• Playoff final: Leicester 15-12 Saracens
  • Decisive drop goal in dying moments decides thriller

Sometimes a club final arouses emotions that even the grandest of Test matches cannot surpass. This was one of them, a spectacular finish made even more special by the sight of Tom Youngs, whose wife, Tiffany, died this month, hoisting the Premiership trophy to the heavens alongside Ellis Genge. Out of darkness into the light, for all connected with Leicester and the Youngs family.

The outpouring of joy – and relief – at the final whistle was also indicative of the long and winding trek the once-mighty Tigers have had to undertake to regain their old status. Not since 2013 have England’s erstwhile superclub been crowned domestic champions and the coup de grace could scarcely have been more dramatic, a last-gasp drop-goal from the replacement stand-off, Freddie Burns, breaking the deadlock.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Blind date: ‘He mentioned he is trained to butcher animals – right after I told him I was a vegetarian’

Zardi, 26, chef, meets Nadia, 32, civil servant Zardi on Nadia What…

Ixta Belfrage’s vegan recipe for creamy saffron orzo with roast butternut and scotch bonnet | The new vegan

A risotto-style pasta in a creamy, saffron-infused sauce and topped with spicy…

UK’s broadband firms set for £1.7bn windfall with above-inflation price rises

Exclusive: annual bill increases are often several percentage points higher than the…

Sleep-in care workers not entitled to minimum wage, supreme court rules

Decisions means workers can only receive minimum wage when required to be…