A week on from their Premiership win and Saracens’ Owen Farrell is still revelling in its glory.

Their fourth domestic title came in style with an assertive 27-10 win over Exeter Chiefs at Twickenham.

And after a tumultuous year for Sarries, the England fly-half admitted he was relieved to end on a high – especially against a team who dominated all season.

“We had a brilliant couple of weeks and were really excited about the game,” he said.

“These games are always tense when you come into them.

“They’re always great occasions and thankfully we came out on the right side of it.

“There’s been a lot of figuring out this year and days like that all make it seem worth it.

“There’s a lot of hard work that’s gone into it from the staff and the players.

“The forwards were on a different level and were unbelievably physical – everyone was concentrated and ready for what was going on.

“To be able to score four tries we’re going forward somewhere so big credit to those guys.”

Hooker Jamie George was equally thrilled by the Men in Black’s performance, expressing delight with the way the pack fronted up to the challenge of a physical Exeter Chiefs eight.

Sarries showed their dominance, winning several scrum penalties as well as multiple head-to-head battles at the breakdown and in midfield.

“We put a challenge out to be the most physical pack in the Premiership and I think we showed that,” he said.

“I thought we were brilliant. I felt we were really good and dominated the game.

“It’s the fourth time we’ve won this thing which is pretty nice, and it shows the club is built on great foundations.

“We’ve got a great culture, great people and that’s a good combination.”

This culture looks set to continue, as director of rugby Mark McCall put pen to paper this week, committing his future to the club by signing a contract extension to 2022.

Assistant coach Alex Sanderson also agreed a new deal, ending speculation over him becoming England’s next defence coach.