Super-sub Shane Drahm lifted Northampton off the Zurich Premiership basement
as Saints recorded their first league victory in 10 games.
Drahm stunned a 17,364 Madejski Stadium crowd - the Premiership's biggest
attendance this season - with a virtuoso display after going on as a half-time
replacement for Paul Grayson.
His match-winning drop-goal arrived four minutes into injury time and left
Irish demoralised.
The Exiles led for most of the match, indebted to 18 points from fly-half Mark
Mapletoft, including three drop-goals, but Drahm ultimately took top billing.
The Australian also rifled over three penalties, two from long range, and
Saints scored the game's solitary try through scrum-half Mark Robinson.
They now face Leeds on New Year's Day, and after climbing above relegation
rivals Worcester, another victory would provide another major survival boost for
new coach Budge Pountney.
Saints had gone nine league games without a win, a sequence stretching back to
mid-September, but they displayed admirable character when it mattered and found
an unlikely hero in Drahm.
Drahm kept them in the hunt with two penalties, yet Irish looked to have done
enough when Barry Everitt, Mapletoft's replacement, slotted a 77th-minute
drop-goal.
But that was the cue for Drahm to seize his moment, and he clinched the points
for Saints with a penalty that took his team to within striking distance, then
landed that priceless drop-goal.
The struggling Saints received a triple boost when internationals Ben Cohen,
Bruce Reihana and Corne Krige were all passed fit, with England's Cohen lining
up at outside centre.
Flanker Andrew Blowers though, had still not recovered from concussion
sustained during Northampton's Heineken Cup defeat against Toulouse two weeks
ago, so former Bristol Shoguns skipper Ross Beattie made his league debut in the
back-row.
Irish included Scottish international Roland Reid at number eight, with Scott
Staniforth and Mike Catt forging a high-class midfield partnership.
Cohen was immediately pressed into defensive duties, but cleared the danger
impressively after Irish flanker Paul Gustard charged down a Grayson kick.
Gustard collided with an upright, trying to chase down Cohen, yet resumed
following treatment.
Grayson regained his composure to boot Saints 3-0 ahead through an
eighth-minute penalty, which Northampton deserved on the early balance of play,
and it was their own poor discipline that allowed Irish a chance to draw level.
Mapletoft's deft midfield break split Saints open, but the diminutive
playmaker still made Saints pay, rifling over a 30-metre penalty following a
reckless late challenge by Northampton wing Wylie Human.
Mapletoft then missed an angled 25-metre chance to put Irish ahead. Saints
though, found themselves under increasing pressure, and further indiscipline
cost them.
Cohen was penalised by referee Tony Spreadbury for not releasing possession
after diving on the ball in defence, and when he committed a similar offence
just two minutes later, Spreadbury predictably sin-binned him.
Mapletoft kicked the resulting penalty, yet Irish could not make their
temporary one-man advantage count.
With Cohen off, Northampton claimed a sparkling opportunist try when Robinson
grasped Mapletoft's pass on halfway and sprinted 50 metres, diving over despite
a despairing tackle from his opposite number Paul Hodgson.
Grayson converted, and although Mapletoft completed his penalty hat-trick
during first-half injury time, Northampton shaded a tense opening period where
it mattered most - on the scoreboard.
Saints made an interval switch, replacing Grayson with Drahm, and Irish
regained the lead on 44 minutes as Mapletoft landed a 35-metre drop-goal.
Mapletoft's strike gave Irish momentum, and with Robinson - Saints' most
influential player - struggling from a knock that eventually forced him off,
cracks started to appear in the Northampton defensive line.
A second Mapletoft drop-goal, after his initial weaving run through heavy
defensive traffic, compounded Saints' degree of difficulty as the game entered
its final quarter.
And when he completed his hat-trick just six minutes later, Saints appeared
down and out until Drahm gave them a fighting chance by kicking two long-range
penalties.
Drahm's accuracy - his third penalty arrived two minutes after Everitt's
drop-goal - then guaranteed an exciting finish that reached a shuddering
crescendo deep into stoppage time.
Teams:
London Irish: Horak, Sackey, Bishop, Catt, Staniforth,
Mapletoft, Hodgson, Wheatley, Russell, Hardwick, Kennedy,
Casey, Gustard, Dawson, Reid.
Replacements: Everitt for Mapletoft (76),
Edwards for Hodgson (78), Durant for Hardwick (43),
Strudwick for Kennedy (54), Roche for Gustard (59).
Not Used: Paice, Mordt.
Pens: Mapletoft 3.
Drop Goals: Mapletoft 3, Everitt.
Northampton: Reihana, Rudd, Cohen, Stcherbina, Human, Grayson,
Robinson, Emms, Thompson, Morris, Seely, Browne, Beattie,
Krige, Soden.
Replacements: Drahm for Grayson (41), Jones for Robinson (54),
Sturgess for Morris (55), O'Donoghue for Browne (73).
Not Used: Richmond, McNamee, Starling.
Sin Bin: Cohen (34).
Tries: Robinson.
Cons: Grayson.
Pens: Grayson, Drahm 3.
Drop Goals: Drahm.
Att: 17,364
Ref: Tony Spreadbry (RFU).