Bristol Bears moved 12 points clear at the top of the English Premiership table after a 39-7 win at home to southwest rivals Gloucester on Monday as fans returned to Ashton Gate.
The lifting of some coronavirus restrictions meant 3,128 spectators - Bristol’s first home crowd since March last year - saw the hosts eventually enjoy a bonus-point success.
“We have got to acknowledge the crowd - it was awesome,” said Bristol boss Pat Lam.
“I think both teams were probably taken aback. We knew there was going to be noise, but we didn’t expect that sort of noise.
“It was unbelievable, and a real credit to the Bristol fans,” he added.
Victory left the Bears on the brink of a home semi-final in the title deciding play-offs, which will feature the top four clubs at the end of the regular season.
Bristol, however, found it tough going for large parts of a match where Gloucester were a man down as early as the 16th minute, when Argentina lock Matias Alemanno saw red for a tip-tackle.
Lam’s men had three first-half tries disallowed, with full-back Charles Piutau spurning another chance before substitute Alapati Leiua and Piutau also had scores chalked off by the officials.
Bristol’s dominance, however, was eventually rewarded thanks to tries from Piutau, wing Max Malins, flanker Ben Earl, No 8 Nathan Hughes and centre Semi Radradra, with fly-half Callum Sheedy kicking two penalties and four conversions.
All 14-man Gloucester had to show for a gutsy effort was a Santiago Carreras try converted by Billy Twelvetrees.
In Monday’s other match, Newcastle put a further dent in Northampton’s hopes of a semi-final place with an 18-10 win at Kingston Park, second-half tries from Adam Radwan and Chidera Obonna proving decisive.
The fifth-placed Saints are now 11 points off the top four with three games of the regular season left to play.
“We had a good three months and we were set up for the top four, but we have let ourselves down and we have three tough games to finish the season off,” said Northampton director of rugby Chris Boyd.
World Cup Sevens 2022 to be held in Cape Town
The South African city of Cape Town will host the 2022 Rugby World Cup Sevens, World Rugby announced yesterday.
The World Cup, the eighth edition for men and fourth for women, will be contested by 24 men’s and 16 women’s teams and is the first to be hosted in Africa. The competition, which will run between September 9-11, 2022, will be held at the Cape Town Stadium, with a capacity of 57,654.
The top eight men’s teams and top four women’s teams from the last RWC Sevens in San Francisco in 2018 have already secured automatic qualification for the tournament in 2022.
The qualified teams for the men’s event are defending champions New Zealand, England, South Africa, Fiji, Argentina, USA, France and Scotland. Amongst the women’s teams, the Springbok women’s sevens side will join defending champions New Zealand, France, Australia and USA in Cape Town. Teams that have not qualified automatically will do so via their respective regional tournaments held in Europe, Oceania, Asia, North America, South America and Africa. There are 16 places available in the men’s tournament and 11 in the women’s from regional competitions. (Reuters)
Fans during the English Premiership match between Bristol Bears and Gloucester at the Ashton Gate Stadium in Bristol. (Reuters)