The Post

Scots revel in surprise win over Auld Enemy

-

Scotland ended England’s Grand Slam hopes in Six Nations rugby by winning 25-13 at Murrayfiel­d yesterday for a first victory over its fierce rival in a decade.

Consigning England to only a second loss in 26 games under coach Eddie Jones, the Scots finally lived up to their hype by blowing away their neighbors in the first half and scoring three tries in the process, two of them by center Huw Jones.

England came out for the second half 22-6 down – their largest halftime deficit in 136 meetings against Scotland – and scored their only try almost immediatel­y through center Owen Farrell. It didn’t spark a comeback, though.

The Scots’ defending was brilliant, they dominated the breakdown and England’s chances all but ended when replacemen­t Sam Underhill was sinbinned for a noarms tackle in the 66th, when the score was 22-13.

Flyhalf Finn Russell knocked over the penalty and the party could start in earnest in a fevered atmosphere at Murrayfiel­d.

‘‘They were too good for us,’’ Jones said. ‘‘We just weren’t in the game for the first 40 minutes. We knew what we were going to get, but we just couldn’t meet the challenge.’’

Scotland’s last win over England in the Calcutta Cup was 15-9 in the 2008 Six Nations. They relied on penalties that day but this was

Jones, a star in the making, kicked forward and gathered to ground in the 15th minute for Scotland’s first home try against the English since 2004.

His other try might end up being the best of the tournament. He broke through a tackle just inside England’s half and ran 50 meters before bursting through two defenders to score. He has 10 tries in 14 tests, having also crossed twice in Scotland’s humiliatin­g 61-21 loss at Twickenham last year and against Samoa, New Zealand, and Australia in the autumn.

Winger Sean Maitland crossed for the other try – from a move started by Jones’ 60-metre break down the right. Russell, another of Scotland’s star players, floated a skip-pass over to Maitland, who dived in at the corner.

Scotland started with a dismal loss in Wales but rebounded by beating France in round two. Like England, the Scots have two wins a different story altogether. from three and can still win the Six Nations.

‘‘We were fueled by last year and the disappoint­ment of the Wales game,’’ Scotland captain John Barclay said. ‘‘We said after that we didn’t become a bad team overnight. That win blows the competitio­n open now.’’

Before the match, there was a scuffle near the tunnel involving Farrell, Barclay and a slew of players as the teams trotted off the field after the warmup.

In Dublin, Ireland edged closer to a St Patrick’s Day showdown with England after seeing off Wales 37-27.

The depleted Irish enjoyed 80 per cent of the possession and territory as they built a seemingly safe 27-13 lead going into the last quarter of a gripping match, but Wales rushed in two tries to trail 30-27 with three minutes to go.

Wales attacked from the kickoff and were making ground on the wings until, 30 seconds after time had elapsed, Gareth Anscombe threw a floater out to the right wing and Ireland speedster Jacob Stockdale intercepte­d and ran 40 metres to settle the result.

Last summer he took 43 Plunket Shield wickets, one behind leading Stags left-arm spinner Ajaz Patel, and was top Ford Trophy wickettake­r this summer with 21 at an average of 22 and economy rate of 5.8.

Nethula sparked the Stags’ collapse of 5-7 in 7.3 overs on Saturday when he removed captain Will Young after a 101-run stand with Tom Bruce. Having won the toss and chosen to bat, it was curtains for the hosts, who lost all 10 wickets to catches.

‘‘Hats off to Auckland, their big dogs Lockie and Tarun led the way and the part-time spinners bowled really well on a wicket that assisted them,’’ said Young, whose team won seven straight and looked near unbeatable heading into the final.

They also lost the Twenty20 decider to the Knights in Hamilton, and last year were pipped by Wellington in a tense T20 final at Pukekura Park.

Auckland began their pursuit of 198 knowing all three chasing sides had won Pukekura Park onedayers this summer, including themselves on December 3.

Test opener Raval, after scoring 149 to help eliminate Canterbury on Wednesday, showed his readiness for England with a breezy 47 off 54 balls and an opening stand of 84 with Glenn Phillips (63 off 75).

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? New Zealand-born Scotland wing Sean Maitland scores during his side’s comprehens­ive win over England.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES New Zealand-born Scotland wing Sean Maitland scores during his side’s comprehens­ive win over England.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand