Showing posts with label Martin Castrogiovanni. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Martin Castrogiovanni. Show all posts

Tuesday, 9 December 2014

Guess Who's Back?

Tigers got their European Champions Cup campaign back on track this Sunday after dispatching double Euro & defending French Champions Toulon 25-21.  Welsh wizard Owen Williams was the star of the show slotting a sumptuous 20 points from the boot, as well as providing Toulon with their first try courtesy of a gift wrapped interception for Springbok Bryan Habana.

Tigers raced in a 13-0 lead after only 20 minutes as the Tigers ferocious defence forced key errors from a harried Toulon team.  Fast defence forced Bakkies Botha into a poor pass hacked on by Anthony Allen, Toulon recovered possession but from the ruck Owen Williams charged down Drew Mitchell’s attempted clearance to force a 5m scrum; the reunion between Marcos Ayerza and Martin Castrogiovanni was won conclusively by the Argentinean Ayerza forcing a penalty which Williams simply slotted.  Tigers lead was doubled quickly; Castro’s late entry to a ruck forcing the referee to reverse the penalty previously awarded to Toulon.

Similarly the first try was born from Toulon errors.  A series of areal ping pong seemed to have been won with Delon Armitage’s excellent clearance but Mat Tait’s hard chase of his own kick forced Sebastian Tilous-Borde into a sloppy pass to a shell shocked Mitchell.  The Australian simply went M.I.A. allowing Tom Youngs to sweep onto the ball and set Brad Thorn up for his first try in Tigers colours.

The 13-0 lead was short lived however, directly from the kick off Tigers were held up in a maul forcing a scrum and this time it was Toulon with the penalty which Nicolas Sanchez comfortably slotted.  Tigers were now the ones making errors, Jordan Crane’s pass and Mat Tait’s fumble gave Toulon terrific ball under the posts.  Were it not for Tait’s magnificent tackle a try was sure to be scored.  As it was an inevitable penalty was conceded as Toulon battered at the Tigers line with Sanchez again on the mark.

The scores were levelled when Williams flung his fateful pass, over the head of Salvi, too short for Kitchener it was just right for Habana to pounce.

Williams had also missed a tricky kick from right in front of the Crumbie just previously and missed a further testing penalty on the stroke of half time but made amends early in the second half.  Mat Tait’s scudding low kick found touch deep inside the 22, after forcing a knock on in the lineout the Tigers pack roared, marching Toulon backwards at a rate of knots to earn a simple three points for Williams to slot.

The next scrum was not to be so successful.  Tigers failed to hook the ball cleanly, the ball ricocheting off the front row’s shins into the Toulon side, Tilous-Borde caught Jamie Gibson unawares leaving Goneva with an impossible two on one to defend.  Ironically it was serial offender Mitchell who had the run in for the five.

Facing a tricky touchline conversion on Welford Road’s boggy side Sanchez went under the ball, floating the kick, just, short and wide.  This left Tigers within a score and was to prove crucial in the final reckoning.

Tigers were resilient.  And ambitious.  On loose turnover ball Tigers gained a fortuitous penalty for a high tackle on Ben Youngs.  The captain seeing the gap went quickly only a few yards from his line, the momentum gained another penalty and this one could be kicked deep into Toulon territory.  Some sure possession rugby was perhaps not so inspired but drew the necessary penalty and Williams made no mistake to ease Tigers back into the lead they had previously held for 40 minutes.

Tigers were really on song now, pinning Tilous-Borde into the corner and gaining the 5m attacking lineout.  Tigers’ forwards drove the ball over the line but never fully having it controlled failed to ground it, instead letting themselves be shunted to touch in goal and a relieving 22m drop out.

Toulon then wasted a golden chance inside the Tigers own 22 when they conceded the penalty for sealing off; Williams’ mighty boot bypassed the midfield and gave Tigers a lineout at the other end of the pitch.  Tigers were more patient than their opponents, again forcing the clumsy error from the Toulon defence.  This time it was Georgian goliath Mamuka Gorgodze getting pinned on the wrong side of a ruck.

