
Rugby is in a new era of audacious try celebrations
Maybe this is a sign of being in your late 30s, scarred from witnessing too many botched finishes, but both of Henry Pollock's tries against Castres made me twitchy, the voice in my head imploring him to avoid disaster and get it down. If Pollock had heard those concerns, he might have telepathically responded by saying: 'What are you worried about?' Being 20 and this good looks a lot of fun.
Henry Pollock's second try ✌️
Another fine display from the @SaintsRugby man as they claimed a big victory today 😇 #InvestecChampionsCup pic.twitter.com/9OVxtV4SC2
— Premier Sports (@PremSportsTV) April 12, 2025
We are not here to talk about Pollock, however, but celebrations. Or, and I apologise for putting this in writing, 'cellys'. They are hot right now in rugby, and in a big way.
Pollock's punched spike into the ground? It was good. His free-throw basketball celebration, like Steph Curry was lost and had ended up in the East Midlands? Much better.
Pollock was merely following up Tommy Freeman's excellent celebration after the opening try, rolling the ball forward and following it with his imaginary lawnmower. Innovative, not getting the love it deserves, and an upgrade on the finger wags against Clermont.
Tommy Freeman is just too good 🔥
The @SaintsRugby star combines brilliantly with George Furbank to open the scoring 😇 #InvestecChampionsCup pic.twitter.com/M6KJVk6vIS
— Premier Sports (@PremSportsTV) April 12, 2025
It seems important at this point to stress that celebrations are not limited to Northampton players. Craig Casey, Munster's scrum-half, pulled off an excellent archer celebration after his try in Bordeaux last week. Thomas Ramos, usually metronomic off the tee for Toulouse and France, put three misses in the quarter-final win over Toulon behind him to land the match-winner, responding with a cold 'one' gesture as his team-mates went barmy around him.
There is a degree of rugby playing catch-up here, given a lot of the recent celebrations have been poached from other sports. Chandler Cunningham-South used Cole Palmer's after scoring against Australia and Marcus Rashford's for his first try against Wales.
Chandler Cunningham-South doing the Cole Palmer celebration ❄️🥶 pic.twitter.com/cF4wIKDCCH
— Rugby on TNT Sports (@rugbyontnt) November 9, 2024
Edwill van der Merwe, the exciting Springbok who plays for the Lions, recently borrowed a headstand celebration used by NFL wide receiver Amon-Ra St Brown. Which is also why the Freeman lawnmower celebration should be getting a bit more love, given it has not been copied from elsewhere.
Amon-Ra St. Brown 🤝 Edwill van der Merwe
The Emirates Lions winger tells us the story behind that epic try and celebration yesterday 🤸♂️🦁 #VURC | #OriginRound pic.twitter.com/xBNO9i9bRP
— SuperSport Rugby (@SSRugby) March 2, 2025
For those tittering at the back about rugby values, we are still some way off the choreographed team performances after touchdowns in the NFL, although how are we yet to see a bowling celebration in rugby.
With all of this in mind, a penny for the thoughts of Chris Ashton. Perhaps rugby in the 2010s just was not ready for the 'Ash Splash', Ashton's exaggerated leap to score which was loved by many, hated by quite a few. The fact is, it cut through. Your friend who watched England occasionally and had little interest in the week-to-week minutiae of domestic rugby knew what an 'Ash Splash' was. Kids up and down the country were copying it to the despair of their coaches.
Rugby, and this cannot be expressed enough, desperately needs more of that. Not Netflix series which try to sell the players in a way which feels inauthentic and irrelevant, but actual glimpses of personality mixed in with what rugby players do best – pummelling the life out of each other while producing high levels of skill under pressure.
Fittingly, when Ashton scored his 101st Premiership try playing for Leicester two years ago, instead of the 'Ash Splash' he paid homage to another of rugby's great celebrations, copying Felipe Contepomi from all those years ago by leaping the barrier, taking a seat in the stand and applauding his own good work.
Sometimes you've just got to sit back and admire... 👏
Chris Ashton has saved his best celebration for try No.101 🤣 #GallagherPrem | #LEIvEXE pic.twitter.com/mmPF7iBV3l
— Premiership Rugby (@premrugby) April 16, 2023
Time for more of the same, please. Just dot down the ball a little faster, Henry, for the sake of our ageing hearts.
Best rugby celebrations
Felipe Contepomi – Bristol v Northampton, 2002
Still the best. After scoring at the Memorial Stadium, Contepomi ran straight through the gap in the advertising hoardings, up the steps into the stand, and took a seat on the end of a row before applauding his own good work.
