Leaders Clermont escape Grenoble humiliation
French Top 14 leaders Clermont narrowly avoided a humiliating defeat at relegation-threatened Grenoble on Saturday with a 21-20 win secured with a late penalty from replacement fly-half Patricio Fernandez.
The victory gave Clermont a nine-point lead at the top but until Fernandez hit the winning penalty 10 minutes from time, they were staring at defeat against a Grenoble side who have the league’s worst defensive record.
Prop Alexandre Dardet had scored Grenoble’s second try of the game which was converted by Jonathan Wisniewski for a 20-18 lead.
But Argentine fly-half Fernandez, who last week contributed 30 points in the 40-16 rout of Brive, kept his nerve with his first kick of the game after replacing Camille Lopez.
Earlier Morgan Parra and Otar Giorgadze had crossed for Clermont for a 15-7 lead at half-time with South African winger Gio Aplon keeping second-from-bottom Grenoble in touch.
Clermont, unbeaten at home all season, still had to ride out a nervy ending to the game when Wisniewski missed a drop goal which could have secured a shock victory.
“We are happy to take four points tonight. We played a great team in Grenoble but we already knew this before kick off,” said Clermont coach Franck Azema.
Defending champions Racing 92 scored two tries in the last eight minutes to beat fellow title hopefuls Montpellier 21-9 in a drab affair in Paris.
Playing without injured All Blacks legend Dan Carter, Racing were locked at 9-9 until the 72nd minute with Johannes Goosen and Ben Botica exchanging three penalties apiece.
But Henri Chavancy, who has been at Racing since he was 11, blasted through three tackles to score with fellow academy graduate Xavier Chauveau adding a second try three minutes from time.
Toulouse also left it late to secure a 16-15 win over Castres at their Stade Ernest-Wallon home.
Missing six of their first-choice squad who are away on international duty with France, Toulouse needed a penalty two minutes from time by Samuel Marquesto steal the win.
Rory Kockott kicked five penalties for Castres but his miss from just 22 metres in front of the posts with five minutes left proved costly.
Bordeaux ran in four tries in an impressive 37-19 win over 2015 champions Stade Francais.
Most of the damage was done in the first half when they stretched to a 27-7 lead with tries from New Zealand No8 Hugh Chalmers, hooker and skipper Clement Maynadier and centre Julien Rey.
Scrum-half Yann Lesgourgues added a second-half try while Kiwi fly-half Simon Hickey kicked a personal haul of 17 points.
Stade, who scored three tries of their own through Hugo Bonneval, Jeremy Sinzelle and Nayacalevu Waisea, remain down in ninth place but just three points off the play-off spots.
Struggling Lyon will look to their Toulon old boys to stun the big-spending, three-time European champions when they clash on Sunday.
In their ranks, Lyon can boast star fly-half Frederic Michalak, full-back Delon Armitage, centre Theo Belan, flanker Virgile Bruni and veteran prop Alexandre Menini, all of whom are former Toulon players.
Even coach Pierre Mignoni has Toulon in the blood — he is Toulon-born and was a former player and backs coach with his hometown team.
Michalak, now 34 and with 77 French caps in his collection, has played in seven matches this season after ending a four-year spell with Toulon to play for the promoted club.
“He brings the experience we were missing at fly-half,” said Lyon skipper Julien Puricelli.
Former England international Armitage played 72 times for Toulon after joining from London Irish in 2012. After four years with Toulon, he too left for Lyon in the summer.