Toulon though are not European & Top 14 champions for nothing.  Breaking through a quick tap from Ali Williams they played quickly and fluently moving into the Tigers 22 with ease, the move was only halted by a soft offside error from sub Robert Barbieri.  The Canadian-Italian flanker was offside after making an earlier tackle giving Sanchez the easiest opportunity to cut the arrears to a single point.

Tigers were calm though, Williams’ low slung kick again pinning Toulon deep into their own half before his up and under was claimed by Scully.  The kicking game may not be to everyone’s taste but was executed well enough so that when Bryan Habana risked an early charge at Ben Youngs the penalty was inches within the Welshman’s range.

The drama carried well over the 80 minutes; not only did Tigers make a meal of finishing off the game, requiring a Toulon knock on with 10 seconds left and again after losing that scrum, but also Martin Castrogiovanni’s expletive ridden tirade at Richard Cockerill’s behaviour over his transfer between the two clubs and Delon Armitage’s excursions which seem both many and varied at this point in time.

The off field stuff can wait for another day, the important points from Sunday were the four that Tigers bagged and perhaps the casual one that Toulon took with them too.

Friday, 3 May 2013

500 Club Leicester Welcome Back New Lions and Old Tigers

In what will be Tigers 500th game in the league Director of Rugby Richard Cockerill has selected all 6 players named for this summer's British Lions tour in his matchday squad.  Manu Tuilagi, Ben Youngs, Tom Youngs, Geoff Parling and Tom Croft all start whilst Dan Cole is rested ahead of the play offs.

Tigers first game in the new league structure was at home to Bath on September 12th 1987; tries from Jez Harris, Les Cusworth and Colin Dexter secured Tigers their maiden league victory winning 24-13.  Famous names like John Wells, Simon Povoas, Dusty Hare, Paul Dodge, Steve Kenney and Barry Evans were all part of that team that went on to win the first of Tigers 9 English Championships. 

498 games and 25 years later Tigers have a new generation of heroes gracing the Welford Road turf hoping to emulate the team of 1987/88 and bring home the title for a record 10th time.  Geordan Murphy veteran of 7 of those titles is restored to the side at full back and as captain; the swashbuckling Irish talisman has not revealed his plans for next season so this could be a farewell appearance at his adopted home.

He is joined in the back three by fellow Irishman Niall Morris, surely hoping to earn a test cap this summer as his native land tour North America, and the Flying Fijian maverick Vereniki Goneva, who's early season form lighted up Welford Road only to fall foul of injury against Toulouse in January then struggle to regain his place due to the form of Adam Thompstone.  A classic case of Cockerill man management has seen him tell the press how Thompstone must be in the England team for this summer then promptly drop him!

In the centres British Lion Manu Tuilagi is joined by stalwart team mate Anthony Allen, and conducting the orchestra of rugby prowess around them are Toby Flood at fly half and another Lion Ben Youngs.  The Awesome Foursome suffered their first ever domestic defeat last time out at Bath so will be looking to unleash their full talents on London Irish this Saturday.

The pack sees three changes to the one that faced our old foes Bath two weeks ago as Steve Mafi, Dan Cole and Thomas Waldrom switch the bench as Graham Kitchener, Martin Castrogiovanni and Jordan Crane step in.  The press report that Castro's move to Toulon is a done deal so this will be his last start at Welford Road 7 years and 146 games after his debut against Sale.

That means that Logovi'i Mulipola, Tom Youngs and Geoff Parling continue in the engine room of the tight room whilst Tom Croft and Julian Salvi maintain their places in the back row.  Croft this week became only the 10th Tiger to be named on a second Lions tour in a 110 years, which just emphasis what a remarkable player we are lucky enough to watch every week.

London Irish Head Coach Brian Smith, who played 15 times for Tigers in 1991, has this week busied himself with the appointment of inexperienced ref Luke Pearce saying that he doesn't want to "victims of a referee's development" and that Pearce's biggest challenge is "making sure the home supporters do not influence their decision-making" .  Pearce's only previous Tigers game was the reverse fixture back in December when he awarded Tigers two penalties tries in a 31-9 victory; though I'm sure that has nothing to do with Smith's remarks.

