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By Andy Rogers
After a delay of 18 months, Canterbury played their part in a thrilling National 2 South game at Bury St Edmunds.
The disappointment for them was that they finished on the wrong end of the scoreline after leading at half-time. In the end it was defensive failures that undid that earlier good work.
Despite conceding a first-minute try, Canterbury came back to score three of their own before the break. The first saw a steal on the Bury 22-metre line allow No.8 Tyler Oliver to juggle the ball and touch down.
Next was the turn of impressive tight head prop Danny Herriott, in his first start for the club, who took advantage of a dominant lineout and burrowed over from close range.
It was left to young scrum-half Tom Williams – who may have been many people's man of the match – to score the best try of the game. Another lineout win saw Williams dummy at the base before drifting through the Bury defence to dab down untouched under the posts.
Bury replied with a penalty from their ever-reliable full-back Charlie Reed, but with another Canterbury debutant fly-half Frank Reynolds landing two conversions – and astutely kicking for position when called upon – the city club seemed well set to consolidate their 19-10 half-time lead.
Bury had other ideas and, directly from the restart, Canterbury’s lack of defensive nous out wide gave home winger Mick Stanaway a simple try, with Reed converting again.
To their credit, the young Canterbury side responded positively, moving the ball wide and forcing the home side into some desperate defence. But when a fourth try seemed odds-on, Bury wing Levi Roper intercepted to run the length of the pitch before putting skipper Matt Bursey in under the posts. That score proved critical because at 27-19 Canterbury were now chasing the game.
Reynolds did reply with another penalty, but with Reed adding three points to complete a perfect kicking performance it was enough to seal the result.
Still, there were positives for the Canterbury coaches to work on. The lineout and set scrums were impressive and the new half-back partnership of Reynolds and Williams looks promising. Lock Jesse De Vries knows how to put in a shift and skipper Jamie Stephens never took a step backwards. It is the defensive shape in the wide areas that needs immediate attention.
Canterbury are away again this weekend when they travel to Old Albanians.
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