The game started with Coast Guard working their way down the field and kicking a penalty. Amherst responded by muscling their way over the line after a nice break in loose play.
Amherst then took an interception which was "knocked forward" about 10 meters and recovered under the posts.
Coast Guard then used their fitness and large forwards to create a break and offload out of the tackle to dot down at half time.
HT Amherst 12 - 10 Coast Guard
In the 2nd half Amherst and Coast Guard traded tries again - Coast guard scoring a nice one off a maul formed from a pick and go near the goal line. Amherst also scored a penalty kick.
Late in the second half Amherst scored another try to widen the gap to 27-17, final score.
Through out the first 50 minutes of the game the penalty count increased at a steady rate with the two sides struggling to grasp the concept of zone entry and maintaining their feet. This resulted in a high penalty count and stop start affair. There needed to be a firm explanation...along with a yellow card...much earlier than 50 minutes in the game. A yellow card was given to a Coast Guard player after a firm warning about breakdown infringements at around 50 minutes. Following the yellow the breakdowns cleaned up fairly well.
I also yellow carded a player for dangerous play, he took a player out in the air following a kick off. The coast guard coaches thought this was harsh seeing that this was the first dangerous tackle of the game. What the coaches failed to realize was what I heard the player say on the way to the kick off "If we're going to lose this game I'm at least going hurt somebody." Now, as a referee, I probably should I have said something when I overheard this - I did not - and the player proceeded to commit dangerous play and be sin binned.
I also struggled with the scrums in this game, they were uniquely unstable, wheeling and skewing every time. I tried again and again to correct this, even penalizing some boring - no improvement. After that game I found out one of the Coast Guard props could not hold his weight in the scrum well at all. After reviewing previous Coast Guard match reports I discovered other referees had a problem as well. As it turns out, despite the Coast Guards very athletic looking front row - they could not hold their weight well. As a referee, I need to learn that looks can be deceiving, there are bad fit props, bad props arent all overweight or too skinny for the job.