stewarts Melville at home last week with the final try coming in almost the exact same fashion.

Still, Howe have been there, done that, although in a more gruelling form of torture than Hamilton are enduring. Nine losses to start the BT National League 1 season tell their own story, 16 losses in a row in the league; the catharsis of a victory at last was greeted with understand­able relief and joy.

It was maybe a fitting day for the tide to turn, with the club’s past presidents and captains attending a special lunch in the pristine new pavilion at Duffus.

Head coach Garry Horne was one of the few on the sideline and the stands not leaping around at the end, but that was down to pure relief.

Horne, who has had to deal with departures, injuries, unavailabi­lities and a team with four to five changes every week, said: “Credit to the guys, they’ve never lain down, they’ve kept working hard. There’s been a sense of improvemen­t week on week.”

Confidence is certainly a key, and the way Howe played for the first hour or so indicated how much it had taken a hammering in the last 12 months.

A solo try from Jake Douglas just before half-time kept them in the game, and their usual pacy, off-loading game allied to frenzied, swarming defence didn’t look quite as sharp as usual.

Hamilton, on the other hand, looked dangerous every time they had the ball and probably felt short-changed by their 26-14 lead after 50 minutes. Full-back Andy Wilson was hugely impressive, with open-side Robert Brown a real nuisance, and they had a brace of tries each.

Howe got back in the game through forward power, mauling for a try to get within five points then driving a scrummage for Graeme Steedman’s unconverte­d try which equalised the score.

Howe felt they might have had a penalty try – and an easier conversion than the one missed – in the build-up to that score, but McIntyre’s anticipati­on and pilfering of poor Mark Wallace’s pass after a madcap final 10 minutes when either side could have won it rendered that debate meaningles­s.

Howe’s position is still perilous, four points adrift at the bottom of National 1 and seven points from safety nearly halfway through the schedule.

But players are coming back – notably stand-off Dom Martin, playing his first home game since September 2015 after ACL surgery and bringing an assurance to the team’s on-field direction.

Remaining injuries like that suffered by key men Chris Mann and Graeme Thomson on Saturday have three weeks to clear before the ‘derby’ with Dundee High on December 3. And Howe’s resilience can never be doubted.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom