logo
Bath 37-12 Lyon: Johann van Graan's side seal second part of treble with European Challenge Cup final win over Lyon as Sam Underhill escapes red

Bath 37-12 Lyon: Johann van Graan's side seal second part of treble with European Challenge Cup final win over Lyon as Sam Underhill escapes red

Daily Mail​23-05-2025
Two down, one to go for Bath. An historic treble inches ever closer.
This European Challenge Cup success followed March's Premiership Rugby Cup victory.
Now, only the Gallagher Premiership – the holy grail for millionaire club owner Bruce Craig – remains outstanding.
Win that and Bath's class of 2025 will seal their place in history. Bath are certainly favourites for the league title having already sealed a home semi-final.
Winning three trophies in one season would be beyond Bath's wildest dreams.
Here, they benefited from the decision making of referee Hollie Davidson to get the better of a resilient French side in Lyon. Davidson became the first woman to officiate a European final.
But she should have sent Sam Underhill from the field for dangerous tackling in the first half. That she didn't amounted to a game-defining moment, allowing Bath to end a 17-year wait for a first European trophy.
Davidson lacked control of the game, with Bath captain and player of the match Ben Spencer allowed to benefit to his team's advantage.
It left Lyon not only beaten, but understandably frustrated.
'I'm grateful and incredibly happy for all the people of Bath,' said Bath head of rugby Van Graan, after his team recorded the biggest Challenge Cup final winning margin since 1998.
'I think Hollie had an excellent game. I'll stick with what the officials decide. The best is yet to come. I'm ecstatic for all involved.
'I've been coaching for 23 years but what happened was special. This is a champion team now. We'll try to get better and better. There are more things to conquer.'
Spencer said: 'We speak a lot about working hard for each other. That's something we really pride ourselves on – when we go down to 14 men and how hard we want to fight. To not concede in that double yellow card period was outstanding.
'The togetherness in this group is absolutely unbelievable. Our boys showed a different level of intensity we haven't seen yet this season.
'I'm so proud to give the fans what they deserve after so many years of hurt.'
Cardiff's Westgate Street was lined with Bath fans hours before kick-off, Van Graan's players choosing to walk to Principality Stadium from their city centre hotel to embrace the electric atmosphere.
After years of misery, Bath's loyal supporters are now thirsty for success.
They made Cardiff a cauldron and inside the ground, the roof nearly came off as Spencer led his team in a last pre-match lap. Lyon started quickest, however.
Ethan Dumortier opened the scoring after his corner try was approved by TMO Mike Adamson. Finn Russell responded with a penalty. It was a scrappy opening.
Will Butt charged through midfield. He couldn't find the killer pass, but it also didn't matter as hooker Tom Dunn soon barged over. Russell converted. Spencer kicked a 50:22. Slowly, Bath were getting on top and Max Ojomoh made it two.
Underhill had been at the centre of Bath's power game, excelling on the flank. But when he collided head-on-head with Lyon's wonderful Georgian attacker, Davit Niniashvili, Underhill should have been shown a red card.
There was no mitigation or excuse for him hitting Niniashvili so high.
Davidson decided on showing yellow only, arguing there was mitigation as Niniashvili had changed direction.
It was a clear nonsense and yet another reminder that while rugby continues to talk about protecting player welfare, it does not follow that with meaningful on-field action.
Davidson then had to show the same card again, Will Muir joining Underhill in the sin bin for upending Dumortier in the air.
With Bath down to 13, Lyon had to strike. Dumortier was at the heart of everything. He thought he'd made it a brace, but his effort from a long line-out throw was ruled out for blocking.
It was salt in the wound for Lyon that it was a combination of Underhill and Ted Hill which stopped them scoring before the break. Russell kicked a penalty when the action resumed.
But with Muir still in the sin bin, Arno Botha breathed life into Lyon's comeback. It didn't last long.
Immediately after Van Graan introduced more power from the bench in the shape of Thomas du Toit, Guy Pepper and Alfie Barbeary, Beno Obano was driven over.
When Spencer followed that with a try of his own after fine work by Tom de Glanville, it ended the game as a contest. Russell's third penalty only rubber stamped that.
Bath just have too much brute force for most teams and it will be a surprise if they don't add a domestic crown to their burgeoning trophy cabinet in the weeks to come.
Lyon coach Karim Ghezal said: 'We didn't score when they were down to 13.
'One of their yellow cards was rather dodgy. I will never complain about refereeing.
'Protection of the players is very important.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hannah Hampton's sleeve notes and Beth Mead's double-kick: England's penalty triumph dissected
Hannah Hampton's sleeve notes and Beth Mead's double-kick: England's penalty triumph dissected

