GB’s Mathias earns first world series podium finish

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Great Britain’s Olivia Mathias finished third as Cassandre Beaugrand claimed victory in the World Triathlon Championship Series in Alghero.

Beaugrand crashed out on the bike leg of the previous race in Yokohama but the Frenchwoman bounced back to win the third race of the series in Italy.

The reigning Olympic and world champion was chasing Wales ‘ Mathias and Bianca Seregni of Italy on the second lap of the swim before bridging the gap on the bike.

The leaders then distanced themselves from the likes of Lisa Tertsch and GB’s Beth Potter in the chase pack and built an unassailable lead on the 10km run.

Beaugrand, 28, clinched victory in 1 hour 55 minutes 55 seconds – 38 seconds before Seregni in second, with Mathias 31 seconds further back in third.

It was a first series win of the year for the 2024 champion while both Seregni and Mathias, 26, earned a spot on the series podium for the first time, with Potter in eighth.

Brazil’s Miguel Hidalgo won the men’s race in 1: 44: 05, crossing 28 seconds ahead of Australia’s Matt Hauser, who was the winner in Yokohama.

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  • Triathlon

Forest keep alive NSL play-off hopes with derby win

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Nottingham Forest kept alive their Netball Super League play-off hopes with a 66-62 win against defending champions Loughborough Lightning.

Forest, who are competing in their first Netball Super League (NSL) season, are now three points behind fourth-placed London Mavericks, who play Birmingham Panthers on Sunday.

There is only one play-off place left up for grabs with two regular season rounds to go as Manchester Thunder, London Pulse and Loughborough have already qualified.

Thunder secured their play-off spot on Friday with a 59-54 win over Cardiff Dragons.

Forest led after every quarter in an impressive display at Nottingham’s Motorpoint Arena, home to both teams. Particularly strong performances came from player of the match Natasha Pavelin and Rolene Streutker, who scored 41 goals.

The victory halted Loughborough’s winning steak – they had not lost since round four, also against Forest.

“Really happy, we knew coming into the game we could do a job”, Pavelin told Sky Sports. “We all really believed. We put out four quarters there which we can be really proud of”.

Elsewhere, Thunder’s Elmere van der Berg top-scored with 37 goals at Belle Vue Arena in her team’s win over Cardiff.

Victory for Thunder moved them up to second in the standings on 28 points, but they trail leaders Pulse on goal difference.

Goal shooter Georgia Rowe scored 26 for Dragons, who remain bottom after losing all but one of their 12 matches so far.

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  • Netball

Forest keep alive NSL play-off hopes with derby win

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Nottingham Forest kept alive their Netball Super League play-off hopes with a 66-62 win against defending champions Loughborough Lightning.

Forest, who are competing in their first Netball Super League (NSL) season, are now three points behind fourth-placed London Mavericks, who play Birmingham Panthers on Sunday.

There is only one play-off place left up for grabs with two regular season rounds to go as Manchester Thunder, London Pulse and Loughborough have already qualified.

Thunder secured their play-off spot on Friday with a 59-54 win over Cardiff Dragons.

Forest led after every quarter in an impressive display at Nottingham’s Motorpoint Arena, home to both teams. Particularly strong performances came from player of the match Natasha Pavelin and Rolene Streutker, who scored 41 goals.

The victory halted Loughborough’s winning steak – they had not lost since round four, also against Forest.

“Really happy, we knew coming into the game we could do a job”, Pavelin told Sky Sports. “We all really believed. We put out four quarters there which we can be really proud of”.

Elsewhere, Thunder’s Elmere van der Berg top-scored with 37 goals at Belle Vue Arena in her team’s win over Cardiff.

Victory for Thunder moved them up to second in the standings on 28 points, but they trail leaders Pulse on goal difference.

Goal shooter Georgia Rowe scored 26 for Dragons, who remain bottom after losing all but one of their 12 matches so far.

Related topics

  • Netball

Saracens miss out on play-offs despite Bath win

PA Media
  • 30 Comments

Gallagher Premiership

Saracens (19) 36

Tries: Segun, George 2, Daly, Dan, Burke Cons: Burke 3

Bath (7) 26

Saracens chalked up the bonus-point win over Bath they needed to retain any hope of making the Premiership play-offs but results elsewhere thwarted their bid.

Sarries needed a bonus-point victory and for two of the teams above them to fail to prevail on the final day of the regular season, and were always in charge against an under-strength Bath side.

Dan George scored two tries, and Rotimi Segun, Elliot Daly, Theo Dan and Fergus Burke all crossed the line but with Saracens ‘ rivals all winning, they could not move out of sixth place.

The win gave Alex Goode, playing his 402nd and final game before retirement, an emotional send-off but scorelines in other parts of the country meant the Men in Black failed to finish in the top four for only the third time since 2009.

