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Ten-Try Connacht Get The Job Done Against Zebre

Last-eight hopefuls Connacht had little difficulty in racking up a 66-21 bonus point win over Zebre in a Champions Cup mismatch at the Sportsground.

VIDEO HIGHLIGHTS: CONNACHT 66 ZEBRE 21

The westerners’ fourth victory in five European rounds gives them 18 points in their three-way battle with Pool 2 rivals Wasps and Toulouse. Their quarter-final hopes now hang on next week’s trip to the south-west of France.

Despite showing some early promise with tries from Johan Meyer and Federico Ruzza, the lowly Italians coughed up the bonus point score by the 27th minute and ended the first half with two men in the sin-bin.

Converted tries from Matt Healy, John Cooney, man-of-the-match Tiernan O’Halloran and Finlay Bealham guaranteed the extra point for Connacht, before additional efforts from Kieran Marmion and Craig Ronaldson made it 40-14 at the interval.

The province’s try tally stood at ten by the final whistle, Healy, O’Halloran and Marmion all completing their braces, replacement Caolin Blade getting them into double figures and lock James Cannon playing a starring role throughout.

Owing to Connacht’s current injury crisis, Cooney played at out-half for the first time ever and landed eight conversions, including a brilliant banana kick in the blustery wind.

The eager Galway crowd did not have long to wait for the first try, the clock showing just 95 seconds when winger Healy glided over unopposed on the right after full-back O’Halloran had been sprung through midfield.

However, a poor turnover in their own 22 led to Connacht leaking a sixth-minute response, Kurt Baker going close before fellow southern Hemisphere recruit Meyer muscled over from a couple of metres out.

Strong first-up defending from Gianluca Guidi’s side forced another turnover and ultimately their second converted try, the forwards laying the platform for number 8 Ruzza to notch his third European score of the season.

Cooney converted his own 16th-minute try to get error-strewn Connacht back on track, finishing off a crisp move that began inside halfway via Marmion’s inviting pass that sent busy flanker Sean O’Brien galloping into space.

Scrum half Marmion increased his influence with a snappy break and with the Connacht maul drawing a penalty, Cooney’s nicely-weighted kick through was touched down by a diving O’Halloran under the posts, with the conversion restoring the early seven-point buffer (21-14).

As Zebre’s discipline worsened, the hosts took full advantage, prop Bealham finishing off a well-executed lineout drive for the bonus point score and the Italians losing winger Lloyd Greeff to the bin for a high tackle on Niyi Adeolokun.

Tighthead Pietro Ceccarelli joined him on the touchline after successive maul infringements, allowing Connacht to pick off two more tries with Marmion twisting over from an advancing scrum and then providing the assist for fit-again centre Ronaldson’s canter in by the posts.

Zebre’s tackling was awful at times and Healy had his second try barely a minute into the second period, with O’Halloran then doing likewise after the pacey pair had linked up again on the left wing.

Replacement forwards Dave Heffernan and James Connolly were to the fore as excellent hands released Marmion for a 48-metre sprint to the line, seeing Pat Lam’s men cross the 60-point mark.

The emptying of Connacht’s bench, combined with some sloppy general play, allowed the Zebre pack to dictate in and around the hour mark and centre Mattia Bellini helped himself to a close range converted try.

However, the home side managed to have the final say when Healy scampered away from inside his own half and passed for the supporting Blade to complete the scoring with 14 minutes remaining.

Giving his reaction afterwards, key man O’Halloran said: “Things haven’t been going well for us in the league but Europe has been a breath of fresh air and to get a five-pointer here puts us in a pretty good position.

“But we’re under no illusions with us playing Toulouse away and it’s going to go down to the wire, but we’ll take confidence from this. It was touch and go for a while this morning with a few dark clouds coming in but we said, in the backs, it was a perfect opportunity with a dry ball and a dry track.

“It was good to throw the ball around for once so we enjoyed that one. This is the first time in about six or seven weeks we’ve had the same squad training together which gave us massive confidence coming into this week.

“The weather hasn’t suited us in the last few weeks but Pat (Lam) has told us to have a go from anywhere and to counter attack. That gives us confidence as a back-three unit and it’s about consistency in my game in both attack and defence.”
 

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