Stuart Bathgate: Optimism is tempered by defeat, but some genuine signs of hope emerge from behind shadow of humiliation
Richie Gray and Scotland enjoyed a decent first half. Picture: Getty
“The most glaring problem yesterday was the stupidity of de Luca and Lamont in being sin-binned”
WELSh rugby followers are supposed to be the ones who switch most rapidly from dejection to elation and back again, but yesterday Scotland supporters surely gave them a run for their money. We stopped some way short of unmitigated delight, of course, but at the end of an emotionally exhausting game in which humiliation had loomed, we had several causes for genuine hope.
It was a convincing and deserved defeat, and every argument for optimism has to be qualified by that fact. But at least there was a partial recovery by Scotland after that awful spell in which two men were in the bin and the defence was in disarray. At least the try drought was ended. And at least there was a whole lot more rugby played than in the unremitting grimness of the loss to England eight days earlier.
Successful rugby teams can contrast their wins with their defeats. Scotland, for whom this was a fourth consecutive loss, have had to learn to distinguish between different varieties of defeat – and judged in that context, this 27-13 result was preferable to the earlier 13-6 one, for all that it was heavier.
Watching the Murrayfield match was like seeing a Third Division team lose to one from the Second Division. Yesterday in Cardiff Scotland lost to a First Division side, but in doing so upped their own game considerably.
Almost the entire first half, for example, constituted an object lesson in how to nullify the opposition while at the same time posing a real threat. It was a balanced, sensible blend, and surely Scotland’s only real regret at the interval, when the score stood at a penalty apiece, was their failure to turn possession into points.
There were problems aplenty in the first 15 minutes of the second half, and we will come to them later. From then on, though, there was little but decent play from Scotland.
There was a try from Greig Laidlaw that showed you can take the scrum-half out of the No 9 jersey, but you can never take the scrum-half’s instincts away from him. There was the score which should have been from Stuart Hogg, whose sleight of hand to keep a low pass under control was so deft it fooled the referee into thinking he must have knocked on. And there were other moments of real, creative rugby from both of those players and several of their colleagues that at least made us think they can make a game of it against the French.
Mike Blair again outperformed Chris Cusiter when he came on for the last half-hour, with a keener eye for the break and a sharper service. On Sunday week he deserves to start alongside Laidlaw at half-back. David Denton was again the pick of the pack, playing with the confidence of a seasoned international in only his second start. The No 8’s omission from the World Cup squad was seen at the time as sensible given his lack of experience, but in retrospect who is to say he might not have made a vital difference to Scotland there?
The forwards as a whole performed well at the set piece and in defence, for most of the time producing quicker ball than they had been able to do against England. Their task was made a bit easier in the first half by Welsh lineout problems, but over the piece it was still a highly creditable 80 minutes’ work.
With Euan Murray again unavailable because the France match is on a Sunday, Scotland coach Andy Robinson could easily select the same eight again. The only doubt is over the selection of John Barclay instead of Alasdair Strokosch, but fielding two opensides in Barclay and Ross Rennie is perhaps too gung-ho for Robinson. The coach is painfully aware that some basic problems still need to be resolved, and may regard that as the priority rather than trying to maximise the attacking options in his line-up.
The most glaring problem yesterday was the stupidity of Nick de Luca and Rory Lamont in being sinbinned in the second half. In both cases, the trouble was an inability to remain calm in a hectic situation: De Luca should have accepted that Lee Jones had as good a chance as anyone of getting to the ball first, and Lamont should have known that, with the centre already in the bin, safety first should be the option rather than committing another professional foul.
As Gregor Townsend said last week, enthusiasm kills accuracy. That failing was also apparent in the closing minutes of the first half when Allan Jacobsen knocked on off 21st-phase ball just metres from the line.
It was a debilitating error from the Edinburgh prop, but it only led to the failure to score points. The mistake by Chris Cusiter from the second-half restart was more damaging, as it quickly led to the first Welsh try, in the process undoing much of Scotland’s good work of the first 40 minutes was undone.
