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Quins show the intent Eddie is searching for

By Nik Simon RUGBY WRITER OF THE YEAR AT TWICKENHAM STOOP

TWO hours after the final whistle, Tabai Matson bounced into the media room and offered to buy a round of beers for the journalists. The Harlequins coach had just watched his team secure a ninth successive bonuspoint victory at home, and outside his players were drinking it in.

In contrast, Bath were left to endure another grim bus journey home. This was their fifth straight defeat, consolidating their worst ever start to a Premiership campaign, and the mood in the two camps could not have been further apart.

If it’s any consolation, Bath’s director Stuart Hooper can be thankful that Marcus Smith’s brilliance diverted the headlines away from his club’s miserable run.

Like a smiling assassin, Smith scored a try and set up another in his final club appearance before he joins England for the autumn internationals.

‘Good players like Marcus keep their powder dry until the opportunity arises and he definitely did that out there,’ said Matson.

‘I hope he gets opportunities with England. Eddie Jones has been speaking really positively about the intent that they want to show in the autumn. If they want to do that, these guys are your men.’

Smith’s second-half try snatched back the lead for Harlequins and put the champions on course for another victory. They cut loose in the closing stages but, for 50 minutes, Bath frustrated them with a show of resistance.

Their desperation was clear to see following last week’s 17-71 drubbing by Saracens. Beno Obano charged at defenders like a mad bull until his knee gave way. A dazed Joe Simpson shoved a medic out of the way so he could stay in the fight to make a cover tackle. Sam Underhill crunched ribs and did his damned best to slow down Harlequins’ ball.

‘Our backs are against the wall and when you are in this position you have to take a step forward,’ said Hooper, whose position will remain under scrutiny until he stops the rot. ‘We know where we are headed and the steps we have to take.’

Results speak louder than words. Two early tries from Andre Esterhuizen gave Harlequins the lead. Then Joe Marler was sent to the sinbin for a dangerous no-arms tackle on Tom de Glanville and Bath made the numerical advantage pay. Building a platform from the lineout, Underhill and Will Stuart hit back with quick-fire tries.

However, Bath’s resistance didn’t last. In the second half they were crippled by penalties and punished for poor exit play in their own 22. Richard de Carpentier ran into Tom Dunn and Semesa Rokoduguni lost the ball trying to run the ball from his own try-line.

Quins have become the hottest ticket in town and the league’s great entertainers cut loose. Tyrone Green jinked through tackles. Alex Dombrandt, catching the ball above his head in one hand, threw a try-scoring offload to Joe Marchant that left his coach bedazzled.

‘It shows an exceptional amount of spatial awareness,’ said Matson. ‘Alex has a unique skillset. There aren’t many forwards in the world who can do the things he does.’

Not content with the bonus-point try, Quins had one last trick up their sleeve. This time it was Green with the speculative offload, which landed in Smith’s hands and ended with Marchant diving over in the corner.

From that moment, the Saturday night party had well and truly started.

Rugby

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2021-10-24T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-10-24T07:00:00.0000000Z

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