Edinburgh Monarchs
Glasgow Tigers
Premier Trophy
47
42
Friday 20th April 2007
Armadale Stadium

The Scotwaste Monarchs displayed their best form of the season in giving Glasgow their first Premier Trophy defeat of the season. The 47-42 win didn't do justice to Monarchs' superiority.

Having been shown Shane Parker?s press comments that Monarchs are ?not good enough? to win, the team set about the Tigers from the first heat with Ronnie Correy giving a magnificent lead.

Bad luck in the shape of two lost chains plus another Tully stoppage prevented an even bigger victory against a visiting side which had a soft centre and relied on their reserves backing their top two to keep them in the hunt.

The first heat saw Ronnie Correy cut back under the faster-starting Stancl to move ahead into the third turn. He raced clear and did the fastest time of the season, with Henrik Moller also putting pressure on Stancl and Smethills a long way at the rear.

Heat 2 looked like a certain 5-1 from the first bend, with McAllan trying to make up ground but getting into difficulties and falling. Unfortunately late in the race while comfortably clear of Dicken, Andrew Tully shed a chain and came down heavily on the pits corner.

Shane Parker, keen to make his press predictions come true, won heat 3 easily but Tessari and Lawson comfortably shut out Ksiezak.

Once again in heat 4 a maximum advantage looked on the cards with Matthew Wethers leading from Sneddon, but Derek never settled and was caught by McAllan and Leverington in turn.

We might have been 10 up at this point, but the gap was just three. Nevertheless the signs were already favourable.

Lawson actually passed Stancl on the first lap of heat 5, but Tigers? no. 1 turned back and regained the lead in another shared heat.

Moller and Correy took the lead in heat 6 and Ronnie was happy to slot inside his partner for a very easy 5-1 to extend our lead.

Tigers gained their first race advantage in heat 7, Parker beating Wethers and Sneddon falling t gift the out-of-touch Ksiezak a point.

We lost another chance to increase the lead in heat 8. Henrik Moller had no difficulty winning but Andrew Tully had problems right from the start and didn?t complete a lap. McAllan kept up the chase to no avail and Smethills was gifted his only point.

Heat 9 looked like a major chance to increase the lead but Lawson and Tessari fluffed the start as Dicken and Leverington went ahead. The Aussie came a spectacular cropper on the pits corner but he cleared the track to leave Dicken his victory chance. The big reserve did well, though William Lawson?s efforts to catch him were disappointing for the team?s no. 2 rider.

Now it was Correy v Parker, both unbeaten. It proved to be no contest as the American dominated the heat, and Parker had his hands full holding off Moller. We were now 33-26 ahead.

Another big Tigers? scalp was taken in heat 11 when Wethers hit the drive on the inside of the second turn and zipped past Stancl. Sneddon though couldn?t catch Dicken.

We had seen little of Lawson so far, and it got worse for William as he trailed behind Parker and McAllan for a disappointing 1-5 in heat 12. The gap was three again and Tigers were right back in it.

The enthusiastic Dicken was given a ride in heat 13, but this again was a Correy-dominated heat as he easily beat Stancl. Matthew had a more uncomfortable ride but he took third place.

A 5-point lead meant we needed a shared heat 14 to win. It was a scrappy first corner as all four headed for the outside. Ksiezak made his only start of the night but went right across the turn, bringing down Tessari who was on an outside run, while Sneddon and McAllan also clashed with McAllan falling.

All four was a fair decision though Tigers didn?t see it that way, re-igniting their McGregor paranoia.

In the rerun we saw a terrific sweep round the boards by Tessari, with precious little room, to go ahead. McAllan came into second ahead of Sneddon but slid off going into the pits corner, right in front of Sneddon who went down with a jolt.

This looked quite a bad one and caused a lengthy delay. McAllan limped off with a foot problem while Sneddon was eventually taken off in an ambulance, possibly with back and leg injuries. We await news on his condition.

In the rerun Ksiezak made a decent start but was passed on either side by Tessari and Tully, who raced to an untroubled 5-1 to clinch the win.

In the final heat, Correy from gate one got another lovely start and seemed set to go ahead when he shed another damned chain and came down. A fortunate closing 5-1 for the Tigers which didn?t disguise the fact that they were very much second best on the night.

For the second time in a month Glasgow are the visitors to Armadale on Friday this time on official business.

What a start the Tigers have made to their Premier Trophy campaign with home and away victories over Newcastle, a home win against Redcar and another away win against Berwick. Can the Monarchs be the first to halt the juggernaut?

Rarely can the Tigers have rolled into town in such confident mood. Already vibes can be felt from the West that this time a victory at Armadale is an odds on certainty.

And who can blame them? On their last visit a month ago they only went down by a single point with some strong races for them still to come before the abandonment. Add to that the fact that their early season matches have seen them go from to strength to strength, with confidence flowing throughout the team, while the Monarchs have looked less than convincing.

Last week we saw (or nearly saw - depending on where you were standing!) an excellent victory over Berwick but it has to be said that this was yet another in a long line of poor Berwick performances with three of the Bandits' team contributing next to nothing. That was followed by another poor display away from home against Newcastle, a team that was there to be beaten.

Certainly we will not be allowed to run riot at reserve as we were against Berwick (and Redcar for that matter) because the Tigers have two of the most experienced (and oldest) reserves in the league. Both their away wins were to a very large extent engineered by the dominance of the Tigers' numbers 6 and 7 although Edinburgh seem far better placed to restrict their scoring power than either Newcastle or Berwick.

Indeed this is probably the main key to the match. Derek and Andrew come together as our reserve pairing for the last time before the new averages kick in. If they can outscore David McAllan and Lee Dicken then we have a good chance to take the two points. If not, then it will be a tall order to ask the main body of the team to make up the shortfall particularly against the likes of Shane Parker and the on-fire George Stancl. No pressure there then!

At the top end everything depends on how well Ronnie Correy and William Lawson gate against the Glasgow top two. You cannot give riders of the calibre of Parker and Stancl a start from the tapes and hope to pass them without a Herculean effort. The middle of the team looks competitive against the Glasgow middle order. Henrik Moller, Matthew Wethers and Daniele Tessari need to weigh in with more than Lee Smethills, Robert Ksiezak and Trent Leverington all of whom can produce the goods if not on a regular basis (although in truth the same can be said about the three Edinburgh riders!).

Glasgow are certainly not unbeatable but, with the momentum they have going at the moment and the confidence with which they are riding, it will require all the team to be at their best to get a result. I hate to say so but the clever money will be on a Glasgow win this time. In saying that I hope I put the same hex on the Tigers I appear to have put on Monarchs by forecasting some return from last Sunday night's match at Newcastle!