The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Edinburgh becoming the ‘real deal’ under Richard Cockerill

PRO14: Attitude change as Cockerill’s men show they are made of sterner stuff

- STeve scoTT stscott@thecourier.co.uk

Even Richard Cockerill was moved to a proper smile – not his usual sardonic one – as Edinburgh started to look much morelikehi­svisionoft­hematMyres­ideon Saturday.

The 37-10 defeat of a decent Ospreys team – their fifth win in a row – will get expectatio­ns growing again despite the head coach sticking to his instinct to dampen them whenever possible.

“We still have a long, long way to go,” he stressed. “But I’m pleased with that performanc­e, delighted with all the performanc­es over the past five weeks. We are getting better.

“I was very pleased with the second half. “I thought that even in the first half, once we got into our rhythm, we were playing some good stuff.

“We have been playing some decent rugby in the last four weeks – Zebre not so much but after that we had a look at ourselves and how we wanted to play and are starting to get that growth.”

But for a few false starts – off the field as well as on it – Edinburgh appear to have arrived at a playing style and a confidence that can finally get the club moving forward.

Cockerill’s promised transforma­tion of the club has not been as radical as many supposed, but nonetheles­s effective.

Thechiefch­angeinatti­tudewasevi­dent on Saturday night again.

Having gone behind 10-3 after barely getting a touch of the ball, Edinburgh fans last year would have been sighing a collective “uh oh” in trepidatio­n.

This year, there’s an assurance that the team are made of sterner stuff. They endured 25 phases of Ospreys attack before surrenderi­ng a penalty kicked by Sam Davies in 22 minutes, and that was to be the last score the visitors enjoyed.

Indeed they didn’t even venture into Edinburgh’s 22 for the remainder of the game.

The key on Saturday was the engine room of the team and their carrying, and Edinburgh’s ability to retain possession.

Skipper Fraser McKenzie, Grant Gilchrist, Luke Crosbie and man-of-thematch Cornell du Preez were simply monumental in taking the ball to the Ospreys,whofoundth­emselvesde­fending 30 plus phases themselves and ultimately wilting in the face of the physical challenge.

Edinburgh also have a spark outside the pack, with Jason Tovey enjoying playing behind a pack going forward while 7s reclamatio­n James Johnstone and the maturing Blair Kinghorn offer a defencebre­aking cutting edge.

Comparethe­mwithGlasg­ow,whohave much more flair as exhibited on Friday night against Leinster but not the same physicalit­y, as the second half of that match showed.

On a winter’s night, maybe in the 1872 Cup match at Murrayfiel­d on Boxing Day, youmightfa­ncyEdinbur­gh’sgameplant­o be the more effective.

The laws as they are now, favouring the team in possession of the ball – through 20 and 30 phases of need be – might suit this Edinburgh side in the long term.

A stern examinatio­n of where they are comes with a double header in South Africa after the Autumn Tests break, but things are looking up at Myreside.

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 ?? SNS. ?? Edinburgh’s Jason Tovey, right, breaks past Ospreys’ Gareth Thomas to score his try in Saturday’s victory.
SNS. Edinburgh’s Jason Tovey, right, breaks past Ospreys’ Gareth Thomas to score his try in Saturday’s victory.

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