Nikora nicks it for Connacht
Connacht sealed home semi-final in the Amlin Challenge Cup thanks to more late heroics from Miah Nikora.
Last Updated: 10/04/10 5:36pm
More late heroics from Miah Nikora sealed Connacht a home semi-final in the Amlin Challenge Cup with a 23-20 comeback success over Bourgoin.
Bourgoin thought they had claimed the scalp of the top seeds in the last eight stage for the second season running when Benjamin Boyet converted scum-half John Senio's try to put the French side 20-14 ahead.
But Connacht, aided by a yellow card for Boyet, fought back in style as Nikora nailed his kicks after hard graft from his forwards paid dividends in the last 20 minutes.
The New Zealand replacement fly-half, who stole the show in last week's Magners League triumph over Edinburgh, showed his composure once again by kicking two penalties and a match-winning drop goal at a sun-kissed Galway Sportsground.
Michael Bradley's men faced into a blustery wind in the opening half and Boyet had two early penalty attempts from the 45-metre range which he pushed to the right.
Destructive
Connacht hit the front on the quarter-hour. The destructive George Naoupu bulldozed across the gain-line, Ian Keatley knocked a penalty to touch and experienced lock Michael Swift, with support from Brett Wilkinson, crashed over to the left of the posts.
Keatley landed the conversion but failed to punish France international Olivier Milloud for a scrum offence ten minutes later as his penalty effort drifted away from the target.
Connacht had their tails up but they missed out on a certain try in the 27th minute. Scrum-half Murphy got a favourable bounce as he chased his own kick but, with the Bourgoin rearguard completely stretched, lock Mike McCarthy knocked on with the line in his sights.
The hosts paid the price just three minutes later as Bourgoin shunned a kickable penalty and hooker Tone Kopelani was able to burst clean through the middle of a ruck and dive over in the right corner, with Boyet converting.
A foot in touch robbed Keatley of a try after good work by Niva Ta'auso and captain John Muldoon was also called back for a knock-on as Connacht pressed for their second try.
They did not have long to wait as, five minutes before the break, a wrap-around move involving Kiwi Naoupu in midfield put centre Keith Matthews roaring through a gap and he drew the cover to send Muldoon powering over for a converted score.
Boyet kicked Bourgoin back to 14-10 as half-time approached and although a late, pacy break from full-back Gavin Duffy engineered a penalty for Keatley, his drilled attempt from wide on the right faded in the difficult wind.
Changes
Bourgoin made changes for the second half, the most significant seeing Boyet reverting to full-back and Sebastien Laloo introduced. Indiscipline from Connacht soon allowed Boyet kick the first of two early penalty attempts, making it 14-13.
The wind-backed hosts struggled for territory and Bourgoin took a deserved lead in the 58th minute when Senio spotted a mismatch on the 22, darted through a gap and dotted down despite the best efforts of Duffy.
Boyet converted and the game seemed to be slipping from Connacht's grasp as Keatley missed a penalty from distance.
However, with Sean Cronin, Swift, Muldoon and Johnny O'Connor putting in heroic displays, Connacht rose to the challenge. As Murphy looked to pass left from a ruck in front of the Bourgoin posts, Boyet slapped the ball out of his hands and a yellow card was the only option.
Nikora, on for Keatley, landed the resulting penalty and, after Laloo had missed a drop goal, the Connacht replacement rewarded his forwards with the levelling penalty.
The momentum was clearly with Connacht now and, having missed a drop from further out just two minutes earlier, Nikora was right on the money with his 79th-minute attempt to send the westerners through to the last four of Challenge Cup for the first time since 2005.