Bath handed debuts to seven players and their youngsters staged a big finish as 18-year-old Tyler Offiah, son of rugby league legend Martin, marked his debut with a second half try, quickly followed by scores for Kepu Tuipolutu and Louie Hennessey.

A hopeful home crowd was soon silenced as the very young Bath pack, without a single starter above 23 years old, began brightly. They ran the ball directly at the Sarries line for Green to burrow over and put the visitors ahead.

That youthful exuberance in attack, however, was soon swamped by the stark reality of trying to defend against an efficient and well-practised set of Sarries forwards who soon put them under intense pressure.

Saracens hit back immediately as Fergus Burke’s fine kick took them to five metres and a quick switch to the left sent Segun over.

The Sarries pack took full control after that, George finishing two maul tries either side of Daly’s try, which came from an angled run onto Ivan van Zyl’s pass from the base of the scrum.

With the bonus-point banked, George was taken off ahead of what would probably have been a hat-trick, and his replacement Dan pocketed the third maul try of the day within 90 seconds of going onto the field as the home forwards imposed themselves.

Burke, whose kicking was poor on the day, bagged a try by latching onto van Zyl’s chip and then himself lobbing the cover before gathering to go over under the posts.

Bath, who will face local rivals Bristol next Friday in the first play-off semi-final, had the final say with a flourish which gave their supporters a taste of the future.

Offiah had a sparkling cameo on his league debut, producing a finish of which his father would have been proud and then coming up with a break that laid the platform for another prospect, 19-year-old Tuipolutu.

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Bath director of rugby Johann van Graan told BBC Radio Bristol:

“We wanted to be tough to beat and for the guys to be themselves and we achieved both goals.

” Coming to Saracens with seven debutants, I was looking for a typical Bath performance, everything we have become together over the last three years, and what you saw]today] was the future.

“It doesn’t matter if you’re Louis Schreuder or Ruaridh McConnochie, at the back end of their careers in terms of age, or youngsters making their debut, it was a fantastic team effort.

Saracens: Carre, George, Riccioni, Itoje, Isiekwe, McFarland, Onyeama-Christie, Willis, van Zyl, Burke, Segun, Tompkins, Daly, Elliott, Goode

Replacements: Dan, Mawi, Beaton, Tizard, Gonzalez, Earl, Bracken, Cinti

Bath: Kirk, Spandler, Griffin, Jeanes, Richards, Staddon, Cowan, Green, Schreuder, Bailey, McConnochie, Parry, Hennessey, Emens, Woods.

Replacements: Tuipolutu, Cordwell, Verden, Graham, Timmins, le Roux, Offiah, Stewart.

Related topics

  • Saracens
  • Rugby Union
  • Bath

Saracens miss out on play-offs despite Bath win

PA Media
  • 30 Comments

Gallagher Premiership

Saracens (19) 36

Tries: Segun, George 2, Daly, Dan, Burke Cons: Burke 3

Bath (7) 26

Saracens chalked up the bonus-point win over Bath they needed to retain any hope of making the Premiership play-offs but results elsewhere thwarted their bid.

Sarries needed a bonus-point victory and for two of the teams above them to fail to prevail on the final day of the regular season, and were always in charge against an under-strength Bath side.

Dan George scored two tries, and Rotimi Segun, Elliot Daly, Theo Dan and Fergus Burke all crossed the line but with Saracens ‘ rivals all winning, they could not move out of sixth place.

The win gave Alex Goode, playing his 402nd and final game before retirement, an emotional send-off but scorelines in other parts of the country meant the Men in Black failed to finish in the top four for only the third time since 2009.

Bath handed debuts to seven players and their youngsters staged a big finish as 18-year-old Tyler Offiah, son of rugby league legend Martin, marked his debut with a second half try, quickly followed by scores for Kepu Tuipolutu and Louie Hennessey.

A hopeful home crowd was soon silenced as the very young Bath pack, without a single starter above 23 years old, began brightly. They ran the ball directly at the Sarries line for Green to burrow over and put the visitors ahead.

That youthful exuberance in attack, however, was soon swamped by the stark reality of trying to defend against an efficient and well-practised set of Sarries forwards who soon put them under intense pressure.

Saracens hit back immediately as Fergus Burke’s fine kick took them to five metres and a quick switch to the left sent Segun over.

The Sarries pack took full control after that, George finishing two maul tries either side of Daly’s try, which came from an angled run onto Ivan van Zyl’s pass from the base of the scrum.

With the bonus-point banked, George was taken off ahead of what would probably have been a hat-trick, and his replacement Dan pocketed the third maul try of the day within 90 seconds of going onto the field as the home forwards imposed themselves.

Burke, whose kicking was poor on the day, bagged a try by latching onto van Zyl’s chip and then himself lobbing the cover before gathering to go over under the posts.

Bath, who will face local rivals Bristol next Friday in the first play-off semi-final, had the final say with a flourish which gave their supporters a taste of the future.

