Lyon make history in Marseilles
MATCH REPORT: New Zealanders Jordan Taufua and Charles Ngatai were at the heart of a tough-as-teak Lyon defence that helped the Top 14 team to its first European title, with a comprehensive 30-12 victory over Toulon in the Challenge Cup Final on Friday.
Lyon led 10-7 at half-time thanks to Baptiste Couilloud’s try converted by Leo Berdeu, who also bagged a penalty.
Baptiste Serin crossed for Toulon’s try, Louis Carbonel hitting the extras.
Lyon turned the screw in the second half – with a penalty try, followed by a try for Pierre-Louis Barassi with Toulon’s Aymeric Luc in the sin bin.
Cheslin Kolbe crossed for a late consolation try, but by then Berdeu and Ngatai had each hit a penalty to condemn Toulon to a fourth Challenge Cup Final defeat.
Fans had barely got comfortable before Couilloud gathered a Ngatai chip and streaked over, but referee Luke Pearce ruled the try out because of an earlier knock-on by Lyon captain Taufua.
Taufua’s barn-storming start to the match, however, got just desserts in the eighth minute when he intercepted a pass by Italy veteran Sergio Parisse and surged towards the Toulon tryline.
The defence managed to bring him down, but the former Samoa and New Zealand Under-20 representative popped up a delicious offload that Couilloud took without breaking stride for the opening try.
Berdeu kicked the conversion despite the deafening whistles from the massed ranks of Toulon fans.
Toulon reacted as they would have wanted, enjoying their first period of sustained pressure, Serin eventually crashing over from short range with the Lyon defence in tatters.
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Impressive Ngatai
Carbonel booted the extras, but Berdeu restored Lyon’s lead after Toulon were penalised for a high tackle.
One-cap All Black centre Ngatai, who is due to join Leinster at the end of the season, seemingly went close as he ran on to his own grubber through, but referee Pearce wasn’t even tempted to go to the television match official.
Toulon roared back up the pitch, the ball was worked wide to Fiji’s Olympics sevens gold medallist Jiuta Wainiqolo and only a double tackle from Toby Arnold and Josua Tuisova prevented a try.
Berdeu shanked a straightforward second penalty just before half-time, and if that was not bad enough, Lyon’s teenage Georgian winger Davit Niniashvili had a try disallowed after his effort to go in under the posts saw his boot just nick the dead-ball line.
Toulon proceeded to suffer a shocking start to the second period, full-back Aymeric Luc yellow carded for a deliberate knock-on of an Arnold pass that would have seen Niniashvili in the clear: a situation that left the referee with no option but to also award a penalty try.
Just a minute later, Tuisova broke up his right wing and fed Berdeu who put in a delicate grubber that Barassi gathered for Lyon’s third try, the fly-half also converting.
Toulon spurned two shots at goal, opting instead for an attacking scrum, but Lyon responded with vigour to win their own penalty on the second set-piece.
With the temperature at the Stade Vélodrome, home to French Ligue One club Marseille, hovering around 29 degrees Celsius (84F), fatigue kicked in and a raft of replacements disrupted the rhythm of the game, played out in front of a new Challenge Cup record of 51,431 spectators.
With less than 20 minutes to go, Berdeu was shown yellow for an illegal tackle, handing Toulon a possible route back into the match.
But Ngatai, who also got a late yellow card, closed down options in midfield and English lock Joel Kpoku became increasingly conspicuous in close quarters, nullifying the threat from the likes of South African World Cup winner Kolbe.
The scorers
For Lyon
Tries: Couilloud, Penalty try, Barassi
Cons: Berdeu 2, Penalty try does not require a conversion
Pens: Berdeu 2, Ngatai
For Toulon
Try: Serin, Kolbe
Con: Carbonel
Yellow cards: Aymeric Luc (Toulon, 45 – cynical foul, deliberately slapping the ball down), Leo Berdeu (Lyon, 62 – foul play, no-arms tackle), Charlie Ngatai (Lyon, 73 – cynical foul, deliberately slapping ball down)
Teams
Lyon: 15 Toby Arnold, 14 Josua Tuisova, 13 Pierre-Louis Barassi, 12 Charlie Ngatai, 11 Davit Niniashvili, 10 Leo Berdeu, 9 Baptiste Couilloud, 8 Jordan Taufua (captain), 7 Patrick Sobela, 6 Dylan Cretin, 5 Romain Taofifenua, 4 Joel Kpoku, 3 Demba Bamba, 2 Guillaume Marchand, 1 Sébastien Taofifenua.
Replacements: 16 Mickael Ivaldi, 17 Hamza Kaabèche, 18 Francisco Gomez Kodela, 19 Felix Lambey, 20 Loann Goujon, 21 Jean-Marc Doussain, 22 Colby Fainga’a, 23 Xavier Mignot.
Toulon: 15 Aymeric Luc, 14 Cheslin Kolbe, 13 Julien Heriteau, 12 Duncan Paia’aua, 11 Gabin Villière, 10 Louis Carbonel, 9 Baptiste Serin, 8 Sergio Parisse, 7 Charles Ollivon (captain), 6 Cornell Du Preez, 5 Brian Alainu’uese, 4 Eben Etzebeth, 3 Beka Gigashvili, 2 Christopher Tolofua, 1 Jean Baptiste Gros.
Replacements: 16 Anthony Etrillard, 17 Bruce Devaux, 18 Emerick Setiano, 19 Swan Rebbadj, 20 Mathieu Smaili, 21 Julien Blanc, 22 Jiuta Naqoli Wainiqolo, 23 Facundo Isa.
Referee: Luke Pearce (England)
Assistant referees: Andrew Brace (Ireland), Frank Murphy (Ireland)
TMO: Ian Tempest (England)