Montpellier outplay Castres to win first French Top 14 title
TOP 14 REPORT: Montpellier beat Castres 29-10 on Friday to win their maiden French Top 14 title in a re-run of the 2018 Final, as English No.8 Zach Mercer played a leading role.
Mercer, who joined the Mediterranean side this season from Bath, set up Arthur Vincent for Montpellier’s opening try as the 2018 runners-up gained revenge for the defeat four years ago.
Kick-off was delayed by 19 minutes after French President Emmanuel Macron was whistled on and off the field as he was presented to the players.
Both Castres and Montpellier named the same starting XVs which won last weekend’s semifinals against record 21-time champions Toulouse and Bordeaux-Begles respectively.
Philippe Saint-Andre’s Montpellier dominated from the off and they were rewarded after six minutes as winger Vincent dived over in the corner from a grubber-kick by Mercer, who is ineligible for his country as he plays abroad.
By the 13-minute mark Montpellier led 17-0 as lock Florent Vanverberghe and fullback Anthony Bouthier, who was beautifully set-up by a Vincent loop pass, added to Castres’ woes, who seemed to be frozen by the pre-match build-up.
Castres head coach Pierre-Henry Broncan’s early worries intensified just a quarter of an hour in, as influential flyhalf Benjamin Urdapilleta left the field with an ankle issue, and without a recognised pivot on the bench, fullback Julien Dumora deputised in the No.10 shirt.
Montpellier’s retiring former France captain Guilhem Guirado left the field for the final time as a professional player on 27 minutes as he suffered a neck injury, and was replaced by Australia hooker Brandon Paenga-Amosa.
Try denials
The score was 23-3 at the break after Dumora opened his team’s account, while Benoit Paillaugue kicked two penalties for Montpellier to put the seal on an almost perfect first half.
Castres began the second 40 minutes on a positive note and were denied shortly after the interval as Mercer and Vincent held up Dumora over the line.
Montpellier, last season’s European Challenge Cup winners, were then able to clear their lines as captain Yacouba Camara won a penalty at a ruck a quarter of an hour into the second half.
Castres, who finished the regular season top of the table despite only having the league’s 10th highest budget, were denied a second time as replacement prop Wayan de Benedittis failed to ground with 32 minutes left.
The final quarter was a turgid affair in humid early summer conditions and Paolo Garbisi extended the advantage for the two-time runners-up with a penalty goal with 12 minutes remaining.
Castres scored a consolation try as Vilimoni Botitu glided over with four minutes before Handre Pollard capped things off for Montpellier with a penalty in the 77th minute.