Aviva Premiership 2014/15 Round 7 Review

Nathan Hughes had another stand-out perfomance
Nathan Hughes had another stand-out perfomance
©PA

This weekend the Aviva Premiership returned to our lives and although the Great British weather did it's best to disrupt things the quality of our Premiership teams shone through and we enjoyed some captivating matches.

Heading to Kingsholm on a Friday Night without a whole host of your leaders is a huge test of character and it is a test that Harlequins passed. Gloucester enjoyed much of the first half supremacy thanks to their strong ball carriers and initially a very accurate Twelvetrees’ boot. At times, O'Shea's men lacked clear direction and throughout they missed their England contingent although Kyle Sinckler in particular put in a strong shift up front. Both sides spent a great deal of the second half wrestling for territory and much of the rugby was played in the middle of the field due to strong defensive efforts. Eventually a moment of superb vision from Karl Dickson and the wheels of Charlie Walker to put the game out of reach of the Cherry & Whites. Final Score Gloucester 15 Harlequins 22

It is not often that the Northampton Saints concede a try within the first five minutes at Franklin’s Gardens however on Friday evening Exeter arrived and shook things up from the word go. The Chiefs’ intent was outstanding and they executed their game plan with conviction. Thomas Waldrom's intercepted try was a gem and certainly not so bad for a man that some deemed to be an ‘interesting’ signing. The Saints, well they left themselves with too much to do and whilst their comeback was what you would expect from the Aviva Premiership Champions another loss was not part of the game plan. Final Score Northampton Saints 18 Exeter Chiefs 24

On Saturday lunchtime the Sale Sharks hosted London Irish and Steve Diamond was a happy man following eighty minutes of rugby for his side dominated the Exiles and recorded a well deserved bonus point victory. One glance over the scoreboard tells you everything you need to know about Danny Cipriani’s response to being left out of England’s autumn plans with three conversions and a penalty to his name as well as confidently pulling the strings. It was done and dusted by half time as the power and precision of Sale proved too much. Alex Lewington’s moment of brilliance was the highlight for an Irish side that missed the direction of Shane Geraghty and a spot of real impetus. ‘A tough day at the office’ said Brian Smith and with Bath Rugby arriving at the Madjeski next weekend the output must be improved. Sale head to London for a spot of action under the Friday Night lights at The Stoop in what will be a cracker. Final Score Sale Sharks 36 London Irish 8

The Rec hosted an evening kick off as Bath Rugby welcomed the Newcastle Falcons. It was the Gavin Henson show as he pulled the strings impeccably well scoring 13 of the 23 Bath points. Another man wearing blue, black and white that meant business was Jonathan Joseph who showed why he might just be given an opportunity in an England jersey next weekend. Dean Richards’ side struggled for set piece parity and that is something they must address against Gloucester. It was great to see Matt Garvey on the pitch for 20 minutes following his lengthy injury spell and across the board Bath’s ‘understudies’ delivered well. Final Score Bath Rugby 23 Newcastle Falcons 14

At Welford Road it was one for the purists as the rain fell and conditions suited the front fives of both Leicester and Saracens much more than the backs. Given these conditions and both sets of defences it was always going to be a game that was won from penalties as opposed to tries. Pretty, perhaps not, but a ding dong it most certainly was. In my eyes Saracens appeared the calmer of the two both with and without the ball and they will be frustrated that they didn’t obtain the four points that they were looking for. Charlie Hodgson delivered another performance that earned him another bottle of Aviva Champagne and Alex Goode also reminded us all of his credentials. Dan Cole was slightly out muscled and a touch rusty but as Cockers said he will be better for it. It was a credit to Leicester’s diligence that they fought their way back into the game although the final penalty to seal the draw could have gone either way. Final Score Leicester Tigers 21 Saracens 21

The final game of the weekend was the last ever Aviva Premiership game to be played at Adams Park as Wasps hosted London Welsh. The bonus point was sewn up on 33 minutes after an emphatic two tries in four minutes start and from then on it was damage limitation for Welsh and a fun day at the office for Wasps. Welsh were ravaged by injuries during the course of the game and the loss of Chris Hala’ufia was a huge shame for it was his power and physicality that was needed. For every move that Welsh had in the armoury Wasps seemed to be one step ahead and defensively things were still a far too loose. Nathan Hughes continued to turn heads and Alex Lozowski delighted everyone with his vision, pace and decision making on his Premiership debut. All in all a more than satisfying  day for Wasps with an eye-watering 11 tries on the board and a very, very difficult one for London Welsh. Final Score Wasps 71 London Welsh 7

Widely regarded as the most competitive rugby union league in the world...it can only be the Gallagher Premiership.

The division is becoming more and more exciting as each year passes by so who will be lifting silverware at Twickenham in May?

At Talking Rugby Union, we aim to provide match reports and news together with our specially commissioned features and interviews.