The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Gray rare high point in dour 1872 Cup clash

- STEVE SCOTT AT BT MURRAYFIEL­D

Even Richard Cockerill said he contemplat­ed emailing Premier Spor ts “to ask for my subscripti­on money back” when Saturday’s 1872 Cup derby went 64 minutes without a point.

Edinburgh’s eventual 10-7 win was deserved, even if handed to them by a terrible Glasgow error. But there was not much to pick over for Gregor Townsend as he finalises his Scotland squad for the Six Nations.

Here’s a few pointers from this game towards Friday’s return at Scotstoun and beyond…

EDINBURGH HAVE TWO OF THE BEST FRONT ROWS IN EUROPEAN RUGBY

The four interchang­eable props mean a level of excellence that Glasgow simply can’t cope with if Oli Kebble is missing, and sometimes even when he’s not. Any one of the three hookers available to them augment the props at the scrummage.

It was the foundation of the recent Sale win. The only downside is that when Pierre Schoeman qualifies for Scotland this summer, Cockerill will lose all of them during internatio­nal windows.

KNOW WHEN TO HOLD ‘EM, KNOW WHEN TO FOLD ‘EM

As the late philosophe­r Kenny Rogers once said. Edinburgh could have built a considerab­le advantage in the first half by kicking just a couple of the flood of penalties that came their way.

They scrummed a few, justifiabl­y as they were on top there. But the lineout was rarely secure, their maul didn’t make a dent in Glasgow, and the visitors’ defence was tenacious.

Richard Cockerill backed his decision-makers afterwards and Ma r k Bennett said after the entire squad were onboard with the strategy.

Ye a h , they would, wouldn’t they? Scoreboard pressure might have made this a very different and less stressful contest. It would have built a foundation for them to bring Darcy Graham and Duhan van der Merwe more into the game.

Expect Edinburgh to kick at goal with far greater frequency on Friday.

‘THE EDGE’ IS NARROWER THAN IT WAS

Glasgow had a massive penalty count against them, and a yellow card was warranted at some point. Perhaps in the 20 minute first- half spell Edinburgh were camped on the Warriors’ line, or after frequent offences at the scrummage.

But Glasgow got away with it. What kept the game close were the penalties Edinburgh gave away, a lot of them at the breakdown.

This reminded one of Scotland’s final Autumn Nations Cup in Dublin, where contesting the ball and getting pinged cost Scotland important field position.

Edinburgh’s breakdown specialist­s Jamie Ritchie and Hamish Watson have to operate on the edge. But the signs are that the freefor-all to contest immediatel­y after the lockdown has been tightened and refs are again not so indulgent to the jackals.

One sympathise­s with players who have every right to be confused.

But a slight adjustment needs to be made if Edinburgh and Scotland are not to be defending lineouts inside their 22 so often.

CALLS FOR DANNY WILSON TO GO ARE LUDICROUS

A hot take on Twitter asked “how long does it go on?” Well, presumably a whole lot longer than half a season under the logistical and financial constraint­s of a pandemic. Wilson has not had nearly sufficient time nor nearly reasonable circumstan­ces to make a difference.

To suggest they need to make a change already is crazy. A portion of the Glasgow support seem to be spoiled and entitled – precisely what they always assume Edinburgh fans to be.

The new head coach can only be judged when he had something l i ke a proper first choice XV available to him. In the meantime, he needs to be cut a good bit of slack.

THE LAST OF BRANDON THOMSON?

Thomson had a solid season as back-up 10 in his first year at Glasgow. However his confidence took a huge jolt with a panicky performanc­e against Dragons early in his second year. It was noticeable that Dave Rennie barely used him again after that.

With both Adam Hastings and Peter Horne out, Wilson had very little alternativ­e but to play Thomson on Saturday.

At times he actually got his back line moving a bit better than Jaco van der Walt did. But a dreadful missed kick, added to the one that lost the recent game to the Dragons, and a brainstorm of a pass that resulted in Edinburgh’s try might be the final straw.

He’s not being asked to be the distributi­ve genius of Finn Russell. Just at a crucial point in the game, not to throw a routine pass two yards behind his inside centre would be cool.

I don’t see any reason why Wilson shouldn’t give a shot to young Ross Thompson in Friday’ s return.

At least he would actually see if he has a viable option there.

RICHIE GRAY SHOWED A LOT OF HIS OLD CLASS

The veteran lock gave a proper schooling to Edinburgh’s young Jamie Hodgson at the lineout, and if Glasgow had stuck it out and sneaked the win, would have been a justified man of the match.

Gray may not be a typical modern internatio­nal lock anymore, but he’s still a class operator.

He’s been labouring with one thing and another this last couple of years. But if he got a concerted run of quality games together, he will be a valuable weapon for the Warriors.

HUW JONES WAS THE BEST BACK ON THE PITCH

Jones’s switch to fullback was an expedient move, but it seems to have re- energised him. With Edinburgh loathe to bring their two wide strike weapons into the game, it was left to Jones to look most threatenin­g.

At 15, his speed and awareness come to the fore – notably when he spotted himself one-on-one with WP Nel and made the best (only?) clean break of the match.

There’s still some work to do around his kicking, but not much. And Glasgow are able to move him around the pitch to where he can be most effective.

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 ??  ?? Glasgow’s Richie Gray steals Edinburgh lineout ball in an impressive display by the veteran lock.
Glasgow’s Richie Gray steals Edinburgh lineout ball in an impressive display by the veteran lock.

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