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Can Sale recover after season of strife?
Image source, Getty Images Image caption, Sale had won the most Prem games (38) in the three seasons before this one By Adam Lanigan BBC Sport England Published 33 minutes ago For the previous three seasons, Sale Sharks have flown the flag as the northern powerhouse of English club rugby. But this current campaign has left Sale battered and bruised and those foundations severely tested. "It was the longest, hardest, most challenging season I've ever had," director of rugby Alex Sanderson admitted. They eventually ended it in seventh after winning only five of their 18 Prem matches, leaving them a whopping 27 points adrift of the play-off spots. With no consecutive league wins all season and just one victory on the road, the 2025-26 version of the Sharks was unlike what had been on show before. Yet is it the start of a decline or just a blip in the road for Sale? The north-west club won their only title in 2006, with stars such as Jason Robinson and Sebastian Chabal. Since replacing Steve Diamond as director of rugby in early 2021, Sanderson, a former Sale player, has been attempting to recreate that success. They reached the final again in 2023 only to lose to Saracens at Twickenham, and were beaten semi-finalists in the play-offs in both 2024 and 2025. No other team matched that consistency as Sale were the only ones to finish in the top four in each of those campaigns, with their 38 wins the most of any team during the regular season. They could not quite make the biggest leap of all, but they were firmly ensconced in the upper echelons. Summer Sale: John and Andrews join 20-player exodus Published 19 May 'I know I have the minerals for Sale job' - Sanderson Published 23 April 'We are not in freefall', says Sale boss Sanderson Published 25 January Injuries play part as wheels come off With two wins from their opening three games in the 2025-26 season, it looked likely to be more of the same from Sale, but from then on, the wheels came off. It started with a 65-14 drubbing away to Saracens in October as teenage wing Noah Caluori ran in five tries on his first Prem start. But it was a surprise 27-26 home loss to Exeter Chiefs in November that hinted at trouble ahead as the hosts gave up a 20-point lead early in the second half to succumb to their first home defeat of the season. The CorpAcq Stadium has been a source of strength for Sale, but this season they lost more games there than they won. A home defeat by Northampton Saints in January effectively ended their top-four hopes with eight games still to play. In 2026, they suffered the heaviest losses in the club's history - a 77-7 smashing away to star-studded French giants Toulouse in the Champions Cup in January, and an 85-19 humiliation at home by Saracens in April as Caluori helped himself to five more tries. Success at Harlequins six days after that debacle was Sale's only away victory in The Prem and gave them some breathing space in guaranteeing a top-eight spot and a Champions Cup place