Bath won 15-6 at Kingsholm on Saturday to take the west country bragging rights over hosts Gloucester.Wing Anthony Watsons 62nd-minute score edged Bath ahead before centre Matt Banahan struck six minutes from time in a dire west country derby when neither side looked remotely like Aviva Premiership play-off contenders.Gloucester skipper Greig Laidlaw was left to rue three missed penalties - he had landed 17 successful kicks this season before Baths visit - includlng two long-range failures in three minutes during the closing quarter as Bath prevailed 15-6.Laidlaw and James Hook each landed a penalty for Gloucester, while Bath fly-half George Ford dropped a goal and converted Banahans try as Bath left Gloucester still without a home win since they beat Exeter last April.Bath have now lost just one of their last eight Premiership encounters against Gloucester, but the home side could have few complaints as they slumped to a third successive home defeat of the campaign.Laidlaw returned as one of four changes for the home side, with Hook replacing injured full-back Tom Marshall, centre Billy Twelvetrees making his 100th Gloucester appearance and prop Paddy McAllister taking over from Yann Thomas, while Bath partnered Aled Brew and Banahan in midfield and paraded lock Elliott Stooke against his former club.Torrential pre-match rain made the playing surface tricky in places, but Gloucester missed a gilt-edged chance for an early lead when Laidlaw sent a close-range penalty attempt wide.It was a let-off for Bath after prop Henry Thomas was penalised following a scrummaging infringement, yet the visitors struggled for fluency and did not create a scoring chance until Ford saw a 22nd minute drop-goal attempt hit the post.The scrums were a mess throughout the opening period, with referee JP Doyle having his hands full to ensure any continuity. But Gloucester took the lead 10 minutes before half-time when Hook rifled over a 50-metre penalty, and he was only narrowly short with another long-range attempt four minutes later as Bath continued to infringe.There was little, though, for a capacity 16,500 crowd to enthuse about, with attacking play at a premium and both sides possessing insufficient quality to convert possession into points.The second-half began with Ford dropping a goal - his fourth of the season - to tie things up, but Gloucester needed just two minutes to go back in front when Laidlaw kicked a penalty, before Ford sent a long-range penalty attempt narrowly wide.But Bath went ahead for the first time after 62 minutes when they patiently went through phase play and full-back Tom Homer found Watson, who finished brilliantly by brushing off Billy Burns attempted tackle to touch down wide out.Fords touchline conversion attempt hit the post, and then Laidlaw took centre-stage, but on both occasions his kicks dipped short of the target.And Bath did not require a second invitation to close the game out, as Watson went close to scoring another try before the ball found impressive Bath scrum-half Kahn Fotualii, who sent an unmarked Banahan over.Ford added the extras, and Bath could reflect on an unspectacular victory that kept them in the Premierships top four ahead of hosting Sale Sharks next Friday night. Kyrie 4 Confetti For Sale . Nine days before the opening ceremony, organizing committee chief Dmitry Chernyshenko said Wednesday that Sochi is "fully ready" and will deliver safe, friendly and well-run games that defy the grim reports that have overshadowed preparations. Kyrie 2 Shoes Black . The 25-year-old Japanese star has officially been posted by his club team, the Rakuten Golden Eagles. http://www.kyrieirvingshoescheap.com/ . And when it opened, every player was at his stall. Thats a sure sign that a team is in a slump and is searching for answers. "Its embarrassing to be at home and play the way we did," said defenceman Josh Gorges. Kyrie 1 Shoes For Sale . The Olympic champion curler and TSN curling analyst immediately went online to look at the Halls long list of honoured members. Thats when the enormity of the honour sunk in. Kyrie 2 Blue . Canada is now down to its 22-player limit, although but players wont be registered until Christmas Day. Changes could still be made as a result of a suspension or injury. Its the obvious question that most AFL fans are asking now Adelaide have emerged as a genuine premiership threat.How good would the Crows be if Patrick Dangerfield had stayed?Or, to put it another way, how well are they going without him?The former Crow has taken his game to new heights in 2016, standing alone as Brownlow Medal favourite at odds not dissimilar to the ones enjoyed by winner Nat Fyfe last year.Its impossible to say the Crows wouldnt be a better side without the 26-year-old in it, but its not a question anyone at West Lakes is keen to entertain.Weve moved into a different space now, coach Don Pyke said.Weve got guys who have come in and relished the opportunity thats been presented.To be honest, theyre playing their role and playing it really well. We look forward.Pyke is hoping that his team without their former champion can grow into a champion team, and on the evidence of the past two months, theyre well on the way.The Crows are the leagues form side after notcching seven-straight victories including three over finals-bound sides.dddddddddddd.There was scarcely a poor performance on the field; even the teams lowest ball-getters played a role.Charlie Cameron and Mitch McGovern only had nine touches each but Cameron had seven tackles and McGovern kicked a classy snap when the contest was hot.McGovern could be the man most to benefit from Dangerfields departure, debuting in round one and playing every match this season.He hasnt stopped to consider the alternate reality where Dangerfield might have made a different choice.We dont think about it at all, he said.It was a big talking point last year but to the credit of the boys, weve filled the spot really well and you can see the benefits on the scoreboard.We had 10 individual goalkickers (against Carlton).We know were a good attacking side ... we all chip in. ' ' '