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Billy Vunipola retained on bench as Saracens make four XV changes

By Liam Heagney
Saracens' Billy Vunipola in action versus Bath (Photo by Bob Bradford/CameraSport via Getty Images)

Billy Vunipola has kept his place on the Saracens bench in the club’s first match since his arrest and fine in Spain on a team bonding session. The back-rower, who was a 57th-minute introduction last time out at The Rec on April 26, found himself tasered twice in a bar in Mallorca before he was arrested.

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Following his payment of a €240 fine following an express trial after he was charged with resisting the law, a Saracens investigation concluded with the club taking no further action against their player.

However, the 31-year-old, who next season will be joining Montpellier on a two-year deal, learned on Thursday that an RFU warning about his behaviour would remain on his record for the next five years and could be used in any future disciplinary hearings.

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With the fall-out from the Spanish incident now complete, Vunipola will take his place on a Saracens bench that has a six forwards/two backs split for this Saturday’s trip to fourth-place Bristol.

Having pipped Bath 15-12 to keep hold of second place, the Londoners have decided to change three of their starting pack with Mako Vunipola, Marco Riccioni and Hugh Tizard all promoted from the bench in place of Eroni Mawi, Christian Judge and Nick Isiekwe.

Fixture
Gallagher Premiership
Bristol
20 - 41
Full-time
Saracens
All Stats and Data

Mawi and Isiekwe are both named on the bench on this occasion but it will be Ollie Hoskins who provides the tighthead back-up to Riccioni. Another bench switch sees Theo McFarland included at the expense of Toby Knight for what is poised to be the Samoan’s 5oth club appearance.

Meanwhile, the sole starting XV backline change sees Ivan van Zyl named at No9, with Aled Davies dropping to the bench.

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Director of rugby Mark McCall told the Saracens website: “We know we are playing against a team who have got a pile of momentum. They are really clear about how they want to play, and they are running a lot of ball but they do it in a really well-organised, well-coached way.

“They don’t mind making the odd mistake, and they will keep going on it so we are going to have to be at our very best defensively on Saturday.

“Quietly we have been gathering a bit of momentum. We have won four out of our last five Premiership matches and we have got 20 points out of the last 25, which is really timely for us.

“Within those matches, we have had a couple of really good performances, very different performances really, the Quins game at Tottenham where we showed a different side of ourselves, and the Bath game a really gritty win down there.

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“So those two important wins for us, and just performances that remind you what you are capable of, which is really important.”

Saracens (vs Bristol, Saturday): 15. Elliot Daly; 14. Rotimi Segun, 13. Lucio Cinti, 12. Nick Tompkins, 11. Tom Parton; 10. Owen Farrell (capt), 9. Ivan van Zyl; 1. Mako Vunipola, 2. Jamie George, 3. Marco Riccioni, 4. Maro Itoje, 5. Hugh Tizard, 6. Juan Martin Gonzalez, 7. Ben Earl, 8. Tom Willis. Reps: 16. Theo Dan, 17. Eroni Mawi, 18. Ollie Hoskins, 19. Nick Isiekwe, 20. Theo McFarland, 21. Billy Vunipola, 22. Aled Davies, 23. Alex Goode

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D
Diarmid 3 hours ago
Players and referees must cut out worrying trend in rugby – Andy Goode

The guy had just beasted himself in a scrum and the blood hadn't yet returned to his head when he was pushed into a team mate. He took his weight off his left foot precisely at the moment he was shoved and dropped to the floor when seemingly trying to avoid stepping on Hyron Andrews’ foot. I don't think he was trying to milk a penalty, I think he was knackered but still switched on enough to avoid planting 120kgs on the dorsum of his second row’s foot. To effectively “police” such incidents with a (noble) view to eradicating play acting in rugby, yet more video would need to be reviewed in real time, which is not in the interest of the game as a sporting spectacle. I would far rather see Farrell penalised for interfering with the refereeing of the game. Perhaps he was right to be frustrated, he was much closer to the action than the only camera angle I've seen, however his vocal objection to Rodd’s falling over doesn't legitimately fall into the captain's role as the mouthpiece of his team - he should have kept his frustration to himself, that's one of the pillars of rugby union. I appreciate that he was within his rights to communicate with the referee as captain but he didn't do this, he moaned and attempted to sway the decision by directing his complaint to the player rather than the ref. Rugby needs to look closely at the message it wants to send to young players and amateur grassroots rugby. The best way to do this would be to apply the laws as they are written and edit them where the written laws no longer apply. If this means deleting laws such as ‘the put in to the scrum must be straight”, so be it. Likewise, if it is no longer necessary to respect the referee’s decision without questioning it or pre-emptively attempting to sway it (including by diving or by shouting and gesticulating) then this behaviour should be embraced (and commercialised). Otherwise any reference to respecting the referee should be deleted from the laws. You have to start somewhere to maintain the values of rugby and the best place to start would be giving a penalty and a warning against the offending player, followed by a yellow card the next time. People like Farrell would rapidly learn to keep quiet and let their skills do the talking.

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