Swinson still in Townsend's good books
Swinson had only been on the field for eight minutes when he received a yellow card with five minutes left to play having been spotted by the touch judge throwing a punch at a driving maul. Glasgow lost control of the ball, and a good field position, and Northampton seized their moment.
"It always hurts to lose in the last minute, but it is the players who put in all the effort and it will be they who are hurting the most after this. They put in a huge amount of effort and I was really proud with the way they stuck to their task," Glasgow's head coach told EPC Rugby .
"Swinson is really disappointed at his yellow card because he knows it cost us. It was out of character for him – he plays tough, but always within the rules. But sometimes when people are hanging on to you things can happen.
"We were in control of the ball at that stage and we could have got a penalty or a scrum. We had just picked up a penalty at the previous scrum and we might have been able to see it out.
"But we always knew how difficult it was going to be to win at Franklin's Gardens. They hadn't gone three games without a win in Europe since 2000.
"We defended really well against their big runners and after a few early problems at the scrum we did well in that area in the end and it was pretty equal. We have shown some good improvement in the last three games, but this will hurt more than the other two defeats."
Deafeat leaves the Warriors with no chance of qualifying for the quarterfinals, yet they still have a game left to play. Their Round Six clash with pool leaders Racing 92, who qualified by scoring nine tries in a record 64-14 annihilation of the Scarlets in Paris, will leave them with only pride to play for.
"We've still got a game to go in Europe and we will have to see who we play against Racing 92. We'll be playing a quality side and we will be trying to get a win – our fans deserve that," added Townsend.
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