Exeter fight back to stun Bath and reach Prem final

Henry Slade clenches his fist and has his mouth open in celebrationImage source, Shutterstock
Image caption,

Exeter Chiefs have reached their first Prem final since 2021

BySophie Hurcom
BBC Sport England at the Recreation Ground
  • Published

The Prem

Bath (26) 26

Tries: Obano, Du Toit, Cokanasiga, Arundell Cons: Carreras 3

Exeter (10) 27

Tries: Tshiunza, Hammersley, Fisilau, Burger Cons: Slade 2 Pens: Skinner

Exeter Chiefs produced a sublime second-half turnaround to stun defending champions Bath 27-26 at the Recreation Ground and reach their first Prem final since 2021.

The Chiefs became just the second side in the past decade to win a semi-final away from home and will go to the Allianz Stadium next Saturday for the seventh time in their history to face Northampton Saints for the title.

Exeter were 26-10 down at the break but scored 17 unanswered points in the second half as Ben Hammersley, Greg Fisilau and Ethan Burger all crossed as Bath fell apart, and Joe Cokanasiga was sent to the sin-bin.

Bath had a chance to win the match in the closing minutes and went through more than 40 phases right in front of Exeter's tryline, but rather than go for a drop-goal they were ultimately held up over the line with their season coming to an abrupt end.

Exeter's victory caps an impressive campaign for Rob Baxter's side, who finished ninth in the 2024-25 season for their worst finish in the league.

They spent a summer rebuilding and now go to London in search of a third Prem title and a return to their trophy-laden glory days.

For Bath there are major questions of what if as the dream of a second consecutive title and third Prem final slipped through their fingers.

Josh Bayliss (left) walks with his head down as Exeter players in the background celebrate and the referee (right) holds the whistle to his mouthImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Bath were looking to reach their third straight Prem final and win their second consecutive title

Exeter confidently beat Bath just a few weeks ago at Sandy Park and they could have scored first in the semi-final if a pass to Cameron Ridl had not been deemed forward shortly after the kick-off.

Bath had a chance of their own but Santiago Carreras, in for the injured Finn Russell at fly-half, threw the ball straight to Ridl to intercept in their first real attack on the Exeter line.

Much like in the second half, a turning point came when Henry Slade was shown a yellow for thoughtlessly slapping the ball out of Bath scrum-half Ben Spencer's hands. Bath capitalised from the restart as Beno Obano barrelled over from a few metres out.

While Harvey Skinner's penalty put Exeter on the scoreboard, Thomas du Toit added Bath's second try on his final appearance at the Rec before leaving the club in the summer, powering over under the weight of three Exeter tacklers.

Slade returned and got Exeter over the line, but this time the try was denied for Paul Brown-Bampoe's foot hitting touch seconds before.

But there was no denying Christ Tshiunza, who produced a moment of individual brilliance as the forward sidestepped Tom de Glanville, raced into space, and dived over to make it 14-10.

Under Johann van Graan, Bath have grown accustomed to big occasions such as this and they reestablished control instantly, as Ollie Lawrence broke through and spun the ball wide to Cokanasiga and he slid into the corner.

Henry Arundell then clinched Bath's fourth try to make it 26-10, collecting a Ben Spencer kick to the corner and dabbing down.

Ethan Burger (right) skips past Tom Dunn's tackle on the floor Image source, Shutterstock
Image caption,

Ethan Burger scored the Exeter try that completed a stunning turnaround against Bath at the Recreation Ground

Exeter needed fresh impetus and Baxter brought on a whole new front row in the opening minutes of the second half. It renewed the visitors' momentum and turned the tide their way.

Winger Hammersley, on for the injured Ridl before the break, drifted through a gap to run under the posts for a crucial score.

Exeter were growing in confidence and Skinner then threw a dummy to ghost past two Bath players and make ground, with Fisilau getting the ball down to bring them within four points again.

Bath finally made changes of their own but it seemed too late. The mood firmly turned inside the Rec when Cokanasiga was shown a yellow card for a deliberate knock-on with 64 minutes on the clock and Exeter continued to ramp up the pressure.

Burger capped the turnaround, scoring from close range, and although Slade missed his second conversion, Exeter led by a point, their first lead of the game.

Still Bath had one final roll of the dice in the closing minutes, and as they crept in front of the Exeter posts, with Carreras sat in the pocket, ready for a drop-goal attempt, the team stuck with their usually reliable forwards and chose to continue through the phases, only to get held up at the death.

'A special group of lads' - reaction

Bath head of rugby Johann van Graan told BBC Radio Bristol:

"In minutes 40 to 60 [the game was lost]. We had opportunities, we couldn't get out of our half. We had few opportunities out there in the first half when we were leading 26-10, but ultimately Exeter came out one point on top.

"Sport is amazing - we score at the end and it's a totally different story, but it isn't. So, from my side, well done to Exeter.

"We didn't finish our opportunities and ultimately you only get so many opportunities in a semi-final and Exeter took theirs and we didn't.

"Both play-off games were incredible, an advert for the Prem, but from our side it's not a nice way to lose it."

Exeter director of rugby Rob Baxter told BBC Radio Devon:

"I still don't know how we've come up with it, if I'm honest. You watch it, you just go, 'How are we holding them out. This feels inevitable that they'll squeeze over,' but we've done it, the whistle's gone and we're in a final.

"They're a special group of lads and I'm so proud I've got one more week with them as a whole group.

"My overriding emotion is that I'm so pleased that the lads that are leaving have the chance to be part of a good Exeter Chiefs season."

Bath: De Glanville; Cokanasiga, Lawrence, Ojomoh, Arundell; Spencer (c), Carreras; Obano, Dunn, Du Toit Roux, Ewels, Bayliss, Underhill, Barbeary.

Replacements: Tuipulotu, Van Wyk, Sela, Molony, Hill, Van der Linde, Redpath, Reid.

Sin-bin: Cokanasiga (64 mins)

Exeter: Woodburn; Brown-Bampoe, Slade, Ikitau, Ridl; Skinner, Varney; Sio, Norey, Iosefa-Scott, Jenkins (c), Zambonin, Hooper, Tshiunza, Fisilau.

Replacements: Dweba, Burger, Tchumbadze, Tuima, Vintcent, Cairns, Wimbush, Hammersley.

Sin-bin: Slade (10).

Referee: Christophe Ridley.