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It will be a red letter day for rugby union in Russia this weekend when the leading team in the Guinness PRO12, Connacht Rugby, play the first competitive, professional cross-border game in Krasnoyarsk against Enisei-STM.
Head coach Pat Lam has left nothing to chance in the build-up to a game that is likely to be played in sub-zero temperatures in a part of the world where the time difference is another major consideration. The Irish province set off in the early hours of Tuesday morning and were in training mode in Krasnoyarsk on Wednesday afternoon.
In theory, the game should be lie stroll in the park for the PRO12 table-toppers, but there is a real sense of stepping into the unknown. Everyone has seen just how much rugby has come on in the fringe nations in Europe in the past two World Cups and the Enisei side is riddled with internationals.
The Russians qualified for the Challenge Cup by beating top club sides from Portugal and Romania last season and will want to make a big impression on their debut and with 22 Test players in their squad from Russian (20), Georgia and the Ukraine they look to have the ammunition to cause more than a few problems for their visitors.
Connacht reached the quarter-finals last year, before going down 14-7 to the eventual winners, Gloucester Rugby at Kinghsolm.
Match Facts
- Enisei-STM are making their Challenge Cup debut and will become the first Russian team to feature in the competition.
- Connacht have won five of their six matches against teams from countries outside the Six Nations, with their only loss coming against Steaua Bucharest in the 1999/2000 campaign.
- Connacht have won nine of their last 13 pool matches away from home at the Challenge Cup.
- Connacht conceded just 9.6 penalties per game last season, only Exeter Chiefs (8.3) gave away less on average.
Connacht will rarely have to work as hard in such severe conditions to earn a bonus point win in the Challenge Cup, but four second-half tries for Pat Lam’s side sent them home form Siberia with five points in the bag.
There was nothing easy about this 17-point win in the snow dusted Central Stadium at Krasnoyarsk. Ball handling was nigh on impossible as the players from both sides battled temperatures below -20ºC, icy hands and a biting wind; the home side were well drilled on the physical side of the game; and it was only in the second-half when the Connacht scrum began to gain the upperhand that they found a way past the stern defence of their hosts.
Two well struck penalties from AJ MacGinty in his first Connacht start gave his side a 6-0 lead at the break, and at that juncture it seemed as if try scoring chances would never surface.
Connacht looked nervous in the early stages as they struggled with the coldest conditions they had faced since their arrival in Russia on Wednesday, but after MacGinty – who controlled the game well on debut – kicked his third penalty in the 44th minute, Connacht finally began to wear down the Enisei challenge.
It was from a fourth MacGinty penalty kick which struck the post, that Connacht's chance came in the 47th minute. Niyi Adeolokun was first to the ball, but under pressure he knocked on under the posts. However, from the resulting five-metre scrum Connacht pushed Enesei off their own ball and Adeolokun got over in the corner following good work from Bundee Aki and George Naoupu.
Five minutes later a scything break from man of the match Aki finally saw John Muldoon score in the corner which gave Connacht a 19-0 lead and some room to breathe. And shortly after the hour mark Darragh Leader bagged Connacht's third try – once again Aki had a hand in the score and sent Leader over on the left after a powerful carry from replacement Sean O'Brien.
The home side deserved a score and it finally came seven minutes from time when replacement prop Andrei Polivalov barrelled over for the first of his two tries. But in between those tries from the Russians, MacGinty picked out Rory Parata on the right with a crossfield kick and Connacht sealed the bonus point win. A job well done.
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