Offiah had a sparkling cameo on his league debut, producing a finish of which his father would have been proud and then coming up with a break that laid the platform for another prospect, 19-year-old Tuipolutu.

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

Bath director of rugby Johann van Graan told BBC Radio Bristol:

“We wanted to be tough to beat and for the guys to be themselves and we achieved both goals.

” Coming to Saracens with seven debutants, I was looking for a typical Bath performance, everything we have become together over the last three years, and what you saw]today] was the future.

“It doesn’t matter if you’re Louis Schreuder or Ruaridh McConnochie, at the back end of their careers in terms of age, or youngsters making their debut, it was a fantastic team effort.

Saracens: Carre, George, Riccioni, Itoje, Isiekwe, McFarland, Onyeama-Christie, Willis, van Zyl, Burke, Segun, Tompkins, Daly, Elliott, Goode

Replacements: Dan, Mawi, Beaton, Tizard, Gonzalez, Earl, Bracken, Cinti

Bath: Kirk, Spandler, Griffin, Jeanes, Richards, Staddon, Cowan, Green, Schreuder, Bailey, McConnochie, Parry, Hennessey, Emens, Woods.

Replacements: Tuipolutu, Cordwell, Verden, Graham, Timmins, le Roux, Offiah, Stewart.

Related topics

  • Saracens
  • Rugby Union
  • Bath

Sale hang on to beat Exeter and reach play-offs

Rex Features
  • 12 Comments

Gallagher Premiership

Exeter (5) 26

Tries: Brown-Bampoe, Hodge, Haydon-Wood, Capstick Cons: Hodge 3

Sale (20) 30

Sale secured third place in the Premiership and a play-off semi-final at Leicester with a 30-26 victory over Exeter in a tense encounter at Sandy Park.

Paul Brown-Bampoe’s 20th-minute try briefly put the home side in front before Sale’s superb attack kicked into gear as Rekeiti Ma’asi-White and Bevan Rodd went under the posts to help give Sharks a 20-5 lead at the break.

Josh Hodge pulled a try back for the hosts soon after the restart and, when Will Haydon-Wood cut the gap to four points Sale looked worried.

Dan Frost had a fourth Exeter try disallowed for a knock on with 18 minutes left, but former Chiefs favourite Luke Cowan-Dickie forced his way over with 12 minutes left to seal victory for Sale.

Richard Capstick got a fourth try for Exeter with three minutes left to set up a tense finish as the hosts ended the season with two losing bonus points.

An indisciplined start cost Exeter as George Ford kicked a first-minute penalty for Sale before they gave up possession a couple of metres from the Sharks line having had the better of the early play.

Brown-Bampoe capped a flowing Exeter passing move to get the first try midway through the first half – although the unconverted score came at a cost as recently fit-again back Tommy Wyatt limped off having been hurt in the build-up.

Ford’s second penalty a minute later saw Sale retake the lead before Ma’asi-White capped off a superb passing sequence to go under the posts as Exeter struggled to defend against Sale’s excellent offloading.

It was more of the same eight minutes later as Rodd was the beneficiary after Ford and Arron Reed combined to create the gap for the Sale loose-head to score.

Exeter fightback falls just short

Persistent pressure eventually told as Ma’asi-White was sin-binned after a number of penalties on the Sale line and soon after Hodge went over in the right corner as Exeter exploited the extra space.

A third Ford penalty soon after calmed Sale’s nerves with less than 30 minutes to play, but Haydon-Wood rounded off Exeter’s best attacking move of the afternoon, Hodge and Henry Slade linked up to put the replacement over.

Exeter thought they had taken the lead five minutes later when Frost was forced over, but replays showed he had lost control off the ball as he dived over the line.

Sale regained their composure and their double-digit advantage with 12 minutes to go as Cowan-Dickie forced his way over from close range.

Sale missed out on a fourth try six minutes later when Gus Warr was sin-binned after replays showed a dangerous tackle in the build-up to a try from Reed, while from the resulting line-out penalty Exeter replacement Jimmy Roots was held up over the Sale line.

Exeter: Hodge, Brown-Bampoe, Slade, Tua, Wyatt, Skinner, Townsend, Blose, Yeandle (capt), Iosefa-Scott, Tuima, Molina, Vermeulen, Capstick, Roots

Replacements: Frost, Sio, Roots, Tshiunza, Moloney, Cairns, Haydon-Wood, Vintcent

Yellow card: Roots (39)

Sale: Carpenter, O’Flaherty, R du Preez, Ma’asi-White, Reed, Ford, Quirke, Rodd, Cowan-Dickie, Opoku-Fordjour, Van Rhyn, Hill, J-L du Preez, B Curry (capt), D du Preez.

Replacements: McElroy, McIntyre, John, Bamber, Dugdale, Warr, James, Wills.

Yellow card: Ma’asi-White (47), Warr (74)

Related topics

  • Exeter Chiefs
  • Sale
  • Rugby Union