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Match Review: Bristol Bears (14) vs. Argentina XV (38)

On a wet Friday night, at Ashton Gate, the Argentina XV secured a convincing 38 – 14 victory over Bristol Bears in a high-profile tour match.

Match Review: Bristol Bears (14) vs. Argentina XV (38)

On a wet Friday night, at Ashton Gate, the Argentina XV secured a convincing 38 – 14 victory over Bristol Bears in a high-profile tour match.

The result served as both a statement for Argentina’s emerging side and a wake-up call for Bristol, who fielded a younger squad and were tested brutally by their South American visitors.

First Half – Argentina Set the Tone

From kickoff Argentina XV came out with purpose. Despite the wet conditions, reports suggest they dominated the scrum and collision zones, exerting physicality and execution that Bristol struggled to counter.

By halftime they held a lead — with tries from Juan Cruz Pérez Rachel and Tobías Wade around the 14-minute mark putting the visitors ahead 14-7.

For Bristol, there were glimpses of intent — the hosts managed to cross the whitewash and stayed in the contest — but Argentina’s superior platform and execution made the difference early.

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A post shared by Unio´n Argentina de Rugby (@unionargentina)

Second Half – Argentina Extend; Bears Unable to Respond

The second period saw Argentina build momentum. Their forward pack delivered again — two tries from Leonel Oviedo, plus further scores from Nicolás D’Amorim and another from Wade, extended their lead and closed out the contest.

Bristol did cut the margin with a late brace: tries from Victor Worsnip and Ollie Harris reduced the deficit but arrived too late to change the narrative.

The final margin (38-14) reflects Argentina XV’s dominance across phases, while Bristol’s younger side couldn’t sustain enough pressure or consistency to mount a comeback.

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Unio´n Argentina de Rugby (@unionargentina)

Key Takeaways

Argentina XV

  • Physicality & set-piece strength: They imposed conditions on the scrum and collisions, especially in less than ideal weather.

  • Execution: From the platform they converted opportunities into scores, especially in the second half when the game was there to be taken.

  • Depth and development: This performance will bolster confidence for Argentina’s next generation and underline the value of their touring programme.

Bristol Bears

  • Youthful squad, tough lesson: Bristol’s decision to use younger players showed ambition, but the gulf in execution and physical maturity showed up.

  • Areas to improve: Discipline, breakdown effectiveness, and game-management under pressure all emerged as themes from this defeat.

  • Positives exist: The ability to get on the scoreboard in the second half shows character; spectrums to grow though.

What This Means Going Forward

For Argentina XV, this win is more than just a result — it’s evidence their second-tier / development side can step into strong contests on European soil and come away with a performance worth noting. It supports their wider pathway ambitions.

For Bristol Bears, this defeat is a constructive friction point. Young players got experience, but now the club must convert these experiences into sharper standards. If they are to compete at the top end of the Premiership, the lessons from this tour match will need to be internalised.

Man of the Match

While the official accolade may vary, standout credits go to Leonel Oviedo for his two tries and general forward dominance, and Tobías Wade for his strong contributions in attack. Argentina’s front-up physical edge made the difference.

Final Word

This match delivered on substance: for fans of club vs touring national / representative sides, this kind of fixture matters. It tests depth, exposes development gaps, and gives a platform for emerging talent. Argentina XV made the most of it; Bristol Bears will reflect and look to grow.

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Carl Dawson

Carl Dawson

@RugbyTTLPod

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