3 Years without an RBS 6 Nations win at Murrayfield. 10 Years without a win against France. Some rather unwanted streaks consigned to the dustbin in 80 minutes of heart-pounding, adrenaline-pumping, nerve-shredding action! But who were the main men for Scotland on Sunday?
BACKS:
Stuart Hogg – 8
It feels like we should be thanking wee Archie because fatherhood seems to be suiting Hoggy! A more complete player now than at any stage in his career and while he retains his cockiness his temperament has just the right balance at the moment.
Tommy Seymour – 6
Limited opportunities offensively but again showed his defence has come on in leaps and bounds. Breakdown coach Richie Gray would have loved Tommy’s jackal that won the penalty for Duncan Taylor’s score.
Duncan Taylor – 8
He was everywhere in this game – throwing himself into his defensive duties; scrapping for the ball on the floor; driving back the French line; oh and the small matter of a 60m solo try too!
Alex Dunbar – 6
Unsurprisingly not up to full speed but he was there to ensure the Scottish midfield was not overpowered and there was no chance of the French achieving that.
Tim Visser – 6
On the score sheet yet again! What impressed was that despite not seeing much of the ball his work rate remained high and he made really good decisions in defence.
Finn Russell – 5
No time to judge what he could have done. When he went off after 6 minutes with the French having just scored a superb try most would have thought Scotland were in for a very long afternoon.
Greig Laidlaw – 8
Got almost everything right, again assisted by forwards who are working far more effectively at the breakdown. Also made a couple of last ditch tackles on Vakatawa with open field beckoning.
FORWARDS:
Alasdair Dickinson – 8
His all round workrate was outstanding as was his level of fitness to go 80 minutes and still stay strong at the 20th scrum of the day.
Ross Ford – 6
Lineout was solid (bar 1 steal) and he didn’t need to hook given Greig was allowed to feed the ball at a 45° angle! Physical in defence but carrying could have been more aggressive.
WP Nel – 7
A few more trademark charges this time out. He might want to lay off the buttery pre-game snacks though – no turnovers but the ball did squirt away from him 3 times!
Jonny Gray – 7
Another week, another 100% tackle completion rate. Offered himself tirelessly in attack as well although the wall of light blue jerseys was tough to break down.
Richie Gray – 8
Still improving with each game so we can expect an absolute stormer against Ireland. Almost good enough that we may need to stop calling him Jonny’s Brother.
John Barclay – 7
The French were far more effective at the breakdown than the Italians in the last Round so JB’s turnover opportunities were at a premium. Great lineout option.
John Hardie – 8
There seemed to be a bit of vigilante justice going on in response to a no arms hit by Machenaud early on – Hard Horse saved his biggest hits for the French scrumhalf.
Josh Strauss – 7
After Ryan Wilson last week it was Staruss’ (sic) turn to show what he’s really capable of. Carried for 30m in very heavy traffic as the primary ball carrier – the other 11 Scottish forwards managed 39m combined.
REPLACEMENTS
- Stuart McInally – it feels like his time is coming and he deserves a shot packing down between Dickinson and Nel.
- Rory Sutherland – unused.
- Moray Low – last scrum was very messy but everyone was past caring by that point.
- Tim Swinson – brief cameo.
- Ryan Wilson – put in a good 20 minutes – the highlight being spoiling the final French attempt at a rolling maul that killed off any lingering hope of a comeback.
- Sam Hidalgo-Clyne – unused.
- Peter Horne – 8
Yet another player putting in a performance that truly showed what he is capable of. His passing was excellent and his eye for a gap really stressed a packed French defensive line. - Sean Lamont – unused.
The Scot of the match was… Stuart Hogg. This was a real team performance from No 1 to No 15 and with little drop off in intensity from the subs that were used (special mention to Peter Horne for taking over seamlessly from Finn Russell) – but Hoggy’s touches of class were the icing on the cake. Allied to an excellent kicking display and great defensive work (for 74 minutes at least!) and he’s turning into a real all-rounder at fullback.
Ratings for the avoidance of doubt:
10 – DC v the Lions, 2nd Test 2005
9 – excellent
8 – very good
7 – good
6 – decent
5 – pass marks
4 – poor
3 – very poor
2 – waste of space
1 – waste of oxygen
0 – comatose
topofthemoongw
Tough news for Jonny Gray who has been ruled out of Scotland’s next game against Ireland. He had a scan yesterday which showed he has a partial pectoral tear. Wish him all the best for his recovery. Not the best birthday news for the man who turned 22 yesterday. Hard to believe at times he is still so young as he seems to have been around for a while now.
Would guess we will see Tim Swinson shift up from the bench to start in Jonny’s place and Ben Toolis on the bench to cover lock. Or maybe flanker Rob Harley who can also cover lock will be on the bench but think that would give away too much in bulk against Ireland. We really need Grant Gilchrist to get over his injury problems.
Here is a Tuesday tune, saw these guys for the first time on Sunday, were the first support act at Wet Wet Wet gig, quite like their sound:
Wow wickets have been tumbling in Nagpur, India 26/4 after 5 overs against NZ! Chasing 127 to win. All of a sudden that NZ score looks a far better one than it did before India started batting.
Oh dear India lost by 47 runs. That is a big defeat in a 20 overs innings especially chasing a fairly modest total. Must be the equivalent of an innings defeat in test cricket.
@ Bullscot:
I thought Scotland were very good on Sunday, and have been improving steadily over the last 18 months or so.
It is nice to see them competing again, AND I think it is so important for the 6N and WORLD Rugby.
Mind you, in the same breath we have to ask, “just how poor are France?”
5 @ Bullscot:
I don’t trust ANY result in T20 cricket.
Cricket has no credibility as far as curbing match fixing is concerned, and the Indians are the leaders of the pack IMO.
7 @ Scrumdown:
It’s a crock of shite in my eyes too.
@ Scrumdown:
Agree fully.. it has no more credibility than professional wrestling….
6 @ Scrumdown:
Hi Scrumdown cheers it is nice to have two wins in the last two games, hopefully we can go on and beat Ireland in Dublin, Ireland will be on a high after their big win against Italy. The impressive thing is I felt we were not in good shape going into the tournament with too many of the players not in good domestic form. So it highlights to me what a good coach Vern Cotter is and some of his assistants. One thing it seems is the Boks loss is Scotland’s gain as far the breakdown specialist coach Richie Gray is concerned.
7 @ Scrumdown:
Ja when a team is bowled out that cheaply you want to think it is a good job by the bowlers but unfortunately that has disappeared long ago with the way the sport has been tainted on various occasions.
Bullscot wrote:
Absolutely.
Unfortunately, SARU couldn’t spot a decent coach if he slapped Hoskens on the ear.
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