Champions cup final halted as england star in horror collision

Champions cup final halted as england star in horror collision

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BARELY FIVE MINUTES HAD BEEN PLAYED WHEN THE INCIDENT OCCURRED. 15:33, 24 May 2025 England international George Furbank took a sickening blow to the head before being removed from the field


by a medical cart. The incident occurred in the Champions Cup final between Northampton Saints and Bordeaux Begles at the Principality Stadium in Cardiff on Saturday afternoon. Furbank had


attempted to catch a cross-field kick from Maxime Lucu when he tumbled to the ground as the ball bounced away. A surging Romain Buros was haring after the ball when Furbank attempted to get


up, causing Buros' knee to connect with Furbank in an horrific collision. Just four minutes had been played in the Welsh capital when Furbank went down, causing the match to be stopped


for a number of minutes while medical professionals tended to the Saints back. Sign up to Inside Welsh rugby on Substack to get exclusive news stories and insight from behind the scenes in


Welsh rugby. Referee Nika Amashukeli decided it was simply a rugby incident and there was no penalty or card against Buros. Once it was deemed safe to do so, Furbank was removed from the


field on a medical cart wearing a brace and being administered what looked like oxygen, prompting sympathetic applause from both sets of fans. It was a surprise that Furbank was involved at


all with Saints today, after suffering an injury against Castres in the quarter-final. The 28-year-old had no game-time between that game and the final today. "It’s always a


gamble", said Phil Dowson ahead of the match. "Whenever you bring someone back from an injury, there’s always a risk. He hasn’t been a mile away from coming back. He’s fortunate


that the timing has worked well, he’s worked very hard." This final follows the EPCR Challenge Cup final between Bath and Lyon on Friday night, with the English Premiership side winning


convincingly in a 37-12 score line. Article continues below That final had a controversy of their own, with Bath flanker Sam Underhill escaping a red card for a head-on-head collision with


Davit Niniashvili. Despite appearing to be a straight red card on the replays, referee Hollie Davidson gave a yellow card, prompting a strong reaction on social media. Former England


international Andy Goode simply suggested it was a red card "all day long", while La Rochelle head coach Ronan O'Gara posted on X: "Players safety... (mind blown


emojis)". Read more about that here.