As usual this is where I will again say that I don't think it is a good idea to appoint the same referee to both fixtures between two clubs in a season, especially when one or both sides viewed the original match as controversial.  This is the second time this has happened in two weeks and I'm worried that somewhere someone thinks this is a wizzo smart idea rather than an accident waiting to happen.  Referee's neutrality is paramount and having the suggestion that the previous game is preying on their mind, as Smith has also done this week, is a needless obstacle the RFU can easily avoid.  

Luke Pearce is no stranger to controversy himself though, 3 seasons ago he was assaulted by a Coventry fan after awarding Moseley a third penalty try 8 minutes into injury time to seal a 28-25 win.  He was also the referee that prematurely ended the London Welsh v Saracens match this season when a scrum had collapsed and Welsh were camped on the Sarries try line looking for the push over try. 

Tigers bound Jamie Gibson has been recalled to the Irish starting line up to face his new employers and is joined by the departing Jonathan Joseph, Matt Garvey ( both Bath), Alex Corbisiero (Northampton) and Scott Lawson (Newcastle).  Like Bath two weeks ago the Exiles have opted for a 6-2 split between forwards and backs as only Shane Geraghty and Wasps bound Welsh scrum half Jack Moates are backline replacements.  Former Tigers favourite George Skivington captains from lock.

Leicester
15 Geordan Murphy (c)
14 Niall Morris
13 Manu Tuilagi
12 Anthony Allen
11 Vereniki Goneva
10 Toby Flood
9 Ben Youngs
1 Logovi'i Mulipola
2 Tom Youngs
3 Martin Castrogiovanni
4 Graham Kitchener
5 Geoff Parling
6 Tom Croft
7 Julian Salvi
8 Jordan Crane

Replacements
16 Rob Hawkins
17 Fraser Balmain
18 Dan Cole
19 Steve Mafi
20 Thomas Waldrom
21 Sam Harrison
22 George Ford
23 Mathew Tait


London Irish
15 Tom Homer

14 Topsy Ojo
13 Jonathan Joseph
12 Guy Armitage
11 Marland Yarde
10 Ian Humphreys
9 Darren Allinson
1 Alex Corbisiero
2 Scott Lawson
3 Halani Aulika
4 George Skivington (c)
5 Bryn Evans
6 Matt Garvey
7 Jamie Gibson
8 Ofisa Treviranus. Replacements
16 David Paice
17 Jerry Yanuyanutawa
18 Leo Halavatau
19 Kieran Low
20 Jebb Sinclair
21 Declan Danaher
22 Shane Geraghty
23 Jack Moates

Thursday, 21 February 2013

Capitano Castro

Martin Castrogiovanni will celebrate his 94th test for Italy by captaining them against Wales in the Stadio Olmipico on Saturday.  Castro captains Italy for the third time overall, and for the first time in the Six Nations Championship.  Castro is undefeated in his previous two matches as captain after wins against Canada and the USA this Summer.  Italy haven't beaten Wales since 2007 so Good Luck Castro!

Italy: Andrea Masi; Giovanbattista Venditti, Tommaso Benvenuti, Gonzalo Canale, Luke McLean; Kristopher Burton, Edoardo Gori; Andrea Lo Cicero, Leonardo Ghiraldini, Martin Castrogiovanni (capt), Antonio Pavanello, Francesco Minto, Alessandro Zanni, Simone Favaro, Manoa Voaswai
Replacements: Davide Gizazzon, Alberto de Marchi, Lorenzo Cittadini, Quintin Geldenhuys, Paul Derbyshire, Tobias Botes, Luciano Orquera, Gonzalo Garcia.

Sunday, 3 February 2013

Six Nations Round Up: Castro inspires Italy to win Garibaldi Trophy

Martin Castrogiovanni's 12th test match try in 92 games was the winning score as Italy overcame France in Rome's Stadio Olmpico.  The Crumbie Terrace favourite played the first hour in the historic 23-18 win, only Italy's 2nd over France in the Six Nations.

Geoff Parling scored one of England's 4 tries in their win over Scotland at Twickenham, set up by a searing break by clubmate Ben Youngs.  Moments earlier England had had a try ruled out for foul play Tom Youngs, apparently for a dangerous clear out of the ruck but no conclusive footage has become available as yet.  Dan Cole anchored a dominant scrum whilst Toby Flood replaced former Tiger Billy Twelvetrees with 10 minutes of the match remaining.  

