Paris (AFP) - France scrum-half Antoine Dupont scored twice as Toulouse ran in seven tries in a 45-19 bonus-point win over Sale in the second matchday of the Champions Cup on Sunday.
After beating Munster in their Pool B opener in Limerick last week, the French giants turned up the volume for an Ernest-Wallon stadium which was sold out in spite of the alternative attraction of France in the football World Cup final.
After half their Pool B games, Toulouse are joint top on nine points.
"We have to be careful, we are only at two matches out of four," said Dupont."Of course we have started our competition well, but there are still two important matches to try to be at our best and have a good draw for the knock-out rounds."
After conceding an early try from Sale prop Bevan Rodd, Toulouse hit back with tries from Thibaud Flament, Cyril Baille and Dupont.
Sale's South African hooker Akker van der Merwe dotted down to keep the English Premiership side in touch as they trailed 19-12 at the break.
Toulouse forced a penalty try early in the second half as Byron McGuigan tackled Thomas Ramos without the ball in the in-goal area.
Dupont added his second in a speedy counterattack before a superb sequence of passing ended with centre Lucas Tauzin flying in at the corner.
Romain Ntamack added the seventh after which Ramos was sent off for a head butt on McGuigan during the build-up to what would have been an eighth from Matthis Lebel.
Down to 14 for the final few minutes, Toulouse coughed up a third try when Sale lock Jonny Hill went over.
Dupont said the way Toulouse had scored was pleasing.
"We have scored a lot of tries this season, but they were not always very well constructed," he said. "We have had trouble finding each other.That's what is positive today.We were able to be pragmatic and score from turnovers but also hold the ball and be pretty good on our offensive game system."
Alex Sanderson, the Sale coach, was looking forward to the rematch on January 14.
"I'm looking forward to playing them again on a cold, rainy afternoon in Manchester," said Sanderson.
Munster, meanwhile, bounced back from last week's defeat to Toulouse with a 17-6 win at Northampton, Irish number eight Gavin Coombes scoring both tries.
'Huge win'
Munster defended their lead for long stretches with 13 or 14 men after yellow cards to Jack O'Donoghue, Craig Casey, and Joey Carbery
"It's a huge win for us and the manner in which we achieved it," said Munster coach Graham Rowntree.
"We picked up three yellow cards and we had to dig in but our defensive effort was exceptional with players getting up off the floor to help the man next to them."
In the final game of the round, on a cold, rainy night in Twickenham, Harlequins struggled to an ugly 14-10 victory over Racing 92.
Quins hooker George Head sprinted 40 metres to give the home team a third minute lead.
Quins squandered a long spell of pressure on the Racing line and the visitors showed how to execute when No.8 Kitione Kamikamica smashed over following a scrum five metres from the line seconds before halftime.
Quins took note and from a five-metre scrum of their own, hulking centre Grant Esterhuizen scored in the same spot after 49 minutes.
One minute later, Kamikamica received a red card for a crunching tackle on Nick David which ended with the Quins fullback landing on the back of his neck.