Benetton controlled the ball and lost the contest. Exeter carried less, gained more, and kicked when it counted. The final ten minutes flipped 78% possession Exeter's way and Slade delivered twice from the tee when the margin was paper-thin. Jacob Umaga scored twice, kicked eight from eight, and finished on the losing side — that is the cruelty of knockout rugby when your pack cannot protect a lead in the closing window. Exeter's CER of 3.36 against Benetton's 2.99 tells you everything about how this was won: fewer chances, sharper edges, no waste. Rob Baxter's side moves on. Benetton's unbeaten run ends at four, and the manner of it will sting longer than the scoreline.
Benetton moved the ball 140 times and gained 422 metres. Exeter carried 84 times and made 374. The difference was not volume but strike rate. Exeter won the gainline 69% of the time against Benetton's 54%. That 15-point gap is the margin between controlling territory and controlling outcomes. Benetton's 2.99 CER reflected patient build-up and wide channels. Exeter's 3.36 CER came from punching harder with less. When you carry 56 fewer times and still score 44 points, you are not working harder — you are working cleaner.
The possession split tells the same story in reverse. Benetton held 70% in the first half and built a 21-14 lead by the 37th minute. They dropped to 48% after the break and 22% in the final ten. Exeter took 78% of the ball in the closing window and turned it into six points via Slade's boot. That inversion is not luck. It is defensive pressure, tactical kicking, and the composure to strangle Benetton's rhythm when it mattered most.
Benetton beat 30 defenders to Exeter's 24, made six clean breaks to six, and offloaded 16 times to one. All of that created space. None of it created enough scoreboard separation to survive Exeter's efficiency when the game tightened. The Chiefs kicked more from hand — 25 to 21 — and their 0.20 kick-to-pass ratio kept Benetton pinned when possession flipped. Benetton's 0.10 ratio reflected ambition. Exeter's reflected control.
Benetton won 11 lineouts from 11 and swiped one Exeter throw. Exeter won five from seven, losing two to their own error. That 100% success rate gave Benetton the platform they wanted. It did not give them the result. Perfect set-piece is a launchpad, not a finish line, and Benetton could not convert dominance into sustained defensive pressure when Exeter had the ball.
The scrums were cleaner but less decisive. Benetton won all four of their feeds. Exeter won four from five, losing one against the head. Neither side built a try from a maul — both recorded zero maul tries despite solid possession in the red zone — but Exeter's scrum penalty in the 15th minute triggered the penalty try that shifted the early momentum. That seven-pointer came without a Benetton defender in the frame and gifted Exeter a 14-7 lead. The set-piece edge belonged to Benetton. The set-piece outcome tilted Exeter's way when the referee's arm went up.
Ruck efficiency was near-identical: Benetton cleared 116 from 118 at 98%, Exeter 85 from 88 at 97%. Neither side conceded meaningful turnovers at the collision point. The contest was won and lost in the carry before contact, not the cleanout after.
Lineouts (success) 11/11 (100%) 5/7 (71%) Scrums 4/4 4/5 Rucks (efficiency) 116/118 (98%) 85/88 (97%)
KICKING Kicks from hand 21 25 Kick/pass ratio 0.10 0.20
Exeter won five turnovers to Benetton's two. That plus-three margin is modest but decisive in a three-point game. Benetton conceded ten turnovers, Exeter nine. The difference was not chaos but precision — Exeter converted their chances into points, Benetton conceded theirs at moments when scoreboard pressure was building.
The tackle count reflects the possession imbalance. Exeter made 201 tackles and missed 30. Benetton made 144 and missed 24. Exeter's 30 misses in 231 attempts is a 13% miss rate. Benetton's 24 in 168 is 14%. Neither is catastrophic. Neither is good enough to shut down an attack that beat 24 defenders and found six clean breaks. The margins were tight, the consequences were not.
Exeter's five turnovers won came at moments when Benetton held the territorial advantage. Two came in the second half when Benetton were chasing the game and forcing width. The Chiefs did not dominate the breakdown. They showed up when it counted and converted those moments into field position that Slade could punish.
Benetton's defensive structure held for 60 minutes and then frayed when Exeter tightened the screw. The 24 missed tackles were spread across the park but cost points in the wide channels. Olly Woodburn made 116 metres, beat nine defenders, and set up two clean breaks from fullback. Immanuel Feyi-Waboso added 60 metres, two clean breaks, and a try in the 23rd minute that came off quick hands and a missed outside shoulder. Those moments did not break Benetton — they accumulated into scoreboard pressure that became unsustainable when possession flipped in the final quarter.
Henry Slade missed two tackles in eight attempts but assisted one try and kicked four from four conversions and three from three penalties. His 17 points were the difference in a three-point game. Harvey Skinner missed four in 12 attempts, scored a try on the stroke of halftime, and made the defensive reads that forced Benetton into wide channels where Exeter's line speed could compress. The missed tackles were a problem. The structure behind them was sound enough to survive.
Benetton's defensive line competed without converting pressure into turnovers. They won two, conceded ten, and allowed Exeter to maintain continuity when possession was scarce. The line speed was there. The chop tackles were there. The finishing pressure at the ruck was not. That is the difference between forcing a turnover and forcing a reset, and in a game this tight, resets do not cut it.
