Diss 13-16 Chiswick

Sam Hallett's last minute penalty sent Chiswick into London One as they overcame Diss in the most dramatic of circumstances.

Chiswick had led 13-8 with minutes remaining thanks to a try from Dan Godfrey and the boot of Hallett.

But Diss came back to level with a try in the corner but with extra time looming the kicker slotted a penalty to send the Dukes Meadow side into raptures.

Diss made the brighter start attacked up the middle, using their forward strength to progress, and after five minutes they gained a penalty in front of the posts and went three points ahead.

With most of the early possession, Diss tried hard to spread the ball across the pitch, but the Chiswick mid-field pair, Jon Gibson and Dan Godfrey, were tigerish in their tackles, and with the formidable support of flanker Riki Darroch and backs Tom Steer, Dan Sutherland and Joe Grindle, the home team lost ground nearly every time as their passes went further and further backwards.

Celebrate: Chiswick start the party

After twelve minutes, Chiswick were beginning to come more into the game, with Simon Hallett and Jon Joyce probing the home defence, and when they gained a penalty twenty metres in from the right touch-line, Hallett levelled the score with a good kick against the wind.

Matt Pickering took the low kick-off well to start another Chiswick attack. Diss got the ball back eventually, but then made the mistake of kicking long.

Meat and drink for Grindle, who brought Sutherland into an attack, carried on by the forwards, and ending with a glorious try, Hallett breaking the home line and putting Godfrey in close to the posts. Hallett slotted the kick, and Chiswick were deservedly ahead.

With the Chiswick pack coming to terms with the home forwards in the scrums, it was only in the lineouts where Diss stayed on top. Their tackling remained solid, however, and few openings appeared on either side.

Diss pressure finally told, when a Chiswick forward got yellow-carded for lying on the wrong side: Diss opted for a scrum, and the disorganised Chiswick pack was pushed back and wheeled, allowing Diss to score a try, which they could not convert, in the right corner.

Half-time arrived with no further score, and the momentum appeared to be with Chiswick.

The Chiswick support play was immense, and director of rugby Adrian Hoile could feel proud of the 100 per cent effort being put in by the team he had built up during the season, with the fond memory of previous coach Rocky Skinner helping to spur them all on.

The home yellow card was followed by a successful penalty kick by Hallett, and Chiswick remained five points ahead until the epic last five minutes. Diss did have one good break down the left wing, and it required an accurate tackle by Grindle to prevent a certain try.

With time running out Diss managed a good break out from their own half, and set up camp in the Chiswick 22.

Three times their pack got over the Chiswick line; twice they were held up, but the third attempt was successful. The try was wide out, however, and the kicker nervously pulled the ball well left of the posts.

With extra time looming, Adrian Hoile was reluctant to put the Chiswick subs on, but it proved unnecessary, as Joyce brilliantly caught the Chiswick kick-off, and Chiswick rampaged down-field.

Diss were penalised and Hallett waited for silence, and then bisected the posts, to complete a fantastic personal performance and send the Chiswick supporters into raptures of delight as a new vista beckoned.

Chiswick team: Chraplywyj, Dibble, Shattock, Joyce, Pickering, Adams, Darroch, Leslie-Miller, Vannini, Hallett, Steer, Gibson, Godfrey, Sutherland, Grindle; Lowe, Cooper, Poon