Premiership Rugby Thrives on High-Scoring Excitement: Gloucester & Bristol Set New Standards
Gloucester and Bristol showcase attacking brilliance in a 13-try thriller, reigniting debates about entertainment versus defense in Premiership Rugby.


Attack-First Rugby Delights Fans at Kingsholm
Gloucester's 53-28 demolition of Bristol Bears in Saturday's West Country derby saw 13 tries and 81 points - exactly the kind of spectacle Premiership Rugby needs according to both clubs. The Cherry & Whites' nine-try haul featured scintillating backline moves that left the capacity Kingsholm crowd electrified.
The Entertainment Debate
Bristol's director of rugby Pat Lam strongly defended the attacking approach:
- "Look at our 23,000 crowd against Exeter and this sell-out here"
- "People want entertainment - our future depends on new fans"
- Cited the recent Principality Stadium clash with Bath as proof of growing interest
Gloucester's attack coach James Lightfoot Brown has transformed their style this season, mirroring Bristol's successful formula:
- Both clubs rank top three for meters gained (Bristol 2nd, Gloucester 3rd)
- Combine for 867 points scored this season (as of matchday)
- League-high 7.4 line breaks per game average between the sides
Defensive Concerns Addressed
Gloucester DoR George Skivington dismissed claims that defense is being neglected:
"Attacks have reached new technical levels - defenses haven't disappeared, they're being stretched like never before."
Key defensive stats: | Team | Points Conceded | League Position |
---|---|---|---|
Bristol | 415 | 11th | |
Gloucester | 358 | 8th |
The Bigger Picture for Premiership Rugby
With three clubs folding since 2022, Lam and Skivington agree the league needs positivity:
- Recent average attendances up 18% post-COVID
- Social media engagement on try highlights increased 42% this season
- Next generation of fans being "hooked by exciting rugby" (Lam)
As Skivington noted: "We'll keep the mauls and scrums for traditionalists, but the game must evolve to survive."