Racing Metro 19-9 Edinburgh, Heineken Cup
Racing Metro down Edinburgh
December 8, 2012
Date/Time: Dec 8, 2012, 19:00 local, 18:00 GMT
Venue: Stade Olympique Yves-du-Manoir, Colombes, Paris
Racing Metro 19 - 9 Edinburgh
Half-time: 11 - 6
Tries: Ben Arous, Imhoff
Pens: Barkley 2, Machenaud
Pens: Laidlaw 3
Racing Metro's Juan Imhoff dives in to score a try, Edinburgh v Racing Metro, Heinken Cup, Murrayfield, Edinburgh, Scotland, November 18, 2011
Juan Imhoff scored in the first-half for Racing Metro
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Racing Metro recorded their second win in the Heineken Cup this term thanks to a 19-9 triumph over Edinburgh on Saturday.

Tries from Juan Jose Imhoff and Eddy Ben Arous either side of the interval proved the difference as the Scottish outfit remained winless in the competition. Edinburgh stay bottom of Pool One, with no points to their name, but they restored some pride with the committed performance.

Edinburgh had failed to score a single point in 160 minutes of rugby as they fell to humiliating defeats to Saracens and Munster in the opening rounds of the competition. But it took them just two minutes for them to open their account in Paris as Greig Laidlaw dissected the posts.

A scintillating break from Richie Rees should have led to a first try of the campaign, but the Wales international became isolated and was tackled by Juan Martin Hernandez. Edinburgh continued to dominate the early exchanges, but were unable to turn pressure into points and Racing hit back through the boot of Olly Barkley on 10 minutes.

Michael Bradley's men continued to waste scoring opportunities as Laidlaw fired two penalties in quick succession wide and the big-spending French club punished their Scottish rivals for their lack of killer instinct with the game's opening try. Fabrice Metz made the initial inroads and some slick handling released Imhoff, who danced around Tom Brown to score.

Barkley failed to add the extras, but the try handed his side an unlikely 8-3 lead. Racing were buoyed by their score and came close to grabbing a quick-fire second following a sustained period of pressure, but Edinburgh survived. But they were still unable to take advantage of point-scoring opportunities as another Laidlaw effort fell short before he made some amends with the final kick of the half.

Edinburgh were once again the better side in the opening exchanges following the restart, but they were unable to turn pressure into points. They opted for the corner as they looked to force a try, but lost possession and conceded a penalty as Racing escaped unpunished.

And the Parisians were again quick to punish the visitors. They launched wave after wave of attacks and, although Edinburgh initially survived, it was only a matter of time until Racing broke through. They won the ball from the top of a five-metre lineout and launched a powerful rolling maul that left Edinburgh in disarray before crashing over the try-line with Arous the beneficiary.

Edinburgh responded through the boot of Laidlaw, but they were dealt a blow when Brown was stretchered off after a heavy collision with Juan Pablo Orlandi. Edinburgh refused to thrown in the towel and continued to battle, but Maxime Machenaud put the result beyond doubt with a penalty with just minutes to spare.

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