Glasgow battle past Bulls to reach quarter-finals

Glasgow will host Toulon in the Champions Cup last eight
- Published
Champions Cup
Glasgow Warriors (12) 25
Tries: Williamson, Dempsey, Schickerling, McDowall Cons: Lancaster Pens: Hastings
Bulls (14) 21
Tries: Grobbelaar, Van Staden Cons: Kriel Pens: Pollard 3
Glasgow Warriors battled past Bulls to reach the Champions Cup quarter-finals in an attritional and thrilling scrap in the rain and wind at Scotstoun.
Franco Smith's side will face Toulon at Scotstoun next Saturday in their first home quarter-final in this competition.
Max Williamson and Jack Dempsey scored first-half tries, with Patrick Schickerling and Stafford McDowall also crossing for the hosts after the break.
The visitors led 14-12 at half-time as a stiff breeze at their backs helped Bulls dominated territory, with Johan Grobbelaar scoring a try and Handre Pollard booting three penalties.
When the sides turned around, Glasgow's greater ambition triumphed - just.
Schickerling's try was pivotal, coming when the majority of Scotstoun thought they should have taken an easy three points from a penalty.
Instead, they tapped and went. Risk was rewarded.
Their fourth came soon after from McDowall. The Warriors were eight points ahead with eight minutes left, but Marco van Staden's converted score a few minutes from the end set up a dramatic end.
The last act fell to Adam Hastings with a penalty as the clock was running out. He banged it over in front of the posts and a richly deserved four-point win was secured.
Scotstoun wasn't hit by the worst excesses of Storm Dave, but it was hardly pleasant out there either. The wind swept, the rain hit and the game was a mighty battle.
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Bulls backed their way into the last 16, qualifying for the knockouts despite losing three of their group matches, conceding a half century to Northampton and 61 points to Bristol.
They picked hybrid teams for those contests. Here, they were mob-handed with 14 Springboks in their party, an amount of grunt which they unleashed on their hosts from early on, their reward coming from Pollard's boot.
The visitors were in Glasgow with a conservative gameplan, all power and phases and pressure. Glasgow tried to play, as is their custom. To say it was a clash of styles was putting it mildly.
Glasgow did not have territory against the wind. They had a couple of decent moments just after the Pollard penalty - one of them ending when Matt Fagerson ran on to a pass in the Bulls 22 only for it go forward off his face, the other when they messed up a lineout.
The third time was brilliant, though. Dan Lancaster slipped the brilliant McDowall into a gap and the centre, in the team ahead of Huw Jones, galloped away.
Bulls scrambled but Glasgow were relentless. Matt Fagerson kept things moving, he linked with George Horne and even though he was tackled close to the posts - and clearly hurt - he popped it to Williamson who smashed over.
Lancaster converted; 7-3 Glasgow. That soon became 8-7 to the South Africans when their muscle got its reward after multiple phases - hooker Grobbelaar going over in the corner.
Pollard put his side back in the lead on the half-hour mark, but Glasgow responded quickly.
They had lost Horne to injury by then, but their gamble in going for touch with a penalty rather than posts paid off. Dempsey got the score in the end. No conversion, but they were a point in front again.
That didn't last. Pollard, from distance, kicked a third penalty just before the break. That was the good news for Bulls. The bad news was that they lost Kurt-Lee Arendse at half-time, not that this was a night for world-class wingers.
With the benefit of the wind in their favour, Glasgow started to get on top. Their risky strategy of turning down shots at goal off Bulls' indiscretions and going for touch instead was a policy they never deviated from, even when it looked decidedly unwise.
Early in the new half they had a kickable penalty, went for touch and lost the lineout.
They had another on 55 minutes - even closer this time - but tapped it instead of kicking it. Now they executed, Shickerling barging his way over for another unconverted score. A three-point game in Glasgow's favour.
McDowall's try in the 72nd minute looked like settling it, but back came the Bulls with that score from Van Staden.
Scotstoun held its breath, but then Hastings, with the last kick, sent the place into raptures. Glasgow march on, in style and substance.
Line-ups
Glasgow Warriors: McKay, Steyn, McDowall, Tuipulotu, Smith, Lancaster, Horne; Schickerling, Hiddleston, Z Fagerson, Williamson, Samuel, M Fagerson, Darge, Dempsey.
Replacements: Stephen, Bhatti, Talakai, Oguntibeju, Ferrie, Fraser, Afshar, Hastings.
Bulls: Kriel, Jooste, Moodie, Vorster, Arendse, Pollard, Papier; Steenekamp, Grobbelaar, Klopper, Vermaak, Nortje, Coetzee, Louw, Hanekom.
Replacements: Van Staden, Wessels, Smith, Wiese, Rudolph, Burger, Gans, Le Roux