Gallagher Premiership: Joe Simmonds kicks Exeter Chiefs to thrilling win at Northampton

Exeter Chiefs move into fourth place in the Gallagher Premiership table after 18 rounds of matches; the Chiefs host Sale Sharks next Sunday afternoon in Round 19 with Northampton Saints travelling to Gloucester Rugby on Saturday

Image: Exeter Chiefs' fly-half Joe Simmonds was accurate off the kicking tee and rewarded his side

Joe Simmonds' last-minute penalty ensured Exeter Chiefs beat Northampton Saints 34-31 in a thrilling match at Franklin's Gardens to move into a Gallagher Premiership play-off spot.

Simmonds' exemplary goal-kicking was a feature of the match but once again Saints will rue their inability to finish games off, as they looked in control when they led 28-17.

However, a yellow card for scrum-half Alex Mitchell ultimately proved decisive.

Josh Hodge, Jack Yeandle, Dave Ewers and Olly Woodburn scored Exeter's tries, with Simmonds kicking two penalties and four conversions.

Northampton' tries came from Matt Proctor, Tom Collins and Juarno Augustus. James Grayson kicked three penalties and two conversions with Piers Francis adding a penalty.

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Gallagher Premiership - Round 18 results

Bristol Bears 31-19 Wasps
Worcester Warriors 21-29 Harlequins
Sale Sharks 27-27 London Irish
Leicester Tigers 35-23 Gloucester Rugby
Newcastle Falcons 25-30 Bath Rugby
Northampton Saints 31-34 Exeter Chiefs

Exeter looked to have taken an eighth-minute lead when Tom O'Flaherty intercepted a pass from Fraser Dingwall.

O'Flaherty then raced 75 metres to touchdown but TMO replays ruled out the try for an earlier obstruction by Sam Maunder on Alex Coles.

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Grayson kicked the resulting penalty but this was soon nullified by one from Simmonds.

Saints full-back George Furbank then made his second break of the game to put the Exeter defence on the back foot but, with the line beckoning, Proctor was unable to gather the scoring pass.

However, the hosts were able to keep up the pressure and a second penalty from Grayson gave them a 6-3 lead at the end of an evenly-contested first quarter.

Image: Exeter Chiefs move up into fourth position in the Gallagher Premiership table

Exeter were first on the try-scoring sheet when they moved the ball neatly along their three-quarter line to put Hodge in the clear and the full-back had an unopposed 45 metre run to the line.

Simmonds nailed the touchline conversion before Saints scored their opening try.

A sharp break from Mitchell was the catalyst with Augustus up in support to send Proctor over.

Minutes later, the Chiefs were back in front when, after a succession of forward drives, Ewers rumbled over with the conversion from Simmonds giving them a 17-13 interval lead.

Within a minute of the restart, Saints regained the lead when Dingwall sailed past Simmonds to provide Collins with an easy run-in. Grayson converted before adding a simple penalty.

Exeter's miserable start to the second half continued when they soon conceded a third try after a quickly-taken tap-penalty saw Augustus cross.

Grayson missed a straightforward conversion but Saints dominated the third quarter to lead 28-17 at the end.

Chiefs' Santiago Grondona appeared to have brought his side back into contention when he forced his way over, but after a lengthy delay for TMO replays, the No 8 was adjudged to have been held up.

However, the visitors were spurred on when first their opponents lost Mitchell to a yellow card for a deliberate knock-on, before Yeandle reduced the arrears with a close-range try.

Mitchell was still absent when Exeter scored their bonus-point try, as Woodburn collected a superbly judged cross-field kick from Simmonds. The outside-half then knocked over another excellent touchline conversion.

Mitchell returned in time to see Francis bring the scores level with a long-range penalty, but 14 points had been conceded in the scrum-half's absence and Exeter made that period crucial when Simmonds landed the match-winner.

Exeter Chiefs' head coach Ali Hepher said: "We've lost four games this season with very late scores so we are owed a few. It was a day for attacks with lots of breaks and in the end our spirit came through.

"It's hugely exciting to come away at this time of year with a bunch of youngsters and get a big win for us.

"We probably should have had a few more scores in that first half but we didn't hold on to the ball for long enough," he added.

"Then in the early part of the second half, we didn't defend well enough. We brought on the bench to shore up the scrums and our attacking pressure forced the yellow card, which proved crucial."

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