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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Lee Calvert

Saracens 35-25 Sale: Premiership rugby union final – as it happened

Saracens' Owen Farrell celebrates with Duncan Taylor (left) after the Gallagher Premiership final victory over Sale Sharks.
Saracens' Owen Farrell celebrates with Duncan Taylor (left) after the Gallagher Premiership final victory over Sale Sharks. Photograph: David Davies/PA

Here’s Rob Kitson’s full match report

The Sarries players congregate on the winners’ platform and await the trophy. It’s handed to Farrell who stretches right up and touches the sky with it under a shower of bubbly and streamers as joy is unconfined.

Saracens's players celebrate with the trophy after winning at the end of the Premiership Final rugby union match between Saracens and Sale Sharks at Twickenham Stadium.
Joy for the Saracens's players. Photograph: Ben Stansall/AFP/Getty Images

Updated

And here come Saracens.

A word for the two RAF lads in full No.1 dress, including leather gloves in this heat, an incredible performance.

The presentations have begun, with the Sale players glumly lining up to receive their loser’s medals. Always a tough moment to watch, but they must surely be looking to next season and continuing their improvement under Sanderson.

Jono Ross, losing captain, is here speaking after his final game.

“I’m massively disappointed, but I’m proud of the group. This is the start of an era for Sale Sharks, I really believe that. Saracens won those fine moments, we spoke about sticking to our systems, but fair play to them they were stronger today. This is a team with a big future, and we want to make rugby strong in the north.”

Owen Farrell has won Player of the Match

“It was proper finals rugby, and when we didn’t look like ourselves in parts it was all about sticking in and moving onto the next moment. You just want to get back to the club being as strong as it is now. This is not redemption from last year, it’s more about getting the best out of ourselves, which we did a bit but not enough and we need to keep working.”

35-25 was the final score, a points tally that was a fair reflection of the game and the season overall.

Sale made Saracens worry on the hour mark, but the champions reset and returned to their gameplan which was always that bit better right from the opening weekend last September. Eventually it looked as comfortable as it was inevitable.

SARACENS WIN THE PREMIERSHIP!

PEEEEP! It’s all over

Saracens' Owen Farrell celebrates after the Gallagher Premiership final victory over Sale Sharks at Twickenham Stadium.
Saracens' Owen Farrell celebrates at the final whistle. Photograph: Mike Egerton/PA

Updated

80 mins. The Sharks are at the “trying to play out of our own 22 for no reason whatsoever” stage

Updated

79 mins. Sale are in their own half and doing very little.

78 mins. Some lethargic passing around halfway from Sale, before Reid finds a bit of space to run through. It looks promising but he can’t hold the ball when tackled and Saracens boot it clear.

77 mins. Sale have a lineout in the Saracens 10m line after a scrum penatly. It’s a decent position, but surely there’s no time to score ten points.

74 mins. Bevan Rodd fumbles the ball forward at the ruck and it’s gathered by Theo Dan (!), replacment hooker (!!), who booms a spiral kick (!!!), that is a perfect 50-22 (!!!!+).

A title-winning intervention by young Theo.

YELLOW CARD! Robin Hislop (Saracens)

73 mins. The Sarries man hits Jonny Hill in head at ruck with his shoulder. The ref says it was a glancing blow, so yellow only.

TRY! Saracens 35 - 25 Sale (Ivan Van Zyl)

71 mins. Malins is off his right wing on a lovely out to in angle that has him in behind the Sale tackle line and into the 22. He sprays a pass out left to Daly, who pops inside to Van Zyl to drive to the line while being hit by Carpenter and Curry. The ref says held up on the field, but on review the TMO can spot a tinly portion of the ball brushing the whitewash of the goal-line.

Farrell boots a nerveless conversion to probably put the nail in this game.

69 mins. Sale are on the attack in the Sarries half, but the ball is spilled and Farrell booms an absolutely huge kick into the opposite 22, which O’Flaherty has to turn to gather and can then only find touch in his own half.

TRY! Saracens 28 - 25 Sale (Elliot Daly)

67 mins. A poor Goode kick is allowed to bounce by Carpenter before he gathers then dithers slightly on the clearance which allows Taylor and his fresh legs to charge down the kick then turn it over. One phase later the ball is spun left to Daly who dives over.

Farrell misses the two-pointer.

Saracens' Elliott Daly dives in to score his sides third try.
Saracens' Elliott Daly dives over. Photograph: David Davies/PA

Updated

65 mins. Saracens, with some intensity in defence force Raffi Quirk to box kick clear and it feels like the final 15 minutes could be something of a siege for Sale. But, on next possession for Sarries, the Sharks defence shepherd it across the field and bang Daly into touch.

