The Goodburn brothers sent Haywards Heath flying into the top five with two more vintage pieces of finishing.

Now the Whitemans Green side aim to stay there and round-off an impressive first season in London One.

Centre Giles Goodburn twice made incisive breaks to send his brother Henry racing for the line in Saturday's comfortable 31-3 home win over lowly Cambridge.

Henry might even have scored his second successive hat-trick had a pass from his brother not been adjudged forward by referee Sarah Stanley, a women's World Cup official.

Heath are now looking forward to the trip to Thanet and a key home clash with Staines.

Henry Goodburn, who skippers the side, said: "We are very happy with fifth position.

"Saturday's performance was nothing flashy but I thought we were pretty comfortable and we were delighted not to concede a try."

Heath never looked in danger once they survived an early onslaught by a Cambridge side who had a bitterly cold north-westerly wind at their backs in the first half.

That pressure only yielded a Darren Messenger penalty and Heath responded with a slick combination between the Goodburns and Andrew Cook, followed by a rather generous penalty try, awarded after Glenn Rankin's charge had been held up short of the line.

Mark Pymm's strong finish just after the break ensured victory before the skipper stepped inside a tackle for a superb finish in the closing stages.

Stuart Charnely made light of the windy conditions by kicking all four conversions and a penalty, with the last two kicks being especially well judged efforts.

Heath's only setback was a second half injury to lock Rick Ure, who damaged medial knee ligaments.

Heath have had a bye in the Sussex Trophy on Sunday as Uckfield have had to scratch.

East Grinstead are top of London Three South East after blitzing neighbours Crawley 67-3 at Willoughby Fields.

Steve O'Reilly enjoyed the return to his old club, collecting 27 points which sent Gs ahead of Sidcup on points difference.

O'Reilly scored a try and added eight out of nine conversions, as well as two penalties.

Matt Lester (2), Guy Cook, Marcus Ayres, Paul Day, Ray Hennessy, Tim Lucas and Alex Ingham also got over.

Gs lost their fourth scrum half of the season when Stuart Sorrell limped off with a damaged ankle. Mike Ayres stepped in at No. 9.

Worthing have a game in hand and look set to make a charge after thrashing Dunstonian 52-7 at Roundstone Lane.

They were 33 points up inside half-an-hour and coach Ian Davies said: "We played some very good stuff in patches."

Tries came from Mike Imrie (2), Dave Davis, Paul Cox, Danny Piggott, Ben Coulson and Adam Holloway. Coulson slotted six conversions.

Brighton also had a great win, coming back from 12-3 down at the break to beat hosts Dartfordians 28-17.

Danie Venter impressed at No. 8 and scored two tries. Dave Pegler and Russ Taylor also got over with Carwyn James adding a conversion and two penalties.

Lewes led Charlton Park 13-7 at one stage but conceded needless penalties and lost 18-13. Dave Hemsley's close range try plus a conversion and two penalties by Neil Rumble gave the hosts their lead.