Ahead of this match, head coach Vern Cotter asked his players to play with a smile on their collective face and the entire BT Murrayfield crowd was sporting one at the conclusion of the Kiwi coach’s home debut. His side saw off Argentina in a five-try romp and the manner in which they did so will create real belief in the Scotland camp and among their tartan-clad fans.
Scotland were cohesive, tough, inventive and played with pace throughout. The forwards produced quick ball and the Glasgow back line demonstrated that they could reproduce their club form at the next level. At times, the home side were inspirational. They rarely dropped below the efficient. All they lacked on occasion was the clinical finishing required or this match could have been over by half time.
Instead, it was six minutes into the second half before Scotland scored their fourth try, which finally killed off any hopes of an Argentine revival. The crowd was understandably wowed; what a pity the stadium wasn’t full.
The two Gray boys were a huge presence, grabbing a try each and, while it is insidious to separate them, Jonny was utterly outstanding, carrying the fight to the Pumas relentlessly and winning one important turnover.
scotsman
We all suspected that Adam Ashe was made of the real stuff and he proved it yesterday with a physical contribution to the heavy lifting required in Test rugby. And Alasdair Dickinson was a revelation, making huge inroads with the ball in hand. The prop’s only mistake was a forward pass to ruin a scoring opportunity in the first half that Joe Montana would have been proud to call his own.
In the backline, Greig Laidlaw was as masterful as ever, but he has added so much more with two clean line breaks leading to two tries, not to mention his usual contribution from the boot. Outside him, Finn Russell played with composure and kicked beautifully from hand, pinning the visitors back into their own 22 with little chips to the corner.
All the above looked less than likely after two minutes as the Argentines went 7-0 ahead when the giant Puma winger, Manuel Montero, caught Laidlaw squarely, but legally, in the back with a pile-driver and the ball spilled loose in the tackle.
Argentina flanker Rodrigo Baez scooped the ball up in one fluid movement and showed everyone else a clean pair of heels up the left-hand touchline to score with one and a half minutes of play on the stadium clock.
Nicolas Sanchez popped the conversion over and the crowd were stunned into silence, but not for long.
Scotland then proceeded to score three tries in the space of 20 minutes, which had the crowd roaring their approval, the second and third of them coming when Argentina’s winger Juan Imhoff was in the sin bin.
Richie Gray was first up when the big lock popped up on the blindside to score, and Jonny then followed his brother over the Argentine try line. Imhoff was sent to the naughty step for shouldering Tommy Seymour into touch and Scotland elected for the attacking lineout. A couple of plays later and Jonny Gray barged his way over.
Still Scotland were not finished. Argentina are not the most disciplined side in world rugby and they conceded a midfield penalty. The visitors may have expected Laidlaw to have a pop at the posts, instead the little scrum-half tapped and ran. He made a clean break through the retreating Argentina line and one pass to the unmarked Maitland on the right flank was enough to put the winger away. Laidlaw kicked three tricky conversions and added one penalty to give Scotland a 24-10 lead at the break.
The little man then broke again through the middle of the Pumas defence before feeding Stuart Hogg for the first score of the second half. Naturally enough, he made good the extras with a touchline conversion.
The remainder of this game was largely played out deep inside the Scotland half as Argentina went in search of some consolation. Rob Harley sat out ten minutes after getting under an Argentine jumper at a lineout, but the Scots withheld a long siege on their line until eventually the Puma set-scrum persuaded Wayne Barnes to award a penalty try with ten minutes left on the clock.
Seymour used ten seconds of those ten minutes to score an interception try and Jim Hamilton maintained his reputation as pantomime villain by earning a yellow card five minutes after entering the fray. There was still time for reserve scrum-half Tomas Cubelli to score two tries for Argentina, both from short range, which meant the final score flattered the visitors.
Final Score: Scotland 41 / 31 Argentina
Scorers:
Scotland:
- Tries: Richie Gray (1), Jonny Gray (1), Sean Maitland (1), Stuart Hogg (1), Tommy Seymour (1)
- Conversions: Greig Laidlaw (4), Duncan Weir (1)
- Penalties: Greig Laidlaw (2)
Argentina:
- Tries: Javier Ortega Desio (1), Penalty Try (1), Tomas Cubelli (2)
- Conversions: Nicolas Sanchez (1), Juan Martin Hernandez (3)
- Penalties: Nicolas Sanchez (1)
Referee: Wayne Barnes (RFU)
Attendance: 36 764
What happened to the other 48 shades? 👿
Sorry GBS couldn’t help myself with corny headline 😀
1 @ Victoriabok:
Hi Victoriabok nah didn’t need them to overcome Argentina, but think we can sure do with all 50 of them against the All Blacks next weekend
Interesting this is what Stuart Hogg was quoted as saying before the game, looks like the plan worked quite well:
“We have different structures in place and we are trying to play a different brand of rugby.
“Get quick ball, play on the front foot, put the carrot in front of the donkey by kicking the ball in behind them and keeping the forwards going forward.
“It is an exciting way to play. It is basically free rein to do what we want within certain restraints, obviously. It is a big thing for [Cotter] as he wants us to express ourselves out on the field and on the training pitch.”
@ Bullscot:
Congrats on the win. I’m se if i can track down some highlights when the power comes back on.
5 @ MacroBok:
Hi MacroBok thanks, if you don’t mind if you do find any would you post here please, busy time so yet to see the game may get chance to download the game on the broadcaster’s ‘iplayer’ but that would be the whole one so one for viewing some time in the future, so be nice to see short highlights reel.
Have added a highlights clip to the Scotland win over Argentina article.
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