My work is done. Think I might have to go home now. Can't top this. pic.twitter.com/NJRbrH3Fnj
— Damian Derrick (@DamianDerrick) October 16, 2018
Dominic Feaunati – Samoa v Uruguay, 2003
Finishing off a comfortable win over Uruguay with a score, Feaunati reimagined the rugby ball as a coconut, hacked the bottom off it with his hand, and then took a drink. An upgrade on the beer can celebration, which is still good.
Quade Cooper – Reds v Waratahs, 2011
The Reds in 2011 were a riot, eventually winning the Super Rugby title, with Digby Ioane's spinning caterpillar celebration also considered. But for following up a very casual finish with a cartwheel and backflip, Cooper's edges it.
Hacjivah Dayimani – Stormers v Northampton, 2024
In an exhibition game at Northampton last year, Stormers forward Dayimani raced after a grubber kick to score, hopped over the hoardings and whipped off his Stormers shirt to reveal… a Northampton shirt underneath. The supporters inside Franklin's Gardens loved it.
The greatest try celebration you will see, courtesy of Hacjivah Dayimani. 👏 pic.twitter.com/0iWIssrYb7
— Planet Rugby (@PlanetRugby) March 10, 2024
And one of the worst
Tom Cruse – Wasps v Dragons, 2020
Cruse's nickname, and this is important, is 'Cruse dog'. After breaking through to score against Dragons, Cruse remained on his hands and knees and, like a dog, cocked his leg as if he was having a pee. Such was the reaction that he later said: 'I am not trying to offend anyone, I am just out here with my mates, having a good time.' Which is never a good sign.
What was that celebration, Tom Cruse? 🐶
The @WaspsRugby hooker with a brilliant finish, then... Eh... Marks his territory near the corner flag 😂 #HeinekenChampionsCup pic.twitter.com/lrs9VeY3Fw
— Rugby on TNT Sports (@rugbyontnt) December 12, 2020

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Scotsman
06-06-2025
- Scotsman
Glasgow Warriors blank out Leinster 'crisis' as three-playmaker ploy explained
Smith hopes midfield reshuffle can help his side win in Dublin at third time of asking Sign up to our Rugby Union newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... A cursory glance at the Irish press this week would have you believing a full-blow crisis has broken out at Leinster. They were accused by one Ireland great - Tony Ward - of being 'arrogant' and out of touch with their support, while Bernard Jackman, another former Leinster player turned media commentator, said he had lost all confidence in their ability to win knockout games. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad It didn't seem much of a problem eight weeks ago when Leinster eviscerated Glasgow Warriors in the quarter-finals of the Investec Champions Cup. The score that night was 52-0 and the victory came hot on the heels of a 62-0 annihilation of Harlequins in the round of 16 the previous week. Glasgow Warriors' Sione Tuipulotu has been switched to outside centre for the BKT United Rugby Championship semi-final against Leinster. | SNS Group Things then began to get sticky for Leo Cullen's side. A URC defeat in Wales by the Scarlets was surprising but no real cause for concern given Leinster had rested players. But the home loss a week later to Northampton Saints in the Champions Cup semi-finals prompted a bout of soul-searching. It was bad enough that they had lost the last three European Cup finals, but this time they wouldn't even be making it that far. It meant they 'only' had the URC left to play for but even their progress there has been traduced. The win over Scarlets in last weekend's quarter-final was a lacklustre affair, with stand-off Sam Prendergast again struggling to find his early-season form. Watched by only 12,879 in the Aviva, Leinster prevailed 33-21 to set up Saturday's semi-final against Glasgow. The Warriors are returning for the third instalment of their Dublin trilogy and while they can take heart from the narrow 13-5 defeat in part two, they are still chasing a victory over the hosts. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Smith unmoved by form Unsurprisingly, Franco Smith is not reading too much into Leinster's perceived problems. 'We absolutely ignore all of that,' said the Glasgow coach. 'It's got nothing to do with what's going to happen between the teams. I realise there's a lot of talk. If they read it, it's up to them. 'We expect a team that gave us 50 points earlier this season. So I'm not going to be lured into any trap regarding that. I know that they would like to perform well, so we expect everything from them.' Dejection for Leinster players during the Investec Champions Cup semi-final defeat by Northampton Saints. | Getty Images Leinster are desperate to loosen Glasgow's grip on the URC trophy. They have not lifted silverware since 2021 when they won the old Pro14 championship and have lost at the semi-final stage of the URC in each of the last three seasons. