Premiership: London Welsh 13-38 Leicester Tigers
London Welsh (10) 13
- Tries: Arscott, Tonga'uiha
- Penalties: Ross
Leicester Tigers (17) 38
- Tries: Waldrom (2), Parling, Salvi, Goneva
- Conversions: Flood (5)
- Penalties: Flood
Leicester Tigers spoiled London Welsh's debut as a Premiership side with a convincing win at the Kassam Stadium.
The nine-times champions were soon in front with Thomas Waldrom scoring two tries in the space of nine minutes.
The Exiles, minus injured Gavin Henson, rallied gallantly with Tom Arscott and Hudson Tonga'uiha touching down.
Previous meeting
The last match between Leicester and London Welsh saw the Tigers win 43-3 in a Pilkington Cup tie at Old Deer Park in January 1990
But Geoff Parling, Julian Salvi and Vereniki Goneva all went over for the visitors in the second half, Toby Flood contributing 13 points with the boot.
Watched by London Welsh and Wales legend JPR Williams, it was a momentous occasion for the home side, who beat Cornish Pirates to win the Championship title last season but had to go through an appeal process before their place in the top flight was confirmed.
They were given a warm welcome by a crowd of 6,850 in Oxford but in an untidy opening phase in which both sides missed penalty attempts, Flood finally put the Tigers ahead from 39 metres after Welsh were penalised for collapsing a scrum.
With their noses in front, Leicester dominated possession and Waldrom went over in the left corner after 13 minutes with Flood adding a beautifully-judged conversion from near the touchline.
The driving maul proved a productive tactic for Leicester and Waldrom added the second touchdown following a five-metre scrum, again converted by Flood, before Welsh finally managed to generate some attacking momentum of their own.
Prop Franck Montanella was forced into touch just short of the line but their first Premiership try soon arrived as a three-quarter move led to full-back Arscott grounding the ball after being tackled, although it was questionable as to whether his momentum had carried him over the line.
Encouraged by that success, the Exiles caught Leicester napping shortly before the break as Tonga'uiha, last season's top try scorer, picked up from a ruck, broke a Manu Tuilagi tackle and sprinted away to reduce the deficit to seven points.
The Tigers came out for the second half with a purpose, despite the loss of scrum-half Micky Young with an ankle knock, and quickly put the game out of the home side's reach as lock Geoff Parling collected Anthony Allen's flick pass to score and Julian Salvi went over from close range.
With the hour-mark approaching, both teams made changes with Jordan Crane returning in place of Waldrom after missing the whole of last season because of a knee injury.
Fijian wing Goneva, in his first competitive start for the Tigers, ran in their fifth try from a clever pass by Scott Hamilton and Flood made his final contribution with another conversion before making way for George Ford.
VIEWS FROM THE DRESSING ROOM
London Welsh coach Lyn Jones:
"What happened in the summer has been well documented, but the knock-on effect is in the detail of your game.
"We knew we just did not have enough time to put the detail into the game. We had players knocking into each other in areas of the field where they weren't sure what they should be doing and that stood out and it cost us.
"I am not saying we were good enough to win but if we had upped our game at the line-out maybe we could have challenged for a bonus point, but we failed when we had opportunities to launch attacks."
Leicester rugby director Richard Cockerill:
"We come away with maximum points and it was a good workout for us, we did some good things in the first 25 minutes and some poor things in the last 15 minutes of the first half. In the second half we were much more accurate.
"But credit to Welsh they were up for the battle and got themselves back in it and if you are not on your game they will punish you.
"We did not know what to expect from them but there is enough experience in that side and physically they were very good and made life difficult for us."
LINE-UPS
London Welsh: Arscott, Mackenzie, Parker, Tonga'uiha, Ajuwa, Ross, Holmes, Montanella, Briggs, Ion, Mills, Kulemin, Williamson, Beach, Brown.
Replacements: Scott for Parker (79), Jewell for Ross (71), Runciman for Holmes (45), Bateman for Montanella (58), Jolly for Ion (76), Bristow for Kulemin (58), To'oala for Williamson (45), Purdy for Beach (58).
Leicester: Murphy, Hamilton, Tuilagi, Allen, Goneva, Flood, Young, Mulipola, T. Youngs, Cole, Andrew, Parling, Mafi, Salvi, Waldrom.
Replacements: Ford for Flood (67), Castrogiovanni for Mulipola (54), Chuter for T. Youngs (60), Stankovich for Cole (54), B. Deacon for Mafi (67), Crane for Waldrom (56).
Not Used: Harrison, Smith.
Att: 6,850
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Comment number 20.
Rob4th September 2012 - 22:50
Regarding coming top to win the title - last season top clubs were hammered by call ups for the RWC and 6Ns but still had competitive fixtures. The play offs give necessary adjustment to this. They mean no meaningless end of season games at the top end of the table and are exciting. And everyone knows the rules of the competition and adjusts tactics accordingly. The play offs are great!
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Comment number 19.
Rob4th September 2012 - 22:39
There should be promotion but it should be a team who has prepared for it - Chiefs are an excellent example. It's unfair if some clubs won't get promoted because they've invested in a sustainable model instead of the quick win of just buying players. A London team playing in Oxford at a rented ground with more opposition fans than 'home' fans - not what's needed. The LW fans were lovely though!
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Comment number 18.
Numbnuts4th September 2012 - 10:00
I find it utterly bizarre that the team that finishes top of the table doesn't automatically win the title. The play offs are an unnecessary extension to an already long and busy season and are imo merely a cash raising excercise. The fact that a team finishing 4th can ultimately win the title is crazy.
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Comment number 17.
Bob3rd September 2012 - 19:39
welshloiner.
Gloucester were one of the main instigators in getting the playoffs introduced. They only have themselves to blame.
If I recall correctly Leicester were the only club to oppose it.
If my maths are correct without the playoffs Gloucester would be 2007 champions and Leicester would have one more title than is currently on record so I assume that numbnuts would agree with you
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Comment number 16.
jmp20123rd September 2012 - 18:59
LW probably had the hardest game possible for the first weekend, considering all London clubs play each other each year.Considering they didnt know about promotion until mid-summer to stay within 25 points is a good start. The criticism can start once the AIs begin as this is when they need to get points as theyve no internationals. A fit Gavin Henson at then must be a plus for them. A Tigers fan
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Comments 5 of 20