Telegraph

time7 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Hannah Hampton's sleeve notes and Beth Mead's double-kick: England's penalty triumph dissected

Chloe Kelly – who else? – scored the winning spot-kick following two huge saves from goalkeeper Hannah Hampton as never-say-die England shocked world champions Spain in the European Championship final. It was, for the second time in the tournament, an incredibly dramatic shoot-out. Here are the key spot-kick moments that helped the Lionesses make history. Wiegman's last-minute planning With four minutes of extra time still remaining, Sarina Wiegman started sketching out a plan. She conferred with her analysts before jotting down her apparent list of final takers and in order. Several automatic takers had already been removed from action, including the iron-willed star of the Sweden spot-kicks Lucy Bronze - who astonishingly later revealed she had played the entire tournament with a fractured tibia. Georgia Stanway, Alessia Russo, Lauren James and Ella Toone had also been substituted, so it wasn't clear who would take a kick. The only certainty was Kelly, who was the only successful taker against Sweden left on the pitch. Hannah Hampton's notes on her arm Goalkeepers referring to notes on opposition goalkeepers has become increasingly common. Indeed, a year ago Jordan Pickford used the notes on his water bottle to great effect against Switzerland in the quarter-finals of the Euros. That, though, is slightly risky - could a water bottle be hidden or thrown away? Hampton had a better idea; to avoid any risk of Spain taking a peak at her research, Hampton kept a list of takers, data and their likely choice of side glued to the inside of her arm rather than the traditional water bottle. That meant that while the outfield players were getting ready to shoot she stood with a member of staff cutting the sleeve of her shirt and using an adhesive to stuck the list to her skin. It would prove a master-stroke as she would go on to make two crucial saves - one against a player of the match and another against the back-to-back Ballon D'or winner. Mead's double-kick penalty chaos If nerves weren't shredded enough already, veteran campaigner Beth Mead would have to take her penalty twice - with her second effort saved. During her initial kick, she had slipped in her run up and while her botched kick went in, the referee quickly ruled she had struck the ball twice. A recent clarification in the law by Uefa following an accidental double kick penalty in the men's Champions League by Julian Alvarez last season ensured Mead could retake the kick. But the second effort was hit at a comfortable height to be punched away. Momentum swings back and forth Momentum swung dramatically backwards and forwards in the ensuing kicks. After Mead's miss, the momentum was with Spain as Patri Guijarro's cool, calm and collected effort then planted into the corner. Alex Greenwood's excellent left-footed effort into the bottom right corner helped calm English nerves but, then Hamton came to the fore, saving from the excellent Mariona Caldentey. Hampton repeated the truck against the world's best player Aitana Bonmatí either side of Niamh Charles's low, hard effort into the corner. Leah Williamson, so impressive over 120 minutes, then hit a poor penalty for an easy save but next up was Leila Ouahabi with an even worse effort blazed right of the post. Chloe Kelly, of course 'I was cool, I was composed and I knew I was going to hit the back of the net'. Of course she did. Not content with winning the Euros for England last time and settling that other penalty drama against Sweden last week, this would be a champagne moment to match the lot. The familiar lifted left knee before leaping into her stride as she did in the quarters, but this time the kick was even more emphatic as she fired into the roof of the net.

GB's Jones takes Challenger title in Palermo
GB's Jones takes Challenger title in Palermo

BBC News

time7 minutes ago

  • BBC News

GB's Jones takes Challenger title in Palermo

Briton Francesca Jones claimed her second Challenger Tour title in dominant fashion with a 6-3 6-2 win against Anouk Koevermans in 24-year-old will climb into the world's top 100 for the first time when the new rankings are released on Jones lost in the first round at Wimbledon earlier this month but has since won successive Challenger Tour events on broke her Dutch opponent to lead 5-3 and then served out to take the opening carried that momentum into the second and broke again in the opening game, before going up a double break at 4-1 and sealing the reached her first WTA semi-final in 2023 but struggled to build on that run and has never been beyond the first round at a Grand Slam event.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store