Benetton spread the ball wide and fast. Their 213 passes to Exeter's 125 reflect the ambition to move Exeter's defence laterally. It worked in phase count but not in points differential. The 16 offloads kept Benetton's attack alive in broken play, but the execution in the final third could not match the intent. Six clean breaks from 140 carries is a 4.3% strike rate. Exeter's six from 84 is 7.1%. Benetton worked harder to create less dangerous ball.
Jacob Umaga scored twice, made 80 metres, beat two defenders, and kicked eight from eight. His 26 points were the highest individual tally on the park and still not enough. His try in the 19th minute came off a Benetton phase attack that found space on the left edge. His second in the 64th minute put Benetton ahead 39-38 and looked like the moment that might decide it. It did not. Exeter responded with possession, territory, and Slade's boot.
Tommaso Menoncello and Onisi Ratave gave Benetton width and pace. Ratave scored in the 36th minute, made 43 metres, beat four defenders, and then spent ten minutes in the bin after a yellow card in the 15th that cost Benetton the penalty try. His absence handed Exeter momentum at the exact moment Benetton were building pressure. The yellow was harsh on the individual, costly for the team, and symptomatic of the fine margins that decided this contest.
Exeter's attack was narrower and sharper. Woodburn's 116 metres from fullback were the platform for everything else. Feyi-Waboso and Skinner combined for 80 metres, three clean breaks, and two tries. The first-half blitz — three tries in 17 minutes from the seventh to the 24th — put Exeter 21-14 up and forced Benetton to chase. The second-half composure allowed Slade to manage the game with his boot when the scoreboard was level and the clock was bleeding out.
Benetton conceded seven penalties to Exeter's nine. Neither side was reckless, but Exeter gave away two more penalties and still won because Slade kicked three from three and Benetton could not convert their discipline edge into sustained scoreboard control. The Ratave yellow in the 15th minute was the only card of the match and it came at the worst possible moment. Benetton were 7-7 and building. The penalty try and ten minutes down a man handed Exeter a 14-7 lead and territorial dominance they would not relinquish until the 36th minute.
Exeter's nine penalties were spread across the match and never accumulated into sustained pressure. Benetton's seven were fewer in number but more costly in context. The discipline was good enough to compete. It was not good enough to close out a three-point margin when Exeter had the ball and Slade had the tee.
Penalties conceded 7 9 Yellow cards 1 0
Jacob Umaga had the performance of the round and walked off with nothing. Two tries, 80 metres, 26 points, eight from eight with the boot — that is a clinic in execution under pressure. His second try in the 64th put Benetton ahead with 16 minutes to play and looked like the decisive moment. Exeter's response was ruthless. Umaga did everything asked and more. The result went the other way because knockout rugby does not reward individual brilliance when the team cannot close.
Henry Slade kicked four from four conversions, three from three penalties, and assisted one try. His 17 points included the 78th-minute penalty that won the match. He missed two tackles, conceded two turnovers, and still delivered when the margin was one score and the clock was running out. That is the definition of a match-winner in a game this tight.
Olly Woodburn made 116 metres from fullback, beat nine defenders, created two clean breaks, and assisted one try. His involvement in the first-half surge gave Exeter the scoreboard buffer they needed when Benetton came back. He was electric in space and composed under the high ball. That combination is rare and it decided the attacking platform Exeter built their win on.
Onisi Ratave scored a try, made 43 metres, beat four defenders, and spent ten minutes in the bin. His yellow card cost Benetton the penalty try and handed Exeter the momentum they would not relinquish until deep in the second half. This was not his best afternoon, but the yellow was the result of a marginal call, not reckless play.
Immanuel Feyi-Waboso scored in the 23rd minute, made 60 metres, recorded two clean breaks, and missed two tackles. His try came off quick hands in the wide channel and showed the finishing quality that makes him dangerous every time he touches the ball. Harvey Skinner scored on the stroke of halftime, missed four tackles, and made 12 others. His defensive reads forced Benetton wide when Exeter were under pressure.
Niccolo Cannone scored the opening try in the fourth minute and made 12 tackles without a miss. Bautista Bernasconi scored in the 44th minute and made 13 tackles with two misses. Both gave Benetton the forward presence they needed to compete. Neither could deliver the one moment in the final ten that might have swung possession back Benetton's way.
Benetton's unbeaten run ends at four and the top spot in the Challenge Cup pool is no longer theirs to control. They carried more, passed more, held more ball, and lost because Exeter were sharper when it mattered. The five-point league gap has evaporated and the narrative has flipped. Benetton are still dangerous. They are no longer inevitable.
Exeter came third in the pool, trailed on possession for 50 minutes, and walked away with a knockout win because they carried with intent and kicked with precision. Rob Baxter's side now sit level on points with Benetton in the standings and hold the head-to-head edge. The Chiefs' CER of 3.36 is the calling card of a team that does not need the ball to control the outcome. They needed Slade's boot, Woodburn's pace, and the composure to strangle Benetton when the possession split flipped in the final quarter. They got all three.
The Challenge Cup knockout stages will not be kind to teams that dominate possession and concede gainline. Benetton found that out the hard way. Exeter already knew.
STATS TABLE
Benetton Rugby Exeter Chiefs ATTACK Possession 58% 42% Territory — — Carries · Metres 140 · 422 m 84 · 374 m Gain line % 54% 69% Clean breaks · Defenders beaten 6 · 30 6 · 24 CER 2.99 3.36
DEFENCE Tackles (missed) 144 (24) 201 (30) Turnovers (won / conceded) 2 / 10 5 / 9
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