The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Redpath among trio set to miss out

- STEVE SCOTT

Scotland’s sky-high confidence after Twickenham probably needed to come back to Earth for tomorrow’s second game against Wales, and injury issues to key men have sobered the mood.

Jamie Ritchie, Cameron Redpath and Sean Maitland have all been ruled out of Scotland’s attempt to win two opening games to a Five or Six Nations Championsh­ip for the first time since 1996, when head coach Gregor Townsend was at the controls on the field rather than off it.

Ritchie – with Hamish Watson probably Scotland’s most consistent player of the last three years – and Maitland are likely just missing this game.

They should make Scotland’s next historycru­shing attempt in Paris, with the help of the championsh­ip’s first bye week.

The absence of Redpath, who impressed so much on his debut at Twickenham, is a major disappoint­ment.

The 21-year-old suffered a neck injury which only manifested itself after Saturday’s game.

A scan has confirmed “a neural issue” and it’s not clear how long he’ll be out. The hope is that he can return later in the championsh­ip, possibly after the second bye week.

Unusually, Townsend has replaced the injured trio with players who were not in the squad of 23 for Twickenham, leaving the bench untouched.

Blade Thomson will replace Ritchie at blindside, James Lang returns to the centre for Redpath, while Darcy Graham is recalled for Maitland.

Townsend said he’s detected no complacenc­y in the squad this week in preparatio­n for Wales, who have named a muchchange­d team due to their own considerab­le injury issues.

“Winning helps in terms of the mood, the confirmati­on of what players are doing can lead to some excellent results,” said the head coach.

“But there is a concern always that confidence can make you take your eye off the ball at times.

“We’ve not seen that from our players this week. It’s been a very similar build-up to the England week, in terms of how well the players have trained.

“We know this is a big challenge this weekend, a very physical team who are coming up here with the confidence of winning.

“They’re a very experience­d team.

“Every game is different. But we’re going to not just back up our performanc­e but improve on it.

“There are a number of areas where we could have done things better. But the fundamenta­ls put us in place to get that win. So we’ll need to see that again.”

The three changes that needed to be made required bringing in players from outwith Saturday’s squad, continued Townsend.

“With Blade it was really the blend of the back row – Jamie has the line-out presence as well as his all-round game, and Blade brings that.

“We have two out-andout 12s in our squad, in James and Duncan (Taylor), and it became a decision between one of those two.

“We feel James is better placed to play 80 minutes at that high intensity, just because Duncan hasn’t had as many games in the last few weeks.

“Darcy likewise was an easy change because we didn’t have a winger on the bench last week. It’s a strange one but the players coming in were either the right positions or the right blend for this weekend.”

Despite the changes, the aim is to push on and take advantage of any dominance, something they didn’t do at Twickenham when 11-6 flattered England.

“We felt that with the dominance we had and the number of occasions we were in the 22 there were tries out there that we didn’t take,” said Townsend.

“There was one in the first half when Hamish (Watson) was held up over the line, and if we had taken a better option we would have walked in a try.

“Those are clearly areas where you know improvemen­ts could lead to points.

“But then there are lots of other improvemen­ts in defensive sets, attacking decisions and execution.

“In the main our players were excellent, whether it was line-out, scrum, defence, attack, kick-chase. The basis of our game is there and we just want to improve by another five or 10% this week.”

The biggest improvemen­t on Saturday was discipline but tomorrow’s referee is England’s Matt Carley, who pinged Scotland 15 times in Dublin in November.

“We have talked about (discipline) a lot, especially around our defence,” said Townsend.

“Discipline is a consequenc­e of how you are playing. If you are getting forward in your attack then it puts their defence under pressure.

“Saturday was a really positive start. We would like to think when teams to put us under pressure we stay calm and composed within our system.”

 ??  ?? INJURED: Cameron Redpath will miss Scotland’s match against Wales at Murrayfiel­d tomorrow
INJURED: Cameron Redpath will miss Scotland’s match against Wales at Murrayfiel­d tomorrow
 ??  ?? Gregor Townsend.
Gregor Townsend.
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 ??  ?? Jamie Ritchie, top, has been ruled out of the Wales clash but there are recalls for Blade Thomson and Darcy Graham, above.
Jamie Ritchie, top, has been ruled out of the Wales clash but there are recalls for Blade Thomson and Darcy Graham, above.

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