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Play-off beckons as Mowden tame Lions
DARLINGTON Mowden Park
can start making plans for a trip
to the south-west for the National
Three play-off following Saturdayfs
14-11 win at Leicester
Lions.
Of the only two teams in contention
in Three South, Penzance-
based Mounts Bay remain
five points clear of Cinderford, so
the Gloucestershire club remains
the most likely venue for Mowden.
They overhauled an 11-0 deficit
in the last ten minutes at Leicester
and with four games left are
now three points ahead of the
Lions, who have the tougher runin
and have failed to win any of
their last five games.
Mowden have won eight out of
nine, the defeat coming against
runaway champions Tynedale,
and the latest victory was a triumph
for perseverance in the
face of adversity.
They had three players sinbinned,
two of them for
backchat, and the third, flanker
Aaron Myers, for punching after
he had been hit twice himself.
But on each occasion the hosts
failed to take advantage of their
extra man and when they received
a yellow card of their own
in the 70th minute Mowden made
them pay.
Superbly led from inside centre
by Jamie Connolly, they had battled
doggedly to stay in the game
and got their reward when back
row man Scott Riddell finished a
big forward drive.
Replacement fly half Ben
Snook converted and from the
restart Sean Buckley fielded the
ball and it went via his front row
colleagues Robbie Kalbraier and
Danny Brown to Gareth Kerr.
The winger beat his opposite
man and ran from just inside his
own half to score under the posts,
giving Snook a simple conversion.
In a game played in a diagonal
gale Mowden lost Andy Foreman
to the sin-bin after only eight
minutes and Iain Dixon suffered
the same fate after 34 minutes
after the Lions scored a try to add
to two penalties.
The refereefs interventions
prevented Mowden from playing
with their usual fluency and
pace, but it all came right in the
end and Mowden will be confident
of winning at home to West
Park St Helens and Rugby Lions,
and away to bottom three strugglers
Macclesfield and Morley.
Depleted Blaydon lost 64-10 at
Manchester, where they played
for the last half hour with 14 men
following an injury after using
all their replacements.
Prolific winger Andrew Fenby
had to play at full back, where he
was replaced at half-time by
flanker James Burns, who lasted
ten minutes before colliding with
a team-mate and suffering a fractured
cheekbone.
Both Fenby and flanker Andy
Wright had head injuries, and in
the reshuffle Selwyn St Bernard
switched to centre, allowing
Newcastlefs Ross Beattie to make
his comeback in the back row.
That was one of the few plus
points, the others being the debut
on the wing of Newcastle RGS
schoolboy Fred Burdon and the
fact that physio Nick Williams
made a satisfying return at
scrum half.
Burdon converted a penalty
try when Blaydon enjoyed a good
20-minute spell either side of
half-time, otherwise a penalty by
Fenby was their only reward.
Middlesbrough, who have a rearranged
game at home to
Sheffield Tigers this week, need
another win to achieve safety in
North One after losing 40-14 at
Liverpool St Helens.
In atrocious conditions the
hosts scored from the kick-off
when they robbed Boro of the
ball, then added a length-of-thefield
try and a pushover to lead
19-0.
Just before half-time Boro were
awarded a penalty try when a
maul was pulled down, only to
have Ben Horton sin-binned
when the same thing happened
in reverse on the resumption.
The absence of any locks, as
well as skipper Dave Richardson,
proved too big a handicap for
Boro as they struggled to win any
ball and conceded two more converted
tries.
They finally produced a good
move for replacement lock
Michael Tebbs to score under the
posts.
There is no change at the top of
North Two East as West Hartlepool
won 18-5 at home to Morpeth
and Durham City defied monsoon-
like conditions to win 12-0 at
Aldwinians.
With a two-week break before
the top two meet at Hollow Drift,
City have a friendly at Darlington
this week and it was the prop
who briefly defected to Blackwell
Meadows, Mark Cammiss, who
scored their first try.
Just before the rain really
started to lash down, fly half
Arnie Stevenson chipped ahead
and the ball was moved through
the forwards for Cammiss to go
under the posts.
Despite forward dominance,
the conditions dictated that City
played a very limited game and
the only other score came midway
through the second half.
City drove Aldwinians back at
a scrum ten metres out and
flanker Howard Johnson charged
down an attempted clearance to
score.
West responded quickly to
going 5-0 down against Morpeth
when fly half Paul Moss kicked
to the corner and flanker Dan
Boatman finished a line-out
drive.
Moss added penalties either
side of half-time before sending
Jonny Boatman through a gap to
score following a rolling maul.
Mossfs conversion completed the
scoring.
Billinghamfs 44-3 win at home
to Ponteland kept them top of D
and N One and ensured the visitors
would be relegated. That
means Stockton are safe, despite
a 25-10 defeat at Horden, who
fielded four 18-year-olds but were
hugely indebted to veteran lock
Steve Black.
Both teams played better into
the wind, with Stockton dominating
the first half without
being able to score.
They trailed to a catch-anddrive
try, then in the second half
turned their backs expecting a
kick at goal, only for Horden to
run the penalty and send winger
Chris Purvis over.
A Jeremy Good penalty made
it 10-3, but Horden added three
more tries in the last ten minutes,
with the visitors replying
through centre Peter Armstrong.
Darlington Mowden Sharks
centre Georgina Roberts and
clubmate Tamara Taylor played
the full 80 minutes, while fly half
Katy McLean went on as a replacement
as England Women
beat Scotland 34-5 to stand one
game away from a third consecutive
RBS 6 Nations Grand Slam.
Blaydon prop Katy Storie was
substituted after 60 minutes.
9:14am Monday 10th March 2008
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