Harlequins 30-23 Leicester Tigers, Aviva Premiership final
Quins clinch maiden Premiership title
May 26, 2012
Date/Time: May 26, 2012, 15:00 local, 14:00 GMT
Venue: Twickenham Stadium, London
Harlequins 30 - 23 Leicester Tigers
Attendance: 81779  Half-time: 14 - 13
Tries: Robshaw, Williams
Cons: Evans
Pens: Evans 6
Tries: Allen, Mafi
Cons: Ford 2
Pens: Ford 3
Quins edge out Tigers for maiden Premiership title
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Features: Each to his own
Features: Behind the lens
Players/Officials: Danny Care | Chris Robshaw | Tom Williams
Tournaments/Tours: Aviva Premiership

Harlequins produced a display brimming with passion to defeat Leicester Tigers 30-23 in the Aviva Premiership final at Twickenham on Saturday, becoming English champions for the first time in their history.

Story of the Game

  • Man of the Match: Chris Robshaw has had a season for the ages. The Harlequins skipper has been in imperious form for club and country and capped it all off with the winning try at Twickenham. A great ambassador for Quins and England.
  • Key Moment: Robshaw's final intervention ensured that history repeated itself for the Tigers. Twelve months ago they battered away at Saracens in vain during the dying seconds, and did the same this time around. Many doubted Quins' temperament, but they proved their class at the death.
  • Hero of the game: Quins fly-half Nick Evans picked up his first club honour and it was just reward for a player who has made the Premiership a better place since his arrival from New Zealand.
  • Villain of the game: Thomas Waldrom's sin-binning just before the break gave Harlequins added belief at a crucial time. Evans kept the scoreboard ticking over during the No.8's absence as Leicester battled to cover their loss.
  • Talking Point: Can England find room for Joe Marler? The Quins prop was superb once again and took Leicester on in the scrum to great effect. He's a spiky character and not to everyone's taste, but his time seems to have arrived.
  • Play of the game: Tom Williams' try showed Quins at their very best. With Evans pulling the strings they moved the ball quickly and with great precision, creating a sliver of space out wide for their winger to get the ball rolling. Top class.

Quins came to the party by refusing to abandon their free-flowing style, and such adventure was rewarded as skipper Chris Robshaw lifted the trophy.

Tries in each half by wing Tom Williams and Robshaw - accompanied by 20 points from fly-half Nick Evans' trusty right boot - saw Quins become the sixth different club to be crowned Premiership champions after Newcastle, Leicester, Wasps, Sale and Saracens.

This time three years ago Quins were reeling from Bloodgate fall-out, a despicable cheating episode during a Heineken Cup quarter-final against Irish heavyweights Leinster.

It was unquestionably English professional rugby's most unsavoury episode, but Quins - led by their inspirational Irish rugby director Conor O'Shea - have now turned things around spectacularly.

Evans kicked six penalties and a conversion, eclipsing his 19-year-old opposite number George Ford, whose 13-point haul included conversions of both Leicester tries by flanker Steve Mafi and centre Anthony Allen.

Leicester scored 10 unanswered points during the final quarter, but Quins had already done enough to consign the Tigers to their fifth defeat in eight successive Premiership final appearances. It was the perfect send-off for England captain Robshaw and many of his Quins colleagues, who will depart next week on a three-Test tour to South Africa.

Robshaw deservedly took the Man of the Match honours, and it was hard to question whether there has been a more influential player on the English rugby stage this season. Leicester had their moments during a pulsating final, but Quins ultimately had too much ammunition during critical areas of the contest, and Tigers could not respond at the death on farewell appearances for wings Alesana Tuilagi and Horacio Agulla, plus lock George Skivington.

Quins made the early running, taking a second-minute lead when Evans found his range from 40 metres, and there was a vibrancy about their play that kept Leicester's defence occupied.

Evans had a second penalty chance six minutes later. It hit the outside of the post and Tigers escaped but it was only a temporary reprieve. Quins, their confidence undiminished despite the final's high-pressure stakes, continued to attack Leicester with ball in hand, and such adventure was rewarded when Williams pounced after 10 minutes.

Harlequins skipper Chris Robshaw shows his delight with the Premiership trophy, Harlequins v Leicester Tigers, Aviva Premiership Final, Twickenham, England, May 26, 2012
Harlequins skipper Chris Robshaw shows his delight with the Premiership trophy © Getty Images
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Lock George Robson made critical early headway before scrum-half Danny Care and fullback Mike Brown linked superbly, and Williams trotted over for a quality touchdown. Evans' conversion attempt bounced back off the post, but although Leicester replied with a Ford penalty, Quins remained a far more confident team as their exciting brand of rugby matched glorious sunny conditions.

Evans restored Leicester's eight-point advantage through an angled strike from 30 metres, which was cancelled out by Ford five minutes later, although not before he had sent a longer kick well wide. Despite stamina-sapping heat, there was no let-up in the tempo Quins looked to put on proceedings, but they were architects of their own downfall nine minutes before the break.

Leicester prop Dan Cole snaffled possession from a lineout and found Mafi in support, who then sprinted 40 metres for an opportunist try that Ford converted. Tigers' 13-11 lead came arguably against the run of play, but an Evans penalty after Tigers No.8 Thomas Waldrom was sin-binned for a technical offence edged Quins one point ahead by the break. Another Evans penalty made it 17-13, and although Leicester enjoyed much more possession than in the game's initial stages, their indiscipline handed the New Zealander a further scoring chance that he gratefully accepted.

Robshaw's close-range score, accompanied by an Evans conversion and later penalty, left Leicester floundering before Allen sprinted over for a try that Ford improved. Ford then kicked a penalty that ensured a nerve-shredding finish, and it became a case of how successfully Quins could close down the clock under growing pressure. A succession of penalties brought the tension to a head, but Quins were able to hold out on their own line for a famous win.

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