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Smith, meanwhile, is bidding to steer the Warriors into a final for the third year in a row, having lost the 2023 Challenge Cup showpiece to Toulon at the Aviva in his first season then clinching the URC so impressively with a win over the Bulls in South Africa 12 months ago. They have won eight out of 12 knockout games under Smith and in their bid to make it 13 they have pivoted to a new midfield blend. The defending champions have brought Adam Hastings into their Aviva starting XV. Hastings, who came off the bench in the 36-18 win over the Stormers in the quarter-finals, starts at 10, Tom Jordan moves from stand-off to inside centre and Sione Tuipulotu switches from 12 to 13. The unlucky Stafford McDowall drops to the bench and there is still no place in the squad for Huw Jones who is nursing an Achilles tendon injury. Adam Hastings returns to the Glasgow Warriors starting side. | SNS Group Jordan was outstanding at 10 against the Stormers last week and it is slightly surprising to see him pushed out to 12 but Smith denied that the selection of three interchangeable playmakers was designed to confuse Leinster. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'If it works out that way, it will be great, but that was not the main objective, to be honest,' he said. 'We've just got good rugby players in that role, and it's good to have them out on the pitch. 'Obviously, the game is all about strategy and tactics as well, so, without giving too much away, I think it's an opportunity for Adam to add value. He's got a different skill set to Tom. 'It just balances a different approach when we play away from home. Maybe this week the challenge that Leinster offers is different. For us, it keeps refreshing it and bringing some energy and that's going to be even more important.' Tom Jordan has been selected at 12 for the BKT United Rugby Championship semi-final. | SNS Group Leinster have injury problems in that area, and elsewhere. Centres Garry Ringrose and Robbie Henshaw are both missing and they are joined in the sickbay by Lions duo Josh van der Flier and Hugo Keenan. Flanker van der Flier hurt his hamstring against Scarlets while full-back Keenan has a slight calf issue and they are replaced, respectively, by Scott Penny and Jimmy O'Brien. Tadhg Furlong and Caelan Doris are also missing from the 52-0 game but Smith believes such high-profile absenteeism will not affect Leinster unduly. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'I think they've got good enough quality,' he said. 'You've got Jordie Barrett [at inside centre]. Jamie Osborne [at 13] has played and is tried and tested. I don't think they've got a lack of depth in that part of the game. 'They've shown that the whole season by beating everybody else with a second group of players. I don't think they are weakened at all.' The only other personnel change made by Glasgow to their starting side is in the front row where Fin Richardson comes in at tighthead prop. 'He played really well the last time against Leinster and scrummed well against Andrew Porter so he merited the opportunity,' said Smith. Richardson replaces Murphy Walker who picked up a slight injury early in the week which hampered his ability to train. Sam Talakai is back-up tighthead and he is joined on the bench by loosehead Rory Sutherland who returns after a long spell out. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Glasgow will need all his experience in Dublin. While Leinster's cloak of invincibility may have slipped, they remain huge odds-on favourites to reach their first URC final and the visitors will have to produce an away performance akin to last season's final in Pretoria if they are to prevail. Leinster v Glasgow Warriors teams Leinster v Glasgow Warriors (URC semi-final, Saturday, 2.45pm, Aviva Stadium, Dublin) Leinster: Jimmy O'Brien; Tommy O'Brien, Jamie Osborne, Jordie Barrett, James Lowe; Sam Prendergast, Jamison Gibson-Park; Andrew Porter, Dan Sheehan, Thomas Clarkson, Joe McCarthy, James Ryan, Ryan Baird, Scott Penny, Jack Conan (capt). Replacements: Rónan Kelleher, Jack Boyle, Rabah Slimani, RG Snyman, Max Deegan, Luke McGrath, Ross Byrne, Ciarán Frawley. Glasgow Warriors: Josh McKay; Kyle Steyn (capt), Sione Tuipulotu, Tom Jordan, Kyle Rowe; Adam Hastings, George Horne; Jamie Bhatti, Gregor Hiddleston, Fin Richardson, Alex Samuel, Scott Cummings, Euan Ferrie, Rory Darge, Henco Venter. Replacements: Johnny Matthews, Rory Sutherland, Sam Talakai, Max Williamson, Jack Mann, Macenzzie Duncan, Stafford McDowall, Jamie Dobie.