A superb all-round performance from Tottonians ensured the three-way domination by Hampshire clubs continued to lead the way in London Division 3 South-West.

Winchester had a comfortable victory over Alton and Jersey stole a one-point win over an unfortunate winless Andover on the Channel Island, leaving Totts third behind the other two on points difference.

Against the side that missed out on promotion through the play-offs last season, Totts produced the best showing of the campaign so far to inflict a second defeat on Old Wimbledonians and record a win number three out of three for the Water Lane outfit.

Injured skipper Paul Goodall was delighted as he watched his side put in the performance they had promised for so long as first Richard Buck scooted in under the posts and then Paul Brading's break released Jason Jones to put in Martin Goodall before the interval.

A laboured restart allowed the visitors a soft try but Buck created a chance from well inside his own half for James Weeks to take for his first league score. Lee Brading converted all three.

"It was a great performance of structured rugby, which is something we have been working on for some time," said Paul Goodall.

"The back row was outstanding. It was a fantastic performance and puts us in a great position."

Sitting at the top are Winchester, who took a while to get going but eventually find their way through stubborn but poor Alton 34-7.

It took a full 25 minutes before number eight Ben Baseley drove over to get on the scoreboard but Alton responded immediately when Adam Baker took advantage of a kick-off fumble and pounced. However Dan Kinsey hit a penalty to give the visitors the interval lead.

As the second half progressed, Winchester gained full control with Ed Ravenhill, Scott Turner and prop Adi Mort all going over before Baseley added his second at the end as the visitors began to take balls in the scrum and the line-out was all one way traffic.

Coach Barry Bridgman was disappointed by the first half but enthused by the second. "We got dragged down in the first, but turned it around nicely in the second, carrying out our plans ad we discussed them," he said.

"We overwhelmed them and scored some good tries, which was encouraging ahead of next week's mini crunch game against Tottonians."

In London Four South-West, Guernsey held off Romsey's late charge at the Sports Centre to pick up their second win of the season and leave the home side still searching for their first.

Two Graham Noble penalties put Romsey on the board before the break but they had already conceded three tries in the process to the newly-promoted Channel Islanders.

However, a superb turn-over and recycled ball allowed centre Jerry Francis to reduce the gap early in the second period and with Noble's conversion in his last game before heading off to university, Romsey felt they were back in the contest.

It was a forlorn hope though as Guernsey upped the anti, and with Stuart McCormick off the field with a back injury and Romsey's scrum weakened, the visitors took command. Guernsey's number eight was then sent off for an offence involving on skipper Darren Sharpe.

Southampton breathed a huge sigh of relief when the final whistle went after a full 20 minutes of second half injury time was played and the Old Amplefordian fly-half missed the conversion to the try in the final moment of their match at Test Park.

In miserable conditions, the city side held out for a 15-14 win but only thanks to the Amps' man missing the vital kick in the 100th-minute.

Alan Butler went over in the first half and Chris Milne right on half-time to give Saints the slenderest of interval advantages as OA's had hit three penalties. With a Dave Griffiths penalty extending the lead, it was down to how long the referee added on.

But skipper Tony Cador did not know where the added time came from. "I don't think anyone knew where the hold up was. There was one injury, which took two minutes to sort out. Maybe the ref was enjoying the game," he joked!