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Image source, Getty Images Image caption, Finn Russell and Henry Slade's Bath and Exeter sides will meet in the second Prem semi-final, while Tom Willis heads for France as Saracens fall short of the top four By Mike Henson BBC Sport rugby union news reporter Published 14 minutes ago Henry Slade's booming kick into the corner in the 2017 Premiership semi-final got plenty of airtime in the build-up to the latest instalment of Saracens and Exeter's rivalry. That monster touch-finder set up a final-minute match-winning try from Sam Simmonds. Nearly a decade on, Slade's influence on Saturday's 32-12 victory, which clinched a play-off spot for the Chiefs at Sarries' expense, was still key. The 33-year-old purred around out wide, scored the try that started the hosts' second-half blitz and lassoed Rotimi Segun with a crucial try-saving tackle before the break. Slade, who won the most recent of his 74 England caps against Argentina in November, last month told the For the Love of Rugby podcast he was "frustrated and disappointed" not to play a single minute in England's floundering Six Nations campaign. With Ollie Lawrence and Max Ojomoh seemingly out of favour, Slade's form is edging him back towards the Test spotlight. Fraser Dingwall, Seb Atkinson and Benhard Janse van Rensburg were the other specialist centres called up to an England training camp last month. None are clearly ahead of the Exeter man. "If I was picking an England team, I'd have Henry Slade in there," said Exeter attack coach Dave Walder. "I see him every day and I know what he's capable of. He's doing everything you would expect of a player who's not being picked by playing well week-in, week-out on both sides of the ball." "You don't realise how much you miss something until you don't have it," Slade told BBC Radio 5 Live at Sandy Park. "Maybe we took it for granted all those years ago, it is very special to have it back. I feel good, I'm in the shape of my life, still feeling fresh and good." Slade was talking about a play-off spot. He might have easily been talking about a starting Test shirt. Rugby Union Weekly: Slade, semi-finals & send-offs Exeter beat Saracens to reach play-offs and end McCall's reign Published 1 day ago Bath wait on Russell return for Chiefs meeting Image source, Rex Features Image caption, Finn Russell was in the stands for Bath's win over Leicester at the Rec How much of Bath's title defence rests on Finn Russell's iffy calf? The Scottish string-puller was signed to a big-money contract for the biggest games. With Russell still nursing an injury, Bath coach Johann van Graan decided the risks outweighed the rewards of throwing him in against Tigers with a play-off spot already secured. In the end, with Argentina's Santi Carreras at fly-half, Van Graan was proved right. Bath won 24-22 and locked in a home semi-final against Exeter. But Van Graan's post-match prognosis on Russell, who has not played since mid-May, was interesting. "He's in a great place, but h
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    But dont get too caught up in Slades spectacular kicks. The real story is Willis farewell and Russells calf. Saracens defense has been holding their own, but they still need a bit more edge to take on Exeter in the final. #Saracens #Exeter #Premiership
  • 2
    Slades powerful kicks show why hes a force to be reckoned with, but its Willis farewell that truly captures the essence of rugbys beauty. Lets honor his career with a strong final performance against Saracens.