Despite Worcester’s latest defeat at the hands of a polished Northampton, the Warriors players on show can consider this a successful audition for lead roles in the club’s new era.
Steve Diamond’s appointment as Worcester’s new director of rugby was announced this week – he remains lead rugby consultant for now – and the former Sale coach begins a two-year contract this summer.
“I thought we were competitive but the scoreline doesn’t suggest that,” Diamond said after watching his team’s spirited second-half fightback, led by the captain Ted Hill and Scotland wing Duhan van der Merwe, come up short.
“Our defensive frailties were evident in the first half. [But] we’ve got people who actually care about what they’re doing.
“Let’s get a bit more streetwise, a bit more understanding in our ‘D’, and I think we’ll push on.”
A breathless, scoreless opening at Sixways would have satisfied Diamond but the class of Northampton eventually began to tell. A perceptive pass by the new Wales captain, Dan Biggar, sent Sam Matavesi scorching through a midfield hole after 20 minutes.
Worcester scrambled but Northampton won a penalty and Biggar kicked for the corner. The visitors gained metres with a driving maul and Rory Hutchinson touched down. Biggar converted for 7-0.
The 19-year-old Worcester fly-half, Fin Smith, replied with a penalty but Northampton soon threatened again with a rousing charge forward by the dynamic No 8 Juarno Augustus.
Worcester’s Perry Humphreys was yellow-carded for a deliberate knock-on, Biggar again kicked the for the corner, and Matavesi flopped over following another well-executed drive.
Two minutes before half-time, Saints tightened their grip when the scrum-half Alex Mitchell darted through a gap and raced over from near halfway. It was 19-3 and seemingly game over.
Biggar added a penalty seven minutes after the break but Worcester kept bashing away, and a bullocking run by Rory Sutherland soon had the crowd on their feet. Van der Merwe nearly crossed on the right wing following a rampaging break, and attacking momentum was maintained until Sutherland scored.
That brought the hosts to within 14 and when Hill charged into space on the left and was tackled just short, Sixways was rocking. Ashley Beck cantered over with 15 minutes left to reduce the deficit to nine and a thrilling finish seemed in store.
It was not to be. Another muscular lineout drive resulted in a try for the Northampton replacement, James Fish, a bonus point for Saints, and the end of Worcester’s challenge. Diamond has his work cut out but a few gems to polish up, too.
“You can’t do better than get five [points] away, so very happy with that,” said the Northampton director of rugby, Chris Boyd. “Dan Biggar continues to be the ultimate professional for us. He came out of the Welsh camp on Wednesday, trained with us Thursday, he jumps in his car now and goes back to Wales. It’s a tough gig for those guys, but that’s why they get paid the big bucks.”