Callum Hunter-Hill replaces Hugh Tizard in the Sarries second row, and Duncan Taylor is on for Alex Lozowski in the centre.

Updated

60 mins. A lovely pattern is run by the Sale backline before Rob Du Preez drives a 50-22 over the head of Goode. A catch and drive from the resulting lineout is illegally pulled down by Itoje and on the advantage Sale are over the line but held up.

It’ll be another 5m lineout for Sale after we come back for the penalty.

MISSED PENALTY! Saracens 23 - 25 Sale (Elliot Daly)

56 mins. Daly preps his cannon foot from halfway, and it has the prodigious distance but is right of the posts.

At some point in the middle of all that, Alex Sanderson brought on Raffi Quirk and Tom O’Flaherty for Gus Warr and Tom Roebuck as changes in the Sale backline.

TRY! Saracens 23 - 25 Sale (Bevan Rodd)

52 mins. A huge, trademark Tuilagi carry drive Sale up to the Sarries 22. The ball is moved right sharpish to Bevan Rodd lurking out wide who first moved the ball on then picks and drives over from the base of the subsequent ruck.

Ford converts and Sale are ahead for the first time!

Raffi Quirke (left) celebrates after Bevan Rodd goes over to put Sale Sharks ahead.
Raffi Quirke (left) celebrates after Bevan Rodd goes over to put Sale Sharks ahead. Photograph: Tom Sandberg/PPAUK/Shutterstock

Updated

PENALTY! Saracens 23 - 18 Sale (Owen Farrell)

49 mins. Coenie Oosthuizen, Ewan Ashman and Bevan Rodd have replaced the starting front row for Sale, with Nic Schonert, Akker van der Merwe and Simon McIntyre coming on.

This has led to Saracens immediately having a better time at the scrum, including winning a penalty for Farrell to convert.

47 mins. An immediate response from Saracens has Daly over the line after some smart work from Itoje and Wray. But there was half a foot in touch in the build up from Lozowski and the TMO scrubs the try off!

TRY! Saracens 20 - 18 Sale (Tom Roebuck)

44 mins. On the fourth attempt at out-foxing Goode with a Warr box-kick, the Saracens full-back fumbles it, which Sale pounce on. Van Der Werwe runs into space and chips it towards the touchline for Roebuck to nip it forward with his toe before diving on it in-goal.

A brilliant, opportunist attack and an even better finish from the Sale winger.

Sale Sharks’ Tom Roebuck dives in to score his sides second try during the Gallagher Premiership final against Saracens at Twickenham Stadium.
Sale Sharks’ Tom Roebuck dives in to score his sides second try . Photograph: Mike Egerton/PA

Ford can’t convert from way out on the right.

Updated

42 mins. Saracens have noticably upped the speed of recycling and passing, which has served to hold the Sale tackle-rush in place. However, the Sharks manage to soak up what is thrown at them this time and Malins eventually boots the ball away.

Second Half!

Farrell chips us back into action at Twickenham

Half-time musings

This looks there for the taking for Saracens if they can sort out the scrum issues from the first half. Sale are defending with vigour, but the second quarter had Sarries repeatedly in the opposition 22 and pressure being ruthlessly applied.

Sale are managing to stay somewhere near in touch on the scoreboard due to the aforementioned Sarries ill-discipline at set piece, but the northern outfit are yet to be ahead in the game, and the way things are shaping up this looks an increasingly distant possibility.

HALF TIME! Saracens 20 - 13 Sale

40+1 mins. Another Sarries attack makes its way to Daly to chipsand chase but he can’t get to the ball ahead of Gus Warr, who grounds it in-goal to end the half.

Updated

38 mins. It’s becoming an increasingly ominous performance from Saracens, with Sale struggling to get out of their half. The latest raid by Sarries ends with Daly tickling a diagonal grubber into touch in the Sharks’ 5m zone, but pressure is released as Itoje is pinged for closing the gap at the lineout.

37 mins. A Ford kick is claimed on the left touchline and just as it looks like Goode will be pushed into touch, he somehow pops it to Lozowski who is suddenly free and runing into the Sharks half. On the next phase, Curry recovers to win a turnover at the breakdown and snuff out the danger.

TRY! Saracens 20 - 13 Sale (Max Malins)

34 mins. The ball is fired into the backs early from the lineout, and there’s a bit of sevens-style run and check, with short offloads before Farrell pops a short pass to Malins off his left shoulder for the winger to run a diagonal line to score.

Farrell adds two.

