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Saints and winners; Sarries' Zidanes and Pavones? - Prem talking points

BBC Sport

Across four matches in all competitions this month, they have conceded an average of more than 37 points. They have also won three of them, but their attack is having to work overtime to keep the victories coming. Bath, with one eye on their Champions Cup semi-final against Bordeaux-Begles on Saturday, had picked a largely second-string side as superstars like Finn Russell, Ollie Lawrence and Thomas du Toit took the weekend off.

Instead the hugely promising Ciaran Donoghue, playing his first minutes of the season after suffering a knee injury in pre-season, stepped in at 10 seamlessly, flinging passes and fixing the defence with his own running ability. On the wing, Louis Hennessey, making his fifth Prem start of the season, was excellent, beating defenders and getting his hands free to keep the momentum of attack going. Miles Reid and Josh Bayliss - two of the visitors' more regular faces - were superb in the back row.

They may have lost the game, but the Bath could arguably take more heart from a match having pushed Saints so hard. Four months ago, the shoe (army) was on the other foot. Northampton didn't perhaps stray so far from their first-choice line-up then, but a mix-and-match side ran out comfortable winners against a more familiar-looking Bath at the Recreation Ground in the reverse fixture.

Both sides have formidable depth that sets them apart from the rest, with standards staying high as selection chops and changes. It is the difference that makes it difficult to see anything other than a fourth meeting of the season taking place in the Prem final on 20 June. Other sides with weaker squads and more salary cap head-room to play with may also be looking to see if they can tempt some of Saints and Bath's fringe figures with the promise of a more central role elsewhere.

Caluori leads the Prem try-scoring charts with 18, five more than Northampton's Tommy Freeman In the early 2000s, Real Madrid had a team-building philosophy they coined 'Zidanes y Pavones'. The theory was to mix top-end imported talent - like France superstar Zinedine Zidane - with homegrown youth, such as local centre-back prospect Francisco Pavon. Noah Caluori, only 19, is already somewhere between prospect status and the superstar bracket.