Green seizes day for dazzling quins

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Bordeaux-Begles ...........41pts

Tries: Lucu 19, Buros 24, Depoortere 42, Bielle-Biarrey 59, Tambwe 64, 75

Conversions: Lucu 25, 43, 60, 65

Penalties: Lucu 52

Harlequins ....................... 42pts

Tries: Porter 2, 29; Penalty 14, Evans 40, Dombrandt 56, Green 71 Conversions: Smith 3, 30, 42, 58, 73

HARLEQUINS reached their first Champions Cup semi-final after shattering perceptions of a free-running side with a soft underbelly by taking on a team that had twice overpowered Saracens at forward and destroying their scrum.

Quins won five penalties and a free-kick at the set-piece. They turned two into tries and a third, with less than a minute to go, allowed them to run down the clock as replacement Jarrod Evans went for goal. He missed from wide on the left, but it was all about making sure the ball went dead.

The home players were as stunned as their supporters. The previous week they had pulverised Saracens for the second time this year three weeks after the Premiership champions had put 52 points on Quins to make it 90 in the season against their London rivals.

It was not so much that there was complacency in the Top 14 side’s ranks as a belief that the danger they faced lay out wide. The first eight minutes showed what they were really up against as the excellent Will Porter’s try was followed up with a penalty try when Mateo Garcia denied Tyrone Green a run-in by swatting away Marcus Smith’s pass with his left hand.

Bordeaux-Begles found themselves 14 points done without mounting an attack. They had bossed the gainline against Saracens, using their bulk to rock tacklers, but they found themselves having to deal with the rampaging Chandler Cunningham-South.

The England flanker was making only his fifth start for Quins and if in the 29 degree heat he was burnt out after 50 minutes, he had done his job. The Top 14 side generated more forward momentum after the break, but they lacked their expected foundation.

Key to that was the Quins front row. Will Collier’s pedigree as a tighthead has long been established, but on the other side of the scrum Fin Baxter announced himself against Ben Tamefuina, the nearly 24st Tongan, and his equally heavy replacement on 47 minutes, Carlu Sadie.

Joe Marler, along with Danny Care, was left at home because of injury, but the old hands could not have been more influential than the younger pair. Porter scored two tries and made a number of crucial tackles while Baxter gave Tamefuina a scrummaging lesson and was one of Quins main carriers.

Baxter and Collier remained on t

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