Glasgow Warriors 13-7 Sale Sharks: DTH van der Merwe try sets up Champions Cup win
Last Updated: 16/11/19 3:35pm
DTH van der Merwe's try gave Glasgow a winning start to their Champions Cup campaign as they edged out Sale 13-7.
Dave Rennie's team dominated the first half but should have taken more than a solitary try and eight points from the boot of Adam Hastings.
Having badly lacked tempo during the opening 40 minutes, Sale boss Steve Diamond rang the changes early after the interval and got a response as Coenie Oosthuizen crossed over.
Warriors failed to build on their tally but were relieved as they held on for victory.
Sale were missing World Cup winner Faf de Klerk as well as England's beaten finalists Tom Curry and Mark Wilson.
The hosts on the other hand were almost at full strength, with Scotland lock Jonny Gray the only one of the 19 men they sent to Japan yet to return to club duty and it showed as the Warriors bossed the early exchanges.
Hastings nudged Warriors ahead on the quarter-hour mark but it was a shaky kicking display from the Scotland fly-half as he skewed past the poles with another penalty after Jake Cooper-Woolley was penalised for handling in the maul.
Glasgow were well on top but a three-point advantage was little reward for their efforts, so Hastings made certain to split the posts when he was handed another chance after an illegal Byron McGuigan tackle on 27 minutes.
Glasgow broke through for the opening try four minutes before the break. Fraser Brown's lineout was plucked by Ryan Wilson before Sam Johnson turned up the speed levels as he flicked a George Horne pass round the corner for Van der Merwe and there was no catching the Canada international as he darted for the corner.
Sale were hoping the change of ends would produce a change in fortunes.
They got a stroke of luck when a cruel bounce denied Van der Merwe a second try as he chased after a clever Hastings kick to the corner.
And they finally built up the momentum that got them on the scoreboard on 63 minutes.
Diamond waited just a couple of minutes after half-time before replacing his front-row and it was substitute prop Oosthuizen who squeezed over the line for the score that drew Sharks back within six points of Rennie's team.
The Sale replacements had made a huge difference, giving them the upper hand at the set-piece and Glasgow's nerves appeared to be jangling as the game moved into the final 10 minutes.
Sale continued to press for a late winner with the clock gone red, but a Robert du Preez knock-on saw a relieved Glasgow hold on for victory.