Thank you to all at Aviva Premiership for the info and photo.
Full-back Jack Nowell insists helping Exeter end their away day hoodoo was a perfect way for the Chiefs' young guns to underline their credentials as they beat London Welsh 42-15 at Kassam Stadium to open up their LV= Cup campaign.
Rob Baxter had rung in the changes from the side which defeated Worcester Warriors in the Aviva Premiership last week, with a combination of youth and experience in a squad which took a while to get out of the blocks.
And Nowell believes he did his first team chances the world of good by turning in his man of the match performance.
"It was a great opportunity to show what I and a lot of the other guys could do," he said.
"We are treated all as equal at this club and I think we played as equals and that was really important because it's an opportunity to underline your talent.
"It was a big performance there, I think both the young boys and old boys stepped up when they needed to today and that was important.
Also on Sunday London Irish gained a measure of revenge over Sale Sharks with a 34-28 win at the Madejski Stadium.
Matt Garvey was the hero with a try in each half while George Skivington and Shane Geraghty also crossed as the Exiles grabbed a try bonus point.
The Sharks lead 18-10 at the break, largely down to the work of Danny Cipriani who finished with 16 points in the game, but they could not repeat the heroics of last weekend when they beat the same opposition for their first Aviva Premiership win of the season.
On Saturday Harlequins continued their late game heroics with a last-gasp 31-30 win against Northampton Saints.
And head coach Conor O'Shea insisted his side make their own luck after they were saved by Ben Botica's try and conversion.
Trailing 30-24 in the final minute of the game, Botica barged his way under the posts before dusting himself down and slotting his conversion to give Quins the victory.
Sam Smith's double in the first half along with Harry Sloan's try on his first start for Quins looked to have put the hosts to bed.
But Jim Mallinder's troops are made of stern stuff and they came roaring back in the second-half, Luther Burrell and Tom May both crossing.
And it appeared they had done enough to win it before Botica's late heroics saved Quins and left O'Shea beaming.
"It's a great fillip for the squad to come here and get a win," he said.
"People will say we got lucky with the last-minute try but we seem to get lucky a lot and that comes from hard work and belief in one another.
"A lot of teams would have tried to chase the game in an unstructured way but we were very controlled."
Worcester Warriors were also the victors on Saturday as they took down Scarlets 34-18 thanks to the introduction of Andy Goode after half-time.
The English side trailed at the break after Kristian Phillips went over for the Welsh region but after the interval Ben Howard, on debut, Semisi Taulava, Jake Abbott and Neil Best, in the final play of the game, all scored for the Warriors.
Semesa Rokoduguni was the star for Bath Rugby as they kicked off their LV= Cup campaign with a 36-15 win over Newport Gwent Dragons.
The Fijian debutant crossed twice at the Rec, Matt Banahan also scoring for the home side who were well marshalled by Tom Heathcote who finished with 21 points.
On Friday Saracens served notice of their strength in depth as they ran riot with a bonus-point 38-21 win against perennial rivals Leicester in their LV= Cup opener.
Blazing into a 27-0 lead at the break thanks to tries from Jamie George, Duncan Taylor and Joe Maddock and the steady boot of Nils Mordt, Sarries never looked back in their four-try win, with Andy Saull crossing after the break.
And defence coach Paul Gustard was full of praise for his side's young guns in the absence of their big-name stars.
"It was brilliant, absolutely brilliant. Some of our youngsters really came to the fore," he said.
"It's really pleasing, Saracens often get criticised for not playing good attacking rugby, but we've shown that we do."
It was less good news for London Wasps on Friday as they fell to a 22-17 defeat to head coach Dai Young's former charges Cardiff Blues.
Elliot Daly scored the English side's only try, Tommy Bell notching 12 points with the boot but the Blues crossed for three tries of their own, Ceri Sweeney's late effort decisive in the end.
And Gloucester Rugby's remarkable fightback fell agonisingly short against the Ospreys at Liberty Stadium, the Welsh region running out 33-27 winners thanks to a last-gasp Morgan Allen try.
Matthew Morgan inspired the hosts to an 18-13 lead, kicking all 18 points, before being replaced by Sam Davies, son of Gloucester 's director of rugby Nigel.
And after finding themselves 26-13 down with 15 minutes to go, the Cherry & Whites scored two late tries to edge 27-26 ahead before Allen's last-gasp effort completed a thrilling finale.
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