
Northampton's Mapu banned for dangerous tackle
Northampton Saints prop Iakopo Mapu has been given a three-week ban following his sending off against Ealing Trailfinders in the Premiership Rugby Cup.The Samoa international, who joined Saints in November, was shown the red card by referee Sara Cox for a dangerous 41st-minute tackle on Ealing hooker Mike Willemse.Mapu will definitely miss the Premiership games against Leicester Tigers and Sale Sharks on 21 and 28 March.But the suspension will be reduced to two weeks if he completes the World Rugby Coaching Intervention Programme (CIP) course, allowing him to be available for the Championship Cup clash with French side Clermont on 4 April.He could have received a six-week ban but a disciplinary panel decided it had been a "mid-range" offence.Saints lost 43-26 to Championship side Ealing, costing them a place in the PRC semi-finals.They must now focus on Europe and trying to improve their position of eighth in the Premiership, having won a first title for a decade last season.Speaking following the Ealing defeat, director of rugby Phil Dowson said his side had been dominated from start to finish and would now face intensive training ahead of the East Midlands derby against Leicester."There was a lack of everything - lack of intensity, lack of urgency, a lack of skill levels, a lack of decision making, a lack of leadership. It was just flat," he told BBC Radio Northampton."We're going to train very hard. We're going to work on our game and we're going to work on how we apply ourselves, before, during and after games and make sure the opportunity we missed isn't repeated in the run-in of the season."
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Rhyl Journal
an hour ago
- Rhyl Journal
Winning mentality will be Michael Cheika's Leicester legacy
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Scotsman
an hour ago
- Scotsman
Finn Russell explains kicking tweak after Calcutta Cup agony as Bath bid to scratch 29-year itch
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Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Russell, who missed three from three in the agonising Six Nations defeat, tweaked his technique for Scotland's next game against Wales and hasn't looked back. Finn Russell has already helped Bath win the European Challenge Cup this season, beating Lyon in the final in Cardiff. | Getty Images He kicked 17 points as Bath clinched their first European title in 17 years with a 37-12 win over Lyon in last month's Challenge Cup final in Cardiff. Now Leicester Tigers must be overcome if the West Country side are to reclaim the English championship crown they last won in 1996. It is a pivotal moment for both player and club. Bath paid top dollar to bring Russell to the Rec in 2023 and he and head coach Johann van Graan have set about restoring the famous institution's preeminence in the English game. It's easy to forget that Bath finished bottom of the Premiership as recently as 2022. 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Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'We've almost got back to where we want to be but, hopefully, we can go one step further. I love big games and playing in front of a sold-out Twickenham will be brilliant for us.' Russell is one of three Scotland internationals in Bath's match-day 23. Cameron Redpath, who missed the Challenge Cup final through injury, will start at inside centre and back-row forward Josh Bayliss has been named on the bench. Cameron Henderson is flying the Saltire for Leicester and victory at Twickenham would be especially sweet for the lock who missed a year of rugby after rupturing his anterior cruciate ligament last season. Cameron Redpath, right, will be outside Finn Russell as Bath take on Leicester Tigers in the Gallagher Premiership final. | Getty Images Bath finished top of the Premiership at the end of the regular season, 11 points ahead of second-placed Leicester, and this weekend's final has a whiff of nostalgia about it. 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South Wales Guardian
2 hours ago
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Winning mentality will be Michael Cheika's Leicester legacy
It is set to be a summer of change at Mattioli Woods Welford Road, with former Leicester player Geoff Parling set to take charge after the Australian departs at the end of his one-year contract. Just a couple of seasons on from their last Premiership final triumph, the Tigers finished eighth in a disappointing 2023-24 campaign. The arrival of Cheika – who took the Wallabies to the 2015 World Cup final and then guided Argentina into the last four two years ago – saw Leicester's fortunes transformed. On the back of a new-found mental resilience, Cheika's men were driven on to second place in the table behind Bath. Chessum, who fought his way back to fitness following a knee injury suffered in an England training camp in October, feels 58-year-old Cheika deserves plenty of plaudits for helping turn the club around. 'We were in a real good spot a few years ago as a group, and we probably lost our way a little bit and that is how you find yourself down in eighth and out of the play-offs,' said Chessum, set to be part of the British and Irish Lions tour to Australia. A post shared by Ollie Chessum (@olliechessum) 'There is no denying that something needed to change in quite a few aspects of our game. 'Cheiks will say we have probably not changed too much technically, but it is just around that mental side and the emotional side of the game is what has really changed everything this year and has put us in this spot.' Chessum, 24, added: 'He just finds a way to galvanise the group, get them to find a real meaning in what they are doing and use that to to drive them on. Our mental approach for the team has changed massively towards games. 'He will say that goes a huge way towards winning, it is just believing you can do it and sort of shocking yourself really with what you are able to do as an individual. The lineups for the #GallagherPremFinal! 😍 Who will take home the title, @BathRugby or @LeicesterTigers?#GallagherPrem — Premiership Rugby (@premrugby) June 13, 2025 'The way he has changed how the team approaches the game mentally has been a huge part of what he will leave as a legacy.' Cheika has named an unchanged side from the semi-final win over Sale for Saturday's showpiece at the Allianz Stadium, which will see several Leicester players make their last appearance in a Tigers shirt. Club stalwarts Dan Cole and Ben Youngs will retire while captain Julian Montoya, South Africa fly-half Handre Pollard, James Cronin and Matt Rogerson are all set to depart. Leicester lost home and away to Bath during the regular campaign, beaten 43-15 at The Recreation Ground in May. Chessum knows the Tigers will have to step up to the challenge as Bath seek to complete a trophy treble with what would be the Somerset club's first league title since 1996. 'They don't just play this stylish brand of rugby – they have still got this huge pack that can can break you down physically as well, so they are a great team,' Chessum said. 'We will have to front up on all fronts and be at our best to beat them, but that is the beauty of the challenge and of finals rugby.'