Summary

  • Premiership Rugby final: FT Bath 23-21 Leicester

  • Bath win first title since 1996, three years after finishing bottom of Premiership

  • Van Poortvliet try gives Tigers early lead

  • Two Russell penalties and Du Toit try give Bath edge at break

  • Ojomoh scores from Russell interception to extend Bath's lead

  • Kata try gives Leicester hope before Cole sin-binned for Tigers

  • Russell penalty edges Bath further clear

  • Tigers' Ilione scores to set up grandstand finish

  • Bath complete treble this season after winning Premiership Rugby Cup and European Challenge Cup

  1. converted try

    CONVERTED TRY: Bath 20-14 Leicesterpublished at 68 mins

    Kata, con Pollard

    Tigers are camped on the line, wave after wave of pressure has been repelled. The Tigers pick up a penalty advantage, but they won't need it... Solomone Kata picks up and drives over from close range and the try is awarded after a TMO look at the grounding.

    Handre Pollard adds the extras from the left of the sticks and all of a sudden we have a six-point game.

  2. Postpublished at 65 mins

    Bath 20-7 Leicester

    Ollie Hassell-Collins had the chance to tee-up a try for the Tigers as he burst into space on the right after intercepting a pass, but opted to pass to the right wing, instead of back inside where there was more room, and the Bath defence recover.

    The Tigers fans smell blood here, they are only 13 points behind...

  3. 'Leicester are never going to win'published at 16:38 British Summer Time 14 June

    Bath 20-7 Leicester

    Matt Dawson
    Former England scrum-half on BBC Radio 5 Live

    Do Leicester actually think they are going to win this game by setting up slow rucks and box kicking? It's a little bit like watching England about three or four years ago.

    They are never going to win the game.

  4. Another Tigers curtain Colepublished at 64 mins

    Bath 20-7 Leicester

    Dan Cole gets his curtain call from Tigers chief Michael Cheika, sent on with 17 minutes or so to play.

    Ben Youngs and Cole, on the Twickenham grass for one final time.

    Enjoy it.

  5. 'The ball rolls forward'published at 16:35 British Summer Time 14 June

    Bath 20-7 Leicester

    Martin Haag
    Ex-Bath forward on BBC Radio Bristol

    I actually do think from the second angle that we saw on the big screen that it just rolls forward and because it rolls forward he doesn't have it under control which is why they've given it as a knock-on.

  6. Disallowed trypublished at 61 mins

    Bath 20-7 Leicester

    Guy Pepper scores a disallowed try for BathImage source, PA Media

    Leicester look very tired.

    Guy Pepper, does not look tired. He looks strong, after some fine work under a kick from Will Muir, Pepper picks up the ball on the left flank and stiff arms his man before holding off another challenge and diving to the line to touch down.

    The TMO wants another look though, was there a knock-on from Muir? There was, they say.

    Boos from the Bath fans. One of the most determined finishes in this stadium's long history has been chalked off.

    Leicester are somehow still in this, just, barely.

  7. 'More pace needed from Tigers'published at 16:29 British Summer Time 14 June

    Bath 20-7 Leicester

    Tom Varndell
    Former England and Leicester wing on BBC Radio Leicester

    Leicester have the ball in hand and other than the try they've started this second half a lot better than they finished the first half.

    But if they are to break down this Bath defence then there needs to be more pace and speed at these breakdowns. The clear-out has been very ordinary so far.

    They are giving Bath opportunities to slow down their ball.

  8. Postpublished at 57 mins

    Bath 20-7 Leicester

    Bath are playing with a little more vim and vigour when they get the ball, Finn Russell launching a teasing kick forward into space and then Freddie Steward's clearance kick on the line being charged down by Ted Hill, only for the ball to roll dead.

    Tigers look the more tired, it must be said.

  9. Postpublished at 55 mins

    Bath 20-7 Leicester

    Leicester have shown some of the best handling of the game in the past few moments, they know they'll need two tries, at least, to stand a chance of winning, and the best way to do that is to get the ball into the hands of their play-makers.

    Bath are 25 minutes away from their first title in 29 years...

    Ben Youngs gets a huge reception from all four sides of the ground as he comes off the bench for Tigers. His final appearance, and it comes at HQ. Jack van Poortvliet is the one to take a seat.

  10. get involved

    Get Involvedpublished at 16:24 British Summer Time 14 June

    #bbcrugby, via WhatsApp on 03301231826 or text 81111 (UK only, standard message rates apply)

    That pass to Ojomoh was a country mile forward, at least Karl Dickson is being rubbish for both teams.

    Gary

    Why on earth did Russell make that pass, rather than just scoring the try himself?

    Ian, West London

    I'm neutral, but that Russell pass to Ojomoh looked slightly forward to me. Remiss of them not to even check it.

    Nick, London

  11. 'A crucial try'published at 16:22 British Summer Time 14 June

    Bath 20-7 Leicester

    Martin Haag
    Ex-Bath forward on BBC Radio Bristol

    Finn Russell was eyeing that up, he knew Handre Pollard didn't have much around him, he was probably going to go out the back.