Max Malins of Saracens scores the team’s second try during the Gallagher Premiership Final between Saracens and Sale Sharks at Twickenham Stadium.
Saracens’ Max Malins heads off towards the tryline. Photograph: Mike Hewitt/Getty Images
Saracens' Max Malins (right) celebrates with teammates after scoring a try.
Malins (right) celebrates with teammates. Photograph: Ben Stansall/AFP/Getty Images

Updated

33 mins. Tom Curry’s sin-bin is over and he returns to the field. Sale actually won the 10 minutes he was off, which is a great achievement.

But he’ll have some defending to do as Daly booms a penalty punt right up to the Sale 5m line.

Updated

TRY! Saracens 13 - 13 Sale (Akker Van Der Merwe)

31 mins. Sale are peppering the Sarries line with short carries that are repelled repeatedly by the defence before Akker Van Der Merwe drives hard from inches out and is convinced he’s grounded it. Ref Pearce wants a closer look and the TMO confirms the Sale hooker’s view.

Sale Sharks' Akker van der Merwe scores his sides first try during the Gallagher Premiership final against Saracens at Twickenham Stadium.
Sale Sharks' Akker van der Merwe scores his sides first try during the Gallagher Premiership final against Saracens at Twickenham Stadium. Photograph: David Davies/PA

Ford converts.

Updated

28 mins. Another scrum on halfway, this one for Sale, is reset multiple times. Ref Pearce is trying to chivvy them along to forming it up more quickly and it’s comical how much both packs are ignoring his request. Finally, it’s another penalty against Saracens and Mark McCall will be very worried at how the set piece is going for his side.

MISSED PENALTY! Saracens 13 – 6 Sale (George Ford)

23 mins. More breakdown shenanigans has Ford aiming for the posts again, but this one drifts just right.

YELLOW CARD! Tom Curry (Sale)

22 mins. And off he goes.

PENALTY TRY! Saracens 13 - 6 Sale

21 mins. We get back underway fairly handy, attacking on the blind side up the right from a scrum. Goode dinks a grubber through for Malins who is at top speed and heading towards grounding it before Tom Curry flies into tackle him. It was a lovely hit, the only issue being Malins didn’t have the ball and was about to score.

Pearce immediately gives a penalty try and wields a yellow card in the direction of the England flanker

Updated

It’s been an even contest both on the scoreboard and on the eyes, with both sides having some reasonable forays into opposition territory. It’s boiling out there, and that plus the occasion has led to a circumspect opening from both teams.

Sean Maitland was injured, pre-demo, and he’s off for Elliot Daly.

Match interrupted by protest

20 mins. Just Stop Oil have arrived on the pitch with their orange powder and the game is brought to a temporary halt.

Safe to say the Twickenham crowd are not exactly sympathetic to their cause.

An activist from the environmentalist group
Twickenham’s been tangoed. Photograph: Ben Stansall/AFP/Getty Images

Updated

PENALTY! Saracens 6 - 6 Sale (George Ford)

18 mins. “YEEEEEEEES!” scream the Sale pack as Ref Pearce awards a penalty for Riccioni folding in on his side of the scrum. George Ford again tees the ball up and slots it from 30 metres.

All square again.

PENALTY! Saracens 6 - 3 Sale (Owen Farrell)

14 mins. Manu Tuilagi has woken up and has a couple of big drives in midfield; but the second one ends with Farrell ripping the ball off him and then Goode booms a 50:22 into Sale territory.

Manu Tuilagi of Sale Sharks is tackled by Owen Farrell of Saracens and has the ball ripped during the Gallagher Premiership Rugby final .
Owen Farrell dispossesses Manu Tuilagi. Photograph: Phil Mingo/PPAUK/Shutterstock

Possession is won at the lineout before Sharks are again sloppy at the breakdown to give Farrell a chance to take three points from the tee - which he duly takes.

An incredible turnaround from what was shaping into a decent attack for Sale.

Updated

10 mins. Some minutes lost to a scrum on halfway that ends with a Sarries penalty after McIntyre collapses on his side of the scrum. From the lineout, Tom Curry hits Jamie George hard and there’s some head contact that knocks the England hooker out cold.

George bent double coming into the tackle, so there’s no foul play, says Ref Pearce.

He’s awake and walking off, but that’s the end of his game as Theo Dan replaces him.

PENALTY! Saracens 3 - 3 Sale (George Ford)

6 mins. Saracens struggle to capitalise on the early lead as Itoje drops the kick-off and puts Sale on the attack in the 22. Farrell ends up on the worng side of the ruck and the the ref is not happy he’s making enough effort to get out of there. Penalty given.

Ford’s turn to call for the tee, and he evens things up.

