Scotland bounced back from their defeat to South Africa with a 59-21 win over Portugal at Murrayfield.
The gulf in status between the two nations was apparent as a Scotland side featuring 14 changes racked up nine tries against their Tier 2 opponents, who ran in three tries of their own.
Several less established internationals took advantage of their opportunity to impress by crossing the whitewash, including Leicester prop Will Hurd and Sale wing Arron Reed, who added a second-half double.
But it was the talismanic Darcy Graham who had another bumper Murrayfield crowd in raptures when he produced a delightful piece of skill to score his 29th Scotland try and move level with Edinburgh colleague Duhan Van Der Merwe in the all-time record list.
Stafford McDowall – captain for the day – also got on the scoresheet while 19-year-old Edinburgh back-rower Freddy Douglas came on to become Scotland’s youngest debutant since 1963, despite never having made a competitive appearance at club level.
Here is how the Scotland players rated out of 10 for their performance:

13. Rory Hutchinson
A first Scotland cap in over two years for the Northampton Saints centre who had some nice moments, most notably a lovely offload to play in Bayliss for his try in the first half. 7 | SNS Group

14. Darcy Graham
Always lively, always dangerous. His first-half try drew him level with Duhan van der Merwe at the top of the Scotland all-time list. The Edinburgh wingers now have 29 Test tries each. 7 | SNS Group / SRU

15. Tom Jordan
A man of the match performance from the Bristol-bound player who started the game at full-back and finished it at stand-off. Unlucky to have a try chalked off for a forward pass earlier in the move. Composed with the ball and aggressive in the tackle. 8 | Getty Images

16. Replacements
Freddy Douglas, pictured, came off the bench to become Scotland’s youngest debutant in over 60 years. The 19-year-old handled the occasion with maturity beyond his years. Jamie Dobie made his mark with Scotland’s ninth and final try. Scotland's scrum seemed to struggle when the front-row replacements came on. | SNS Group