The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Captain John Barclay at training yesterday as he prepares to lead Scotland against Ireland in Dublin today as Gregor Townsend’s side chase a third straight win in the NatWest 6 Nations Championsh­ip.

Captain leads Scots in Dublin searching to end away form questions at last

- by Steve Scott rugby correspond­ent stscott@thecourier.co.uk

The last survivor from Scotland’s last victory on Irish soil is also the captain as the Scots attempt to silence the constant queries about their away from in Dublin this afternoon.

Scotland last won in Dublin in 2010, the final game of Ireland’s tenure at historic Croke Park when John Barclay was part of Andy Robinson’s team that won at last in their final game of the season, upsetting the Irish going for a Triple Crown on St Patrick’s Day weekend.

It’s all slightly familiar for today as the Irish begin to target a Grand Slam threefifth­s of the way complete, but Barclay hears no talk of that from today’s opponents just as the Scots aren’t even considerin­g their own (very outside) chances of a first Six Nations title.

“I have not heard an Irish player talk about (a Grand Slam),” said Barclay.

“I would be surprised if they did come out and talk about. It is one of those things you do not talk about.

“If you are in a position in week five to talk about that hats off to you. There are always going to be whispering­s of that as they are the only unbeaten team in the championsh­ip and we are going into week four. But it does not lend itself to be ammunition for us.

“We haven’t talked about the title. Even if we did win this weekend, I haven’t even looked at the maths.

“We know how hard this weekend will be. We will let the Irish worry about Grand Slams and we will think about this game.”

To win the Scots must end this perception that they’re a poor away team, and no matter how often they point to last summer’s win in Sydney over Australia – something Ireland haven’t done since 1979 – they’re pigeonhole­d as “homers” by luminaries such as Brian O’Driscoll.

“I don’t think it is unfair of him to say that. Our record suggests it, although we had a good win in Australia last summer,” conceded Barclay.

“But of course you need to win (regularly) away from home. We do get asked about this a lot. But it’s not something we talk about or prepare differentl­y.

“I am sure we are not the team to find winning away difficult because the record of wins home and away for most teams is pretty stark in the Six Nations. There obviously is a thing about home advantage.

“Ultimately it is 15 guys going up against one another on a piece of grass. Whoever is more accurate and plays better wins.”

Barclay thinks that the England game, Ireland versus Scotland, Aviva Stadium, today, 2.15pm.

Ireland: R Kearney (Leinster); K Earls (Munster), G Ringrose (Leinster), B Aki (Connacht), J Stockdale (Ulster); J Sexton (Leinster), C Murray (Munster); C Healy (Leinster), R Best (Ulster, capt), T Furlong (Leinster), J Ryan (Leinster), D Toner (Leinster), P O’Mahony (Munster), D Leavy (Leinster), CJ Stander (Munster).

Replacemen­ts: S Cronin (Leinster), J McGrath (Leinster), A Porter (Leinster), I Henderson (Ulster), J Murphy (Leinster), K Marmion (Connacht), J Carbery (Leinster), J Larmour (Leinster).

Scotland: S Hogg (Glasgow); B Kinghorn (Edinburgh), H Jones (Glasgow), P Horne (Glasgow), S Maitland (Saracens); F Russell (Glasgow), G Laidlaw (Clermont Auvergne); G Reid (London Irish), S McInally (Edinburgh), S Berghan (Edinburgh), G Gilchrist (Edinburgh), J Gray (Glasgow), J Barclay (Scarlets, capt), H Watson (Edinburgh), R Wilson (Glasgow).

Replacemen­ts: F Brown (Glasgow), J Bhatti (Glasgow), W Nel (Edinburgh), T Swinson (Glasgow), D Denton (Worcester), A Price (Glasgow), N Grigg (Glasgow), L Jones (Glasgow).

Referee: Wayne Barnes (England). Assistant referees: Ben O’Keeffe (New Zealand) and Luke Pearce (England). as much as it was a triumph for him personally, has limited relevance other than building the confidence in the squad.

“I believe in momentum in the 80 minutes of a game,” he said.

“Every game is different, there are different challenges.

“Ireland are better at contact (than England). They are always very physical, very accurate. On top of that, they’ve probably looked at last week’s game, so we will need to be sharp in terms of what we managed against England.

“Joe Schmidt is one of the best operators around. He will analyse the England game as we will analyse them in a bid to look for patterns they can pick up from, and strengths and weaknesses. Hopefully there will be issues that we have addressed.”

For the Scots, sticking to the plan after the setback in Wales was the key.

“The start of the tournament was far from ideal and we knew the criticism we would get, but I said the very next day that we hadn’t become bad team overnight,” he continued.

“It was good that we beat France, even though it probably wasn’t the best game of rugby. Then obviously the England game was fantastic.

“We have stayed true to how we played the game. We haven’t changed it.

“The guys are buzzing, they know how excitingit­is,theyknowth­eopportuni­tywe have.

“But we’re also realistic about it and know how hard a challenge beating Ireland in Ireland is.”

Meanwhile Ireland must be “bigger and stronger” than to fall prey to any unexpected setbacks against Scotland two years in a row, according to Rory Best.

Ireland blamed the bus arriving at Murrayfiel­d 15 minutes late on their 27-22 loss to Scotland last year – and captain Best insisted his side have learned the hard way how to clear unforeseen hurdles.

“We must make sure we don’t let any distractio­ns catch us,” said Best.

“Little things, from a dropped ball in the warm-up to the bus breaking down; anything left-field.

Last year we got caught cold. Getting to the stadium that close to kick-off was something really new to us.

“If we find something unfamiliar tomorrow we’ve got to go back to our process, trust our gameplan. Something always goes wrong, and that’s the beauty of sport: you’ve got to be bigger and stronger than that.”

Beat Scotland and Ireland will face England at Twickenham on March 17 gunning for just a third-ever Grand Slam.

When quizzed on the chance of securing a third title in five years this weekend, Best added: “For us, it’s only about the challenge that Scotland pose, if you look at how they’ve been evolving, they’ve put together some very, very good performanc­es.

“So for us it’s about making sure we perform and play well, and get the result. Whatever comes, comes.”

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