The restart problem, like the inability to score tries, has been a recurrent difficulty in recent years, if a less eye-catching one. Other faults also remain. But, to end on a positive note, another problem in recent seasons has been the dearth of attacking flair. Yesterday’s loss was another bitter blow, but in years to come it may just be remembered as the game in which Scotland rediscovered a more promising strain of running rugby.
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Comments
There are 5 comments to this article
Page 1 of 1
Sevendirtywords
Tuesday, February 14, 2012 at 03:41 PM#4 - i think you need a better TV! Jamie Roberts knocks the ball whilst attempting an intercept. It is then kicked on. De Luca is pushed over and falls into Davies - although it ends up looking like a crap tackle. Poite actually calls this one correctly - I saw two players fall over - and it is McDowell sees something more.
jimmybro
Tuesday, February 14, 2012 at 12:53 PMFirstly, there wasn't a knock on prior to NDL's yellow card. I watched it in slow-mo last night and what happened was NDL tried a one handed slap to flick the ball past the on coming defender but sent it about a meter and a half behind the player outside him. And given that the player outside him was Jacobsen he shouldn't have been attempting a flick on pass! Secondly, I agree that a yellow was harsh given that the knock on that stopped us getting a try at half time was from hands in the ruck by Jenkins and we didn't even get a penalty! (That said if Cusiter had used his eyes and gone right prior to this there were no defenders as North was injured) I would say we need to speak to the ref more to point these things out but you could hear players calling offsides during the game and getting nothing from the ref. I think the players need to be a bit more vigorous with the boot when there are hands and bodies in the way.
Sevendirtywords
Tuesday, February 14, 2012 at 10:12 AMAgree on restarts. Apparent at International, Pro12 and Sevens that we have a disproportionate level of difficulty with restarts - ultimately cost us a place in the RWC quarters. Odd one as it's relatively easily coached! Also agree that a Brown, Rennie, Denton backrow would be very tasty! Having reviewed the major incidents again I do think we were very unfortunate on most of them. NDL YC wasn't really an attempted tackle, he was knocked over and falls onto Davies who also falls. He has his hands on him but doesn't really attempt the tackle. Poite says he sees two players falling but McDowall (who has form for hating us) is the one who calls tackling the player without the ball. Harsh given that it's on halfway and Davies is never getting the ball in a million years. Rory Lamont YC was also marginal. Ball is passed out of a ruck (where RL is offside) but once the second player has it it's arguably open play and thus RL isn't offside. There plenty cover so again it's a harsh decision.
tuton1056
Monday, February 13, 2012 at 01:49 PMScotland manage to create their own chaos theory, out of one error. There is an endemic inability to secure re-starts in the pro setup. This happens, many times, in all the teams. The first sin-binning was a direct result of the referree not calling a blatant knock-on and De Luca panicked. Instead of a good attacking position the second phase of chaos was born, quickly followed by the third. Prior to that was the stupid penalty awarded against Strokosh, towards the end of the first half. The Welsh were shouting at the referee to give a penalty, when is was very debatable. Please note that the Welsh were not penalised in similar circumstances, in the second half. But for this choas, which totally reversed the dominance that was evident in the first half, there was very little between the teams. Don't think that Ford is a Captain. Even debatable that he is the best hooker. Lawson was much more dynamic. Strokosh too slow. Much better having Denton and Rennie with a natural No8. Shame that Kelly Brown is injured, Would be a fantastic unit.
tuton1056
Monday, February 13, 2012 at 01:49 PMScotland manage to create their own chaos theory, out of one error. There is an endemic inability to secure re-starts in the pro setup. This happens, many times, in all the teams. The first sin-binning was a direct result of the referree not calling a blatant knock-on and De Luca panicked. Instead of a good attacking position the second phase of chaos was born, quickly followed by the third. Prior to that was the stupid penalty awarded against Strokosh, towards the end of the first half. The Welsh were shouting at the referee to give a penalty, when is was very debatable. Please note that the Welsh were not penalised in similar circumstances, in the second half. But for this choas, which totally reversed the dominance that was evident in the first half, there was very little between the teams. Don't think that Ford is a Captain. Even debatable that he is the best hooker. Lawson was much more dynamic. Strokosh too slow. Much better having Denton and Rennie with a natural No8. Shame that Kelly Brown is injured, Would be a fantastic unit.
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