PENALTY! Saracens 3 - 0 Sale (Owen Farrell)

4 mins. Farrell puts a huge up and under onto the Sale 22 which Carpenter can only flap at allowing Lozowski to yoink it and feed Mawi for a strong carry. A few phases later after some more drives around the ruck Earl is short metres from the line but is held by the Sharks defence.

Inevitably, the Manchester team drift offside and Farrell beckons for the tee and opens he scoring.

Saracens’ Owen Farrell kicks a penalty during the Gallagher Premiership final at Twickenham against Sale Sharks.
Saracens’ Owen Farrell slots home to open the scoring. Photograph: Mike Egerton/PA

Updated

Kick Off!

George Ford booms it deep to get us underway and Saracens have an immediate penalty for Sam Dugdale not rolling away after chasing the kick-off.

Officials for today, for those interested.

Referee: Luke Pearce

Assistant Referees: Karl Dickson & Christophe Ridley.

TMO: Tom Foley.

Here come the teams out of the tunnel into the shimmering air of the stadium, Sale led by captain Jono Ross in his final appearance for the side. A win would be some way to sign off.

Pre-match reading

Ugo Monye is torn between going with the favourites or putting faith in the inspiration narrative. This makes more sense when you read it here.

Get involved by letting me have all your emotions and thought in word form either on email or tweet and I’ll give them due consideration.

Teams

Saracens
15 Alex Goode, 14 Max Malins, 13 Alex Lozowski, 12 Nick Tompkins, 11 Sean Maitland, 10 Owen Farrell (c), 9 Ivan Van Zyl; 1 Eroni Mawi, 2 Jamie George, 3 Marco Riccioni, 4 Maro Itoje, 5 Hugh Tizard, 6 Nick Isiekwe, 7 Ben Earl, 8 Jackson Wray

Replacements: 16 Theo Dan, 17 Mako Vunipola, 18 Christian Judge, 19 Callum Hunter-Hill, 20 Toby Knight, 21 Aled Davies, 22 Duncan Taylor, 23 Elliot Daly

Saracens players arrive at the stadium prior to the Gallagher Premiership Final between Saracens and Sale Sharks at Twickenham Stadium.
The Saracens players stroll past their fans as they make their way into the stadium. Photograph: Clive Rose/Getty Images

Sale Sharks
15. Joe Carpenter, 14. Tom Roebuck, 13. Rob du Preez, 12. Manu Tuilagi, 11. Arron Reed, 10. George Ford, 9. Gus Warr; 1. Simon McIntyre, 2. Akker van der Merwe, 3. Nick Schonert, 4. Jean-Luc du Preez, 5. Jonny Hill, 6. Tom Curry, 7. Sam Dugdale, 8. Jono Ross (C).

Replacements: 16. Ewan Ashman, 17. Bevan Rodd, 18. Coenie Oosthuizen, 19. Josh Beaumont, 20. Tom Ellis, 21. Raffi Quirke, 22. Sam James, 23. Tom O’Flaherty

Sale Sharks players walk into the stadium before the Gallagher Premiership Rugby Final match between Saracens and Sale Sharks at Twickenham.
It’s time for the Sale Sharks fans to greet their player. Photograph: Simon King/ProSports/Shutterstock

Updated

Preamble

As the song sort of goes, in the summertime when the weather is high, you can join us here in Twickenham for the denouement of the Gallagher Premiership season, as Sale Sharks take on Saracens. Yes, Mungo Jerry’s version was a bit more snappy, but one can’t help but call the song to mind on a glorious day for rugby under a beaming sun in south west London .

While we’re on a nostalgia bent, Sale will have memories of 2006; then-captain Jason Robinson stretched right up and touched the sky with the Premiership trophy – the last occasion of such triumph for the Greater Manchester club. The nearly 20 years since has for the most part been a tale of flirting with the play-offs with a sole semi-final appearance in 2021, losing to Exeter Chiefs in a humdinger. This season has seen a gnarly squad containing experience and young promise consistently deliver results under coach Alex Sanderson, with the George Ford inspired indefatigable and classy performance to defeat Leicester in the semi summing 2023 Sale up.

Saracens have a had a better 20 years, certainly, but not without some bumps. And by “bumps” I mean systematic cheating of the salary cap and relegation as punishment. But however they reached this point – or how lean the last three years have been compared to the preceding decade - the north Londoners remain a formidable squad with plenty of experience of winning matches like this one. Mark McCall will be planning that their talent, table-topping form, and lesser likelihood of being overawed by the occasion will bring them their first post-ignominy championship.

North vs South, nearly men vs regular winners, Ford vs Farrell – there’s much to add to the intrigue and anticipation and after a few hours, more pints, and many expended litres of sweat (and that’s just me. HONK!) a new name will be on the trophy.

Updated

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