    He gambled and what a brilliant gamble it was. He never had the pace unfortunately to get there but Max Ojomoh was there following up which was actually a great bit of play.

    That's a massive score because Leicester were on the front foot, they were attacking in Bath's half.

    That's a crucial try.

  12. 'That's what 80k people have come to see'published at 16:21 British Summer Time 14 June

    Bath 20-7 Leicester

    Matt Dawson
    Former England scrum-half on BBC Radio 5 Live

    That is Finn Russell right there.

    Taking a gamble on the read but a Finn Russell gamble is not like any other normal gamble.

    He was sliding over at best but then to open his left shoulder and hook a spin pass to Max Ojomoh to get under the sticks.

    I mean, come on. That's what 80,000 have come to see.

  13. try

    CONVERTED TRY: Bath 20-7 Leicesterpublished at 50 mins

    Ojomoh, con Russell

    Max Ojomoh scores for BathImage source, Rex Features

    Joe Cokanasiga gets his hands right when it mattered to corral a high diagonal from Handre Pollard five metres from his own line.

    It's the Tigers on the front foot in the second half but .... BATH BREAK AWAY TO SCORE...

    Finn Russell intercepts a Pollard pass and blazes away into clear space, he decides to launch the ball across to Max Ojomoh to cross under the posts, which might have given his DoR kittens as it risked a forward pass or a knock-on, but Ojomoh catches cleanly and gives Russell an easier conversion.

    Daylight for Bath.

  14. Postpublished at 46 mins

    Bath 13-7 Leicester

    Rather bitty stuff after the resumption as this time Bath win a penalty at the breakdown and then a lineout near the Tigers 22.

    Another whistle from Karl Dickson brings the play back after Joe Cokanasiga fails to control a Miles Reid pass cleanly, not for the first time today.

  15. 'Bath not far away from their groove'published at 16:13 British Summer Time 14 June

    Bath 13-7 Leicester

    Brian O'Driscoll
    Former Ireland captain on TNT Sport

    The big thing here is that Tigers have defended pretty much the last 15 minutes, there are going to be tired bodies.

    We always talk about benches and how important that is, but Bath are just beginning to get into it and you feel like they are not far away from their groove.

    We saw last week that they struggled in the first half against Bristol, and it was a completely different performance in the second half.

  16. Missed penaltypublished at 44 mins

    Bath 13-7 Leicester

    Handre Pollard misses a penalty for LeicesterImage source, PA Media

    Similar start to the second half as we saw in the first, Jack van Poortvliet launching a fine kick, the Tigers showing some positivity and forcing an infringement.

    Handre Pollard has the chance to halve the deficit with a kick from 10 metres inside the Bath half, but hooks it narrowly wide of the left post.

    Big opportunity goes begging. They haven't looked like adding to their opening try so kicking points would have been helpful.

  17. 'A Bath score could put the game beyond Tigers'published at 16:11 British Summer Time 14 June

    Bath 13-7 Leicester

    Martin Haag
    Ex-Bath forward on BBC Radio Bristol

    If Bath come out of the blocks like they did against Bristol last week in the second half and get another score then I think the game is beyond Leicester.

    So the first five or 10 minutes of this could determine the rest of this game.

    Leicester are hanging in there but they are looking a little jaded. They're having to do a lot of tackles and a lot of defending.

  18. 'Bath the league's best team in the later stages this season'published at 16:09 British Summer Time 14 June

    Bath 13-7 Leicester

    Sophie Hurcom
    BBC Sport at Allianz Stadium Twickenham

    There isn't much in the scoreline but Bath have gone in at half-time plenty of times this season with just a few points between them and turned the screw in the second half and steamrolled their opposition.

    They have scored more points and conceded the fewest of any Premiership team during the final 20 minutes of the 18 regular season games this campaign as their bench players start to rotate in.

    Just a month ago at the Rec when these two sides met, there was just four points in it at the break but Bath went on to score four unopposed tries in the second 40 minutes as Tigers had nothing in reply.

    Leicester are still very much in this final but they are going to be well aware of the challenge that might be coming in the later stages of this match.

  19. Kick-offpublished at 41 mins

    Bath 13-7 Leicester

    Finn Russell had the final touch of the first half and he has the first of the second, kicking to the Tigers backline to get us under way.

    We're 40 minutes away from knowing who will be the 2024-25 Premiership Champions.

    Don't go anywhere...

  20. Glimpse into the future...published at 16:08 British Summer Time 14 June

    HT: Bath 13-7 Leicester

    Say what you like about rugby union, many do, but you have to love the way the game embraces the next generation... we have youth players from a host of clubs walking around the perimeter of the pitch in their club colours and waving flags as the crowd cheer them on.

    How many of the 46 players in action today might have carried out that same thrilling task at a showpiece final in years gone by?

    How many of today's parade will be back here in boots in years to come?