On Friday night up in Newcastle 5 Tigers were part of the England Saxons side that were beaten 13-9 by Scotland 'A'.  George Ford slotted England's three penalties with Jordan Crane leading the side from number 8 and Graham Kitchener played the whole game at lock.  Ed Slater and Kieran Brookes were late replacements but couldn't find a score as the Saxons battered the Scots line in the closing stages.  Former Tigers Grieg Tonks and Tom Ryder were both in the Scotland 'A' side.

Also on Friday night young Academy prop Tiziano Pasquali started for Italy Under 20s as they took on France Under 20s at home.  Pasquali played for the first hour of the match that the Italians lost 6-13.

Saturday, 24 November 2012

International Action Round Up



In Aberdeen Steve Mafi got a last minute yellow card for a petulant tip over after the whistle, but it mattered not as Tonga secured a shock 21-15 over the Scots, their first against a home nation.  Marcos Ayerza was not as lucky as Argentina were pummelled by Ireland 46-17.

At Twickenham some muddled thinking by both players and management cost England a victory, Toby Flood scored 6 points before departing early.  Manu Tuilagi tried valiantly to keep England in it with a series of powerful bursts as Dan Cole and Tom Youngs went well.  Ben Youngs and Geoff Parling round out the England contingent that was close but not good enough. 

In Florence Martin Castrogiovanni and his Italy chums came agonisingly close to a maiden victory against Australia as they lost 19-22.  In Tbilisi Vereniki Goneva played at 12 and grabbed a try as Fiji pulled off a close victory 24-19 against Georgia, confirming a whitewash for the hosts and preventing one for themselves.

Thursday, 22 November 2012

Castro to face Wallabies

Martin Castrogiovanni has retained his place in Italy's starting lineup for their test against the Wallabies in Florence this Saturday.  Italy fronted up well to the All Blacks last week before being blown away in the final 30 minutes, they will be hoping to face the Australia that capitulated in Paris rather than the heros of Twickenham.

Italy: 15 Andrea Masi, 14 Giovambattista Venditti, 13 Tommaso Benvenuti, 12 Alberto Sgarbi, 11 Mirco Bergamasco, 10 Luciano Orquera, 9 Edoardo Gori, 8 Sergio Parisse (captain), 7 Robert Barbieri, 6 Alessandro Zanni, 5 Francesco Minto, 4 Quintin Geldenhuys, 3 Martin Castrogiovanni, 2 Leonardo Ghiraldini, 1 Andrea Lo Cicero.
Replacements:
16 Davide Giazzon, 17 Michele Rizzo, 18 Lorenzo Cittadini, 19 Antonio Pavanello, 20 Simone Favaro, 21 Manoa Vosawai, 22 Tobias Botes, 23Luke McLean.

Thursday, 15 November 2012

Castro in for Italy

Italy have recalled Tigers ace Martin Castrogiovanni for their  glamour test match against the All Blacks in Rome this Saturday.  Castro will earn his 90th cap in the match after replacing Lorenzo Cittadini in the starting line up.

15 Andrea MASI (London Wasps, 70 caps)
14 Giovambattista VENDITTI (Zebre Rugby, 7 caps)*
13 Tommaso BENVENUTI (Benetton Treviso, 21 caps)
12 Alberto SGARBI (Benetton Treviso, 21 caps)
11 Mirco BERGAMASCO (Racing-Metro Paris, 87 caps)
10 Luciano ORQUERA (Zebre Rugby, 27 caps)
9 Edoardo GORI (Benetton Treviso, 14 caps)*
8 Sergio PARISSE (Stade Francais, 89 caps) - capitano
7 Simone FAVARO (Benetton Treviso, 14 caps)*
6 Alessandro ZANNI (Benetton Treviso, 67 caps)
5 Francesco MINTO (Benetton Treviso, esordiente)

4 Antonio PAVANELLO (Benetton Treviso, 11 caps)
3 Martin CASTROGIOVANNI (Leicester Tigers, 89 caps)
2 Leonardo GHIRALDINI (Benetton Treviso, 46 caps)
1 Andrea LO CICERO (Racing-Metro Paris, 96 caps)