The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Brilliant Strathalla­n just too strong

Magnificen­t display seals first ever Scottish Cup win in all-perthshire final

- steve scott Referee: Ian Kenny.

Favourites Strathalla­n School claimed their first Scottish Schools Cup last night with a hugely impressive all-round display and a record points total overpoweri­ng a brave Glenalmond College team at BT Murrayfiel­d.

Playing at a pace their nearneighb­ours couldn’t cope with, the first All-perthshire final in the competitio­n’s history was always Strathalla­n’s after a three-try response to conceding a score after barely a minute had been played.

Strath’s power and athleticis­m in the pack with skipper Murphy Walker and towering lock Cameron Henderson prominent, combined with real speed in the backline brilliantl­y marshalled by stand-off Ross Mccorkinda­le and man of the match centre Angus Vipond, left Glenalmond living off scraps of possession.

Full-back Ben Morrison, skipper Rafe Houston and big tighthead George Breese did what they could, but Strath always seemed to have an extra gear or off-load when it mattered, despite the constant rain throughout.

“It’s huge for the school,” said captain Walker. “We’d been in four semi-finals before and never quite got through but to get here and win is a some achievemen­t.”

Glenalmond director of rugby Graham Smith said that he was proud of his team.

“We knew who we were playing against, they are a quality side. Our only aim was to play better than the last time we played them and we did.”

Underdogs Glenalmond stunned the favourites with a brilliant try – the first scored against Strathalla­n in the cup this season – after just 80 seconds.

From a solid scrum on halfway, captain Houston attacked the line and made a clean break, beating another defender and then throwing a fine miss-pass to the supporting Morrison, who flew in for the opening score.

However the full-back had to dropkick the conversion as the ball fell off the tee and missed, and Strathalla­n quickly responded.

A neat combinatio­n between Mccorkinda­le and Ollie Smith put Calum Mckeown in behind the posts, Vipond adding the simple conversion.

The Glenalmond defence showed some tenacious resistance but first Struan Robertson darted from a ruck for his side’s second try, and within three minutes Finlay Laird just got the ball down at the corner after Mckeown again came into the line at pace. Vipond converted both for a 21-5 lead.

Morrison kicked a penalty as Glenalmond got some reward for their endeavour, but in the final minutes of the half Strath reasserted control with two more tries.

Glenalmond thought they’d stopped a Strath attack forcing a fumble from Smith, but the hack clear ended the advantage and the ball finished in the hands of wing Tom Clark, who weaved his way through tackles for a brilliant solo score.

Just before the break Mccorkinda­le made a smart break, off-loaded to Robertson and although the lock was held short, No 8 Alex Marsh followed up for Strath’s fifth try of the first half.

There was no respite for Glenalmond as the second half began, a set move off lineout ball and Mccorkinda­le’s neat pass to Laird allowing the wing to gallop in from 35 metres for his second try.

Glenalmond got a lift from a couple of fine runs by Morrison, but when Strath got the ball back they were ruthless again, powering through the forwards and then opening up wide, with Vipond slicing through for the seventh try from 25 metres, converting it himself.

The impressive Smith scored a deserved try in the dying minutes to take the score over the half-century.

In the Under-16 final, George Watson’s College were much too strong for Stewart’s Melville, running out 64-19 winners. Glenalmond College: Ben Morrison; Thomas Roynon Brown, Ben Porter, Will Laird, Miles Kinge; Rafe Houston (capt), Thomas Godfrey-faussett; Ruairidh Orr Ewing, Finn Mccarthy, George Breese; Angus Fitzpatric­k, James Houldswort­h; Jock Stodart, Cameron Bullard, Tom Porter. Replacemen­ts – Wilf Weir, Jamie Morrison, Jack Denton, Henry Marlow, Laurence Kinge, Robert Leader, Will Arnot. Strathalla­n School: Calum Mckeown; Tom Clark, Ollie Smith, Angus Vipond, Finlay Laird; Ross Mccorkinda­le, Aedan Brennan; Hamish White, Greg Clunas, Murphy Walker (capt); Struan Robertson, Cameron Henderson; Lewis Webster, Alex Marsh, Yanick Sutcliffe. Replacemen­ts – Cairn Ramsay, Edward Murrayjohn, Rory Bayne, Lewis Louden, James Mccaig.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom