Cardiff Blues 24-35 Montpellier
Cardiff Blues (15) 24
- Pens: Patchell (7)
- Drop-goal: Patchell
Montpellier (19) 35
- Tries: Berard, Gorgodze, Nagusa
- Cons: Paillaugue
- Pens: Paillaugue (6)
Scrum half Lloyd Williams was sent off as Cardiff Blues crashed to their third defeat in this season's Heineken Cup.
Williams was dismissed in the 25th minute when referee John Lacey adjudged he had tip-tackled Benoit Paillaugue.
Montpellier scored tries through Yoan Audrin, Mamuka Gorgodze and Timoci Nagusa. Paillaugue converted one and kicked six penalties.
Fly-half Rhys Patchell, 19, kicked all the Blues' points with seven penalties and a drop-goal.
It was a third defeat for the Welsh regions in a disappointing weekend of Heineken Cup action, following the Ospreys' 30-14 defeat in Toulouse and the Scarlets' 22-16 home loss to Exeter .
The Welsh regions have managed only one win in nine Heineken Cup pool matches this season.
The Blues suffered a blow before kick-off when Wales captain Sam Warburton withdrew with a chest infection.
They were already without Leigh Halfpenny, Jamie Roberts and Bradley Davies who were all injured on international duty.
Welsh Regions' Heineken Cup
ROUND 1
Ospreys 38-17 Treviso
Sale Sharks 34-33 Cardiff Blues
Clermont Auvergne 49-16 Scarlets
ROUND 2
Scarlets 13-20 Leinster
Leicester Tigers 39-22 Ospreys
Cardiff Blues 14-22 Toulon
ROUND 3
Toulouse 30-14 Ospreys
Scarlets 16-22 Exeter Chiefs
Cardiff Blues 24-35 Montpellier
But the Blues enjoyed a good start as young fly-half Patchell kicked a penalty from 42 metres, but he fell just short with a second attempt from slightly further shortly afterwards.
Paillaugue drew the French level with a superb penalty before Patchell was again on target for the Blues.
There were worrying signs for the Blues, however, as Montpellier's scrum was getting on top and a Blues infringement gave Paillaugue a simple second penalty.
But it was Patchell who struck next, kicking a penalty from wide on the 22, but the game turned on an incident in the 25th minute.
Scrum-half Paillaugue stole a ball from the base of a Blues scrum and was upended by his opposite number Williams.
When the ensuing wrestling match subsided, referee John Lacey issued a straight red card to Welsh international Williams for a tip-tackle.
Paillaugue had recovered sufficiently to kick the resulting penalty, but the Blues moved back ahead when Patchell dropped a goal.
But the 14 men of the Blues were put under pressure and eventually ran out of tacklers as the French side worked left wing Pierre Berard over in the left hand corner for a try which Paillaugue converted.
Patchell slotted a fourth penalty, but Paillaugue replied in kind to restore the four point advantage at the interval.
The 19-year-old Blues fly-half kicked a monster penalty from inside his own half to give his team a dream start to the second half.
Blues were making a real fist of it, helped by a strengthening wind behind them.
And there was a let-off for the Blues when Berard intercepted a Patchell pass, but was chased down by the fly-half.
It took the French team until the 63rd minute to finally score in the second half as Paillaugue kicked a penalty.
And they finally broke the Blues' resistance when skipper Gorgodze forced his way over from close range two minutes later.
Patchell dragged the Blues back to within three points with two further penalties, but a successful Paillaugue penalty and a late try for substitute wing Nagusa made the game safe for Montpellier.
VIEW FROM THE DRESSING ROOM
Blues' director of rugby Phil Davies praised the way his team played after the sending off: "That was tough for us, but fortunately no one was hurt and we just carried on after it I suppose.
"I'm not sure actually [if it was correct decision]. I've just got to have another look at it, their guy finished the game which is important, but we'll just have a little look and see what we'll do with it after.
"The pack fronted up well in all aspects of the game and we had some good ball and Rhys [Patchell] moved the ball nicely, he kicked well for his penalties and he kicked out of hand quite smartly at times.
"It was a good performance by him but a lot of people around him were very instrumental in helping him also, I'm pleased with that maturity really."
TEAMS
Cardiff Blues: Jason Tovey, Alex Cuthbert , Gavin Evans, Dafydd Hewitt, Harry Robinson, Rhys Patchell, Lloyd Williams; Sam Hobbs, Marc Breeze, Scott Andrews, Lou Reed, James Down, Josh Navidi, Robin Copeland, Andries Pretorius (c)
Replacements: Lewis Jones for Tovey (40), Owen Williams for Robinson (66), Tafa'ao Filise for Hobbs (57), Rhys Williams for Breeze (57), Benoit Bourrust for Andrews (63), Luke Hamilton for Copeland (66). Not Used: Macauley Cook, Ceri Sweeney.
Sent Off: Lloyd Williams (24).
Montpellier: Benjamin Thiery; Yoan Audrin, Thomas Combezou, Paul Bosch, Pierre Berard; Santiago Fernandez, Benoit Paillaugue; Mikheil Nariashvili, Agustin Creevy, Maximiliano Bustos, Drikus Hancke, Aliki Fakate, Alexandre Bias, John Beattie, Mamuka Gorgodze (capt).
Replacements: Tomici Nagusa for Thiery (56), Yvan Watremez for Nariashvili (50), Erasmus van Vuuren for Creevy (50), Barry Fa'amausili for Bustos (73), Mickael De Marco for Fakate (64), Kelian Galletier for Bias (66). Not Used: Eric Escande, Shontayne Hape.
Referee: John Lacey (Ireland)
Comments
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Comment number 24.
HugoRight11th December 2012 - 15:09
*22 - Ospreys! great result; it's a case of observation rather than moaning, everyone's entitled to an opinion. The danger now is not "dire straits", more one of 'backwater' rugby if the strategic direction remains the same. Being a Blues man perhaps I feel it more than you do, but I remain hopeful that a 'new' approach succeeds. C'mon Welsh Rugby!
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Comment number 23.
Callum11th December 2012 - 10:34
From Jersey and can back up the Ponty supporters, they were awesome.
I think its all to do with grass roots. Get more youngsters into rugby and earlier, rediscover the rugby culture that is fading in Wales, encourage schools to play more leagues/tournaments.
If the next gen loves rugby you will get more fans, better players, and better rugby in general.
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Comment number 22.
Bryyyn11th December 2012 - 8:55
Yes, the regional set-up in Wales is flawed, but I'm getting sick of the usual comments on every single match report when a Welsh team is involved. Can I remind everyone who beat Leinster to win the Pro 12 last season? Of course the WRU have got work to do, but Welsh rugby is not in 'dire straits', so stop moaning and make a comment on the match for once.
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Comment number 21.
JoeCreigiau10th December 2012 - 21:05
This was a valiant performance by a young 14 man side. Lloyd Williams will need to take a long hard look at himself for a moment devoid of any sense. That aside Patchell, Navidi, Andrews, Hobbs, Copeland and Gavin Evans looked good. The Blues need to invest in bringing "Talent" thru year on year. 4+ players p.a. who could go on to play in the HC. The Dwr Shield group proves this is possible.
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Comment number 20.
Jack10th December 2012 - 19:21
Tickets for rugby are far too expensive...
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Comments 5 of 24