Sheffield 1st XV vs York 1st XV
November 20th, 2009 by Reporter_1stMatch report: York vs. Sheffield, 18/11/2009
Grey. Dreary. Dismal. Just a small example of a plethora of adjectives available to anyone with a reasonable grasp of the English language to describe today’s opposition and their less than inspiring town. York have already visited the capital of British steel-making once and came away with less than their deserved share of points, and so today, in the rain, York returned to re-establish the natural order of things. As stated, the heavens didn’t provide much motivation for either team, who would have to slip, slide and slither their way through what was to become somewhat of a milestone-match for York, and a bit of a bugger for Sheffield.
Confidence was brewing way before the first whistle blow at 2.00 p.m today with a tremendously successful warm up. The adverse weather conditions and narrow pitch could do nothing to dissuade York that running rugby was still possible, and this was reflected in slick handling and scarcely a dropped ball. By the time the referee had taken his position mid-field, the boys in the bumblebee kit knew they were in for a big one, and they were ready for it. For a brief moment, the clouds parted and sunshine bathed the battlefield in a glorious autumnal glow, and one couldn’t help but feel that Bugge had asked the big man upstairs for a bit of moral support…just to get the boys going.
The first five minutes was a tentative affair with both sides showing signs of nervousness, exacerbated perhaps by the knowledge that it was going to get very muddy out there, very quickly. However, York showed early signs of the excellent midfield defence that stood them in very good stead all day with M.J and Felgate working seamlessly to ensure the Sheffield centres were going nowhere fast. Sheffield seemed well drilled, but excellent work by the back row, (who were fantastic all day), asserted an early dominance around the tackle area that was to prove decisive in today’s victory. Five minutes in and a Sheffield scrum concedes to the prowess of the York front three; quick turnover and some snappy handling saw the ball drift effortlessly along the backline into the hands of Rich Bremner, who had no trouble at all finding the white line. Grant, eyeing up some Sheffield totty on the sideline, missed the conversion.
Somewhat shocked, Sheffield responded to York’s score with some decent patterns of play, but it was short-lived thanks again to the kleptomaniacal tendencies of Messrs Handy, McGregor and Weir. A spate of penalties in York’s favour ended up as a scrum on the opposition 5. A pre-planned shove by the forwards was cruelly interrupted by the devious Tim Sparkleton who burgled the ball from the back row’s feet and dove over the line. Grant secured the conversion and York were back on track in Sheffield.
The second half started promisingly with York kicking well for position. Clever work in the lineout by Redshaw and Forsythe secured good ball in prime attacking territory. Such was the threat that Sheffield conceded a penalty within striking distance of Grant’s boot, and he duly proceeded to put York a further 3 points ahead. However, with York now a full three scores ahead, motivation to really turn the screw on the opposition in increasingly difficult conditions put York on the back foot. Although work-rate was fantastic, and the front three, led by the ever enigmatic Innes began to physically and psychologically cause problems for the opposition scrum, the last 25 was spent somewhat possession-less. York’s kicking at times was aimless, and although the defence ensured no Sheffield players broke through, they had the drive to close out the game and ultimately had the momentum in the last ten minutes. Sheffield scored two tries that, although weren’t gifted, certainly felt that way with the final score at 15-10. However, the ambition and tenacity present on the pitch today marks a milestone in the 09/10 York BUCS squad who, by now, know what they must do in order to be frontrunners for the league title this year. Today, in the rain, York proved that they could play their brand of rugby clinically and in any conditions- a big confidence booster at the half-way stage of the season.














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