Camborne took a young squad of 22 players down to Tregeseal for their first pre-season and came away with a convincing victory.
On a day when the conditions were much more suited to Cricket than rugby the Cherry & Whites played an expansive game which the hosts found difficult to compete with.
The forwards dominated for large periods of the game which gave their talented back division some superb opportunities to run the ball. The pacy backs looked dangerous with ball in hand but to their credit the St Just defence worked hard all afternoon managing to prevent several try scoring breaks.
Camborne did manage to cross the line 5 times in the first half with Jonny Dower, Simon Hoon and Ben Tyler-Guy among the scorers.
The third quarter saw the visitors make several changes and for the opening 10 minutes the hosts had their best spell of the match when they managed to grab a try.
The Cherry & Whites were soon back in control and notched up a further 4 tries with Guy again on the scoresheet along with returning wing Jayson Lee who carried a big threat all afternoon.
The best was saved for last when 18yr old prop forward Liam Barkwill made a scintilating 60 metre run cutting through the home defence to score in the corner on 70 minutes. This proved the last play of the game as the referee blew up for full time.
There were a number of very good performances for Town including Bradley Bawden (playing out of position at fly half), Tyler-Guy who made more breaks than you could count at centre. Dower may not be one of the younger players but his fitness levels are as good as anyone and he fully deserved his brace of tries.
Also Colts Olli Page, Luke Barnes, AJ Leverton, Connor Willoughby and Dominic Trengrove all made the most of their opportunity looking comfortable at senior level.
After the game watching head coach Damien Cook told the squad how impressed he was with the performance. He went on to urge the players to make a big effort to attend more train sessions and give themselves a better opportunity of making the 1st XV.