Grewcock inspires Bath's 14 to release the heroes inside

Bath 18 Gloucester 16

Tim Glover
Saturday 15 October 2005 19:00 EDT
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Already disrupted by the loss through injury of his full-back Matt Perry, John Connolly, the Bath coach, was forced into a major reorganisation at half-time. He sent on the young centre Tom Cheeseman for James Scaysbrook and asked his captain Steve Borthwick to lead a seven-man pack. The forwards responded quite magnificently, none more so than Danny Grewcock, Lee Mears and Andy Beattie. Andy Robinson, the England coach, was at his old club and would have been impressed.

The Australian Connolly returns home next month - Nigel Melville, the former Gloucester coach, is the favourite to replace him - and he will remember this for a long time. At the end of the epic, which Bath won by five penalties and a drop goal to a goal and three penalties, Connolly shook the hand of every member of his side.

This unlikely victory maintained Bath's extraordinary record here against the neighbours they love to hate. Gloucester, who arrived at the Rec unbeaten, had not recorded a single Premiership win here in 14 attempts. Make that 15. The question is, will they ever get a better chance?

Whereas Bath raised their game, Gloucester's much vaunted pack did not respond to the fire and fury unleashed by the magnificent seven. Borthwick and his men camouflaged the fact that they were playing one short in the back row and by sheer guts and willpower provided the platform for Olly Barkley to land the winning kick four minutes from the end of normal time.

Gloucester were bombarded at the beginning of the second half. First Chris Malone dropped a goal that is worthy of inclusion in the Guinness Book of Records. It was a tremendous strike from inside his own half. When a scrum collapsed a few minutes later, Gloucester conceded the penalty and Barkley kicked it. Then the centre, who had switched to full-back, landed a whopper from the halfway line and Bath were 15-6 to the good.

When David Bory received a yellow card in the process of stifling a James Simpson-Daniel run that should have led to a try, Mercier kicked the penalty and in the 70th minute Gloucester finally managed a coherent attack. The result was a lovely try by Rob Thirlby and Mercier's touchline conversion made it 16-15. Surely Gloucester would now break the jinx. No chance. Barkley, limping from a leg injury, banged over another 55-yarder and the Georgian city was rocking.

Things had been simmering nicely in the first half when the nature of the game changed dramatically. Mercier, who is more comfortable kicking the ball from here to Boulogne than passing it, came within a fingertip of having a pass intercepted by his fellow Frenchman Bory.

In the event Jon Goodridge had a free run down the right wing until he found his path blocked by Perry. The full-back took a knee to the head and went down as if poleaxed. If there was a Premiership award for the unluckiest player, Perry would win it. There again, he'd probably trip on the rostrum. The consolation is that yesterday's setback wasn't as bad as it looked.

While poor Perry was lying face down on the Rec, Gloucester had moved the ball to the left where Higgins homed in on Simpson-Daniel with the intent of a missile. He hit the England wing with everything he had, including a raised arm, and earned himself a yellow card.

Mercier kicked the resultant penalty to level the score at 3-3. Mercier soon added another penalty to push Gloucester ahead and within seconds was knocked over by a late shoulder charge from Mears. The Frenchman failed with the penalty attempt and then hit an upright with a far easier shot.

When Peter Buxton was sent to the sin bin for a professional foul, Barkley kicked the penalty to level at 6-6. His hit and miss regime began in the second minute with a longish penalty. He missed again before finding the target in the 17th minute when Phil Vickery killed the ball. Barkley could not have suspected that his fallible boot would ultimately kick Bath to one of their more famous victories.

The first half was deep into injury time when Higgins, wrong footed by Mike Tindall, making his first appearance at the Rec since joining Gloucester, tripped the England centre with his right leg. Exit stage left for the Bath man. Seldom has an early bath produced such a watermark.

Bath: M Perry (R Davis, 24); D Bory, A Higgins,O Barkley, F Welsh; C Malone, M Wood; D Barnes, L Mears, D Bell (M Stevens, 53), S Borthwick(capt), D Grewcock, A Beattie, I Feaunati, J Scaysbrook (T Cheeseman, 40).

Gloucester: J Goodridge (R Thirlby, 39); M Foster, M Tindall, H Paul, J Simpson-Daniel; L Mercier, H Thomas (P Richards, 55); P Collazo (T Sigley, 55), M Davies, P Vickery(capt), A Eustace, A Brown, P Buxton (L Narraway, 69), J Forrester, A Hazell.

Referee: D Pearson (Northumberland).

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