The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Townsend names squad for Natwest 6 Nations.

Head coach Townsend explains decision over armband for Six Nations

- STEVE SCOTT

Scotland head coach Gregor Townsend yesterday named a squad of 40 players for the Natwest 6 Nations and revealed that John Barclay would retain the captaincy.

Townsend remains optimistic that former skipper Greig Laidlaw will be available to play a full part in the majority of the campaign as he prepares to make his comeback from a broken leg.

However, despite admitting that Laidlaw, if fit, would have led the Scots in the Autumn Tests, he has decided that Barclay would keep the armband.

Townsend has included uncapped props Murray Mccallum – a Dunfermlin­e RFC product – and D’arcy Rae in his squad with Edinburgh backs Blair Kinghorn and Nathan Fowles also in the running for a first Scotland appearance.

David Denton, Jon Welsh, Mark Bennett, Duncan Taylor and Scott Lawson all earn recalls for the Six Nations campaign, which gets under way against Wales in Cardiff on February 3.

John Barclay will stay as captain but Gregor Townsend is optimistic that Greig Laidlaw will be available to play a full part in the majority of the Natwest 6 Nations to give Scotland “two quality leaders”.

The head coach named an enlarged squad of 40 players which included recalls for establishe­d players like Laidlaw – who last played for Scotland in Paris almost a year ago – David Denton, Jon Welsh, Mark Bennett and Duncan Taylor.

Laidlaw would have captained Scotland in the summer tour but for his call-up to the Lions, and Townsend added he’d have been skipper for the Autumn Tests had he not broken his leg. In his absence, however, Barclay had excelled as captain and would keep the job.

“He’s been a great captain for the team just as Greig was,” said Townsend. “Greig obviously hasn’t played for around three months now so that’s a big part of why he wasn’t named as captain, but also the fact that John has done such a good job.

“If and when Greig comes back to full fitness – and we really hope it will be next weekend – we’ll have two players in the squad who have captained the team very well in the last few years.”

Townsend wouldn’t be drawn on whether he considers the 32-year-old, with 58 caps and 582 points for his country, was still his first choice No 9 ahead of Ali Price.

“Greig was in great form leading into November. We understood it would be difficult going into a new environmen­t in France with a different language but I was pleased with how he was playing,” he continued.

“He would have been our captain. We obviously don’t know where he is yet until he comes back and plays but our expectatio­ns are it will be tough for him to begin with, just to get that match fitness. He’s been training well this week and let’s hope he gets back to his preinjury form quickly.”

The hope is that Laidlaw will feature for club Clermont-auvergne in a Top 14 game prior to the Six Nations kick-off against Wales in Cardiff on February 3. But, while it may be that he and key men Stuart Hogg, Alex Dunbar, Ryan Wilson and Tommy Seymour don’t play before the Principali­ty Stadium clash after recent injury absences, it’s not something concerning Townsend.

“We’ll have two weeks’ build-up to that Wales game that will include some very tough sessions. So for those guys, it will be a chance for them to prove they are fit to play internatio­nal rugby.

“Stuart played one game against Leinster prior to the Autumn Tests after a long injury break and played exceptiona­lly well.”

Townsend has had to include two more uncapped props to cover the loss of as many as six to injury. Welsh – surely the favourite to start in Cardiff at tighthead – and Gordon Reid are recalled, while D’arcy Rae and Murray Mccallum get their first look.

Mccallum, a Dunfermlin­e RFC product and still just 21, has been picked to play on either side of the scrum, said Townsend, as he has been doing for Edinburgh this season.

Scotland’s catalogue of injuries doesn’t really compare to Wales, but while Townsend will keep his options

“… we’ll have two players in the squad who have captained the team very well in the last few years. GREGOR TOWNSEND

open he doesn’t expect to see Ross Ford, WP Nel or Allan Dell for this Six Nations.

“Alasdair Dickinson maybe (will return), which would be a huge boost,” he added. “We hope Darryl Marfo, Scott Cummings, Tim Swinson and Zander Fagerson will be back during the tournament.”

Fraser Brown’s presence is still under question as he sees a specialist to identify a reason for recurring concussion­s, but Townsend has filled that gap with a recall for veteran Scott Lawson, now 36 and still doing a decent job for Newcastle in the Aviva Premiershi­p.

“Given that we are missing, at the moment, two hookers who have played a lot of rugby for Scotland, and we have a couple of guys at prop who don’t have a lot of experience, Scott’s experience, we believe, will really help us,” said Townsend.

“The way Scott has played this season really fits with what we want to do with our game – he’s dynamic, he’s a low tackler and he’s got excellent set-piece accuracy – whether that is in the line-out or scrum.”

Townsend has been impressed by Richie Gray’s return to action after eight months out with Toulouse – “he’s played all 80 minutes of three games and played well” – and Mark Bennett’s two games for Edinburgh after a 10-month break.

“Mark has timed it right to get back into our thoughts,” he added. “He has done very well for Scotland in the past and we have real quality at centre and at second row.”

Blair Kinghorn is rewarded for his outstandin­g Edinburgh form with a callup and Townsend is considerin­g him for all back three positions because of his height and speed.

Glasgow’s Adam Hastings and two players who were in club rugby at the start of the season, Luke Crosbie and Darcy Graham, have been invited to train with the squad, but there’s no spot for George Horne, with Kinghorn maybe the best young player in Scottish pro rugby this year.

“George is somebody we could have invited, but we see him as someone who is very close to that squad so in a different category to those three,” said Townsend.

“He is playing regularly for Glasgow, there are parts of his game that really excite us – his work-rate, his speed and ability to spot a gap.

“His passing has improved a lot, which is great for the future and already now. There are parts of his game he has to work on, especially coming into the Six Nations, but that is just down to him getting more experience of managing games at Glasgow and he should get that over the next few weeks.”

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 ?? Picture: SNS Group. ?? Scotland head coach Gregor Townsend at BT Murrayfiel­d after revealing his 40-man squad for the Six Nations campaign.
Picture: SNS Group. Scotland head coach Gregor Townsend at BT Murrayfiel­d after revealing his 40-man squad for the Six Nations campaign.
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