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Matchday programme: Bristol Bears vs ASM Clermont Auvergne

In this week's Champions Cup edition, Pat Lam talks about his relationship with the competition, Kyle Sinckler previews Saturday's clash at Ashton Gate, Club Historian Mark Hoskins looks back at Bristol's relationship with the tournament and Toby Fricker gives us an update from inside the camp.

In this week's Champions Cup edition, Pat Lam talks about his relationship with the competition, Kyle Sinckler previews Saturday's clash at Ashton Gate, Club Historian Mark Hoskins looks back at Bristol's relationship with the tournament and Toby Fricker gives us an update from inside the camp.

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Pat Lam is a Champions Cup romantic and he’s not<br />

afraid to admit it.<br />

The <strong>Bears</strong> Director of Rugby, a winner of the coveted trophy as a<br />

player with Northampton Saints in 2000, will rekindle his relationship<br />

with a competition he regards as ‘the ultimate’ when French giants<br />

<strong>ASM</strong> <strong>Clermont</strong> <strong>Auvergne</strong> visit Ashton Gate this weekend.<br />

For <strong>Bristol</strong>, it ends a 12-year absence from Europe’s top table. For the<br />

club’s supporters, who have suffered many long nights of the soul,<br />

it represents a lofty milestone of progress – three years ago, the<br />

club was preparing to face Leinster ‘A’ in the British & Irish Cup. The<br />

tragedy here, will be their absence on Saturday.<br />

For Lam, the Champions Cup has been in the <strong>Bears</strong>’ blueprint from<br />

day one, but their mere presence in the competition is far from the<br />

final destination – the occasion though, is one to relish.<br />

“I didn’t really know much about the European Cup till I came over<br />

here in 1997 when I was playing for Newcastle in the Championship,<br />

so we were trying to get promoted,” said Lam.<br />

“We got promoted but the boycott happened, and I ended up<br />

at Northampton after that and we soon realised that this is the<br />

ultimate and that it’s the closest thing in club rugby to Test rugby.<br />

moment of inspiration.<br />

“We talk about our visions around inspiring our rugby community<br />

to bring rugby success. So, that trophy gave huge inspiration to<br />

<strong>Bristol</strong>ians and people in our community all around the world, but<br />

as we keep saying to the players when we came back, it’s just a<br />

moment. It’s now in the history books, which we can enjoy, but now<br />

it’s all about getting more and more of those moments - whether<br />

that’s trophies, visiting kids, old people’s homes, hospitals [and] so<br />

forth. That’s the club we want to be and what we are, but now we<br />

want more, and it certainly helps guys understand the process. To<br />

get that trophy, it took hard work, and if we want more, it requires<br />

more hard work.”<br />

A new competition format, due to the impact of coronavirus and for<br />

this season only, provides a fresh spin on Europe’s highest honour,<br />

with fewer fixtures and two larger pools of 12, made up of eight clubs<br />

from the Gallagher Premiership, Pro 14 and Top 14. In Lam’s opinion,<br />

the temporary format leaves teams with no second chances.<br />

“It’s intriguing, it’s exciting. It’s like you’re going into finals rugby<br />

straight away because looking at it, with only four out of 12 strong<br />

teams in each pool going through to the quarter finals, I would say,<br />

if you lose a game in the pool stages, in these four rounds, it’s very<br />

unlikely that you’re going to make it through, whereas previously<br />

you could.<br />

pat lam &<br />

the HEINEKEN CUP<br />

“You are playing teams you don’t normally face, and it’s probably<br />

influenced me in my coaching because when I came back to the<br />

Northern Hemisphere with Connacht, the ambition was about being<br />

the best Irish team, but my eyes were set on the Champions Cup.<br />

“We set out as part of our vision that we wanted to be a Heineken<br />

Champions Cup team and then when I came to <strong>Bristol</strong> it was the<br />

same thing. There was talk about just getting into the Premiership,<br />

but I said no. It was the wrong thinking – I wanted the club to be a<br />

Champions Cup side.<br />

“So, it just forces you to be at your best right from round one,<br />

otherwise your chances of winning it are gone.”<br />

For the <strong>Bears</strong>, that means hitting their straps from the first whistle<br />

against a <strong>Clermont</strong> side steeped in European history and pedigree –<br />

and Lam says their opening clash ‘will give a good marker of where<br />

we are and how far we’ve come as a club’.<br />

26 27<br />

“That’s the ambition and the realistic goal we set and everything we<br />

do daily and the standards we set are geared towards that because<br />

it is the ultimate competition to win.”<br />

Lam’s Heineken Cup triumph came on a wet and stormy afternoon<br />

at Twickenham in May 2000, as three Paul Grayson penalties saw<br />

Northampton, captained by the <strong>Bears</strong> boss, edge out Munster 9-7.<br />

Only Leo Cullen, the Leinster captain turned Director of Rugby, has<br />

lifted the prestigious trophy as both a player and (head) coach.<br />

The 52-year-old labelled the <strong>Bears</strong>’ 2019/20 Challenge Cup win as ‘a<br />

moment of inspiration’, a stepping-stone – he knows the ultimate<br />

test begins at Ashton Gate on Saturday.<br />

“It’s been a long time since <strong>Bristol</strong> have been a part of the<br />

Champions Cup. It’s in our vision, it’s in our dream to be a team that<br />

consistently, year on year and forever, contests the Champions Cup.<br />

That’s what we want to be. These are the sort of games you want,<br />

because they grow you as a club, grow you as players and give you<br />

really good recognition to be a part of big-time rugby. That’s what all<br />

players, coaches and staff thrive on. There’s huge excitement and we<br />

want to make sure that we’re at our best when we start.<br />

“Winning the Challenge Cup was good recognition for the work that<br />

everyone has done, and it just again highlights and gives everyone<br />

an understanding that if you do the work, and we work together and<br />

we grow on and off the field, you’ll get the rewards - and it’s only a<br />

“It’s a tough start. They’re going really well in the Top 14 and there<br />

are a lot of world class players - I coached some of them in the<br />

Barbarians, so I know the quality. That is a tough start but it’s also an<br />

exciting one.<br />

“We know, or we talk about the fact that <strong>Clermont</strong> are a Champions<br />

Cup team. They’ve got to the finals and it’s their big dream to win<br />

it. But they’re there consistently and to play against them is a good<br />

marker of where we are and how far we’ve come as a club.”<br />

After a 12-year wait for Champions Cup rugby in <strong>Bristol</strong>, the Covid-19<br />

pandemic and the city’s current tier three status has denied the<br />

Ashton Gate faithful the most memorable of occasions. It’s a<br />

frustration for Lam, his players and the thousands of enchanted<br />

<strong>Bristol</strong>ians who have joined the <strong>Bears</strong> on their journey of resurgence.<br />

But the Director of Rugby knows the good times will soon return.<br />

“I would definitely say with <strong>Clermont</strong> here, we would have had a<br />

sell-out crowd and that’s because the fans are loving what the team<br />

are doing, on and off the field. They love the sort of rugby that we’re<br />

playing, and they haven’t had Champions Cup rugby for many years.<br />

“It’s such a shame, but when the time comes, they’ll be back. They’ll<br />

be flooding back in numbers, and we’re looking forward to that day.”<br />

Lam and the <strong>Bears</strong> will be hoping that day is a Champions Cup<br />

quarter final.<br />

BRISTOL BEARS VS CLERMONT NORTHAMPTON AUVERGNE SAINTS | | 2020/21<br />

BRISTOL BEARS VS NORTHAMPTON CLERMONT AUVERGNE SAINTS | 2020/21

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