Saracens ease past Glasgow to set up Munster showdown

Defending champions will travel to the Aviva in the semi-finals after routing the Warriors

Stuart Hogg manages to prevent Chris Ashton from touching down during Saracens’ comfortable Champions Cup win over Glasgow. Photograph: Matthew Lewis/Getty
Stuart Hogg manages to prevent Chris Ashton from touching down during Saracens’ comfortable Champions Cup win over Glasgow. Photograph: Matthew Lewis/Getty

Saracens 38 Glasgow Warriors 15

Saracens will face Munster in the semi-finals of the Champions Cup after bringing Glasgow's European adventure to a halt with a conclusive 38-13 victory at Allianz Park.

Two tries from Chris Ashton and one apiece by Marcelo Bosch and Brad Barritt kept the champions on course for a successful title defence, while man of the match Owen Farrell contributed four penalties and three conversions.

Ashton advanced and damaged his British and Irish prospects in the space of 18 minutes, producing a magnificent finish only to then expose his fragile defence by waving over wing Lee Jones.

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Saracens led 14-3 at the interval and apart from a spell early in the second half when Glasgow threatened a fightback after crossing through Jones, the outcome never looked in doubt.

It was a comprehensive rout of opponents who were appearing in the knockout stage for the first time, delivered in front in an Allianz Park-record crowd of 15,000.

Glasgow contributed 6,000 of that number and the noise and colour generated by the Warriors’ supporters contributed to a fine occasion that never quite ignited on the pitch.

The double winners did not need to be at their best to make a successful sixth consecutive visit to the quarter-finals and they won with fuel left in the tank, their late flurry inspired by the arrival of replacement hooker Schalk Brits.

Munster are their next European assignment and in three weeks’ time they must visit the Aviva Stadium, the setting for Wasps’ collapse before Leinster on Saturday.

Glasgow were forced to make two try-saving tackles at the corner flags inside the opening five minutes after Saracens plundered an early turnover and counter-attacked with great precision.

First Jones kept out Ashton and then Stuart Hogg denied Sean Maitland, although on the second attempt the champions might have been better served had Alex Goode looked inside to Richard Wigglesworth for the final pass.

Having weathered the initial onslaught, Glasgow settled and began to make an impression on the home defence for the first time only to trail to three Farrell penalties.

Not for the first time Saracens were stripped of the ball, Wigglesworth being dispossessed by opposite number Henry Pyrgos to bring one promising attack to a close, but on the half hour mark the visiting whitewash was breached.

Waves of runners made dents before Billy Vunipola made a bulldozing run that created an opportunity that still needed plenty of finishing.

Barritt sucked in two defenders and slipped a superb ball out of the tackle to Ashton, who drove forwards before rolling over the line as despairing Glasgow sought to halt his charge.

The race to the whitewash was on when space was created for a second Ashton try only for Hogg to nudge the wing into touch, the Lions full-back coming to the rescue once more.

Openside Jackson Wray had an eventful start to the second half, preventing Finn Russell from capitalising on an opportunist hack downfield and then flattening Jones under the high ball with a challenge that was on the cusp of illegality.

Saracens are famed for their ‘wolfpack’ defence, but it was exposed in the 49th minutes as Jones took revenge for the hit from Wray by scoring a soft try in the corner.

Russell lofted a kick into the left corner and Jones pounced, catching the ball and then evading feeble grabs from Goode and Ashton to touch down.

The stage was set for a Glasgow comeback, but instead they were breached for a second time 10 minutes later after facing a period of mounting pressure that ended with some lame tackling of their own.

A clearance reached only as far as Ashton and following runs from Vunipola and Barritt, the ball was fed to Bosch who stepped his way past the white shirts and over.

Barritt touched down as the beneficiary of a superb offload from Schalk Brits and Ashton grabbed his second before flanker Ryan Wilson scored a consolation in an action-packed final 10 minutes.