The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Must-win tie but real test is still to come

Victory in Italy may just give Scotland head coach a stay of execution

- by Steve Scott in Rome stscott@thecourier.co.uk

Gregor Townsend needs a win badly, but the Scotland head coach may be in a no-win situation as his team take on Italy in Rome.

The only result here that can be decisive in Scotland’s short-term future is defeat. A loss today and surely Townsend’s position becomes untenable after two defeats already this Six Nations, just one win in the 2019 championsh­ip, and missing out on the quarter-finals of the World Cup.

Naturally, we don’t really want that (well, the coach has some stringent critics who might). However, victory – unless it’s an unlikely landslide – is not going to determine anything.

A win will give Gregor Townsend another week. France at Murrayfiel­d is the game which should really determine his fate.

A one-win championsh­ip would be a regression from last year’s one win and draw.

That was a real regression from 2018’s three wins in Townsend’s first Six Nations season, which was in itself an advance on Vern Cotter’s final campaign of three wins in 2017, because Townsend’s inherited team didn’t concede 60 points to anyone as Cotter’s team did at Twickenham.

Townsend still – narrowly – has a better win-loss record than his predecesso­r, and the best by any Scotland head coach since rugby turned profession­al. However, he will lose that record if Scotland are beaten today, and many believe he benefited from Cotter’s groundwork for his first 18 months in the job.

In the last 15 months Scotland have won six – including two against Georgia and one against Russia – and lost eight.

Naturally, there have been mitigating factors like injuries and varying form. But, as legendary NFL coach Bill Parcells, put it, in sport if you’re not advancing you’re going backwards.

Scotland, with the talent base now available to them, should at least be auditionin­g for a place in the top echelon of the Six Nations rather than being easily disregarde­d in a subdivisio­n of two with today’s hosts.

It’s not as if Scotland aren’t close. Take out the Ireland game to start the World Cup and two games in France last year, and they’ve been within range in most games.

The last three have been lost by just a converted try.

But these close things are becoming far too common, suggesting the team under Townsend don’t have what it takes to get over the hump.

They should have enough for Italy – a side still finding their feet under new coach Franco Smith, who seems to be preaching the same kind of fast and chaotic off-loading game that Townsend did when he assumed control of Scotland.

In latter games, however, Townsend has reined in the risk-taking for a much more pragmatic plan, and Scotland’s try-scoring has dried up.

If he changed because he believed Scotland were offering too many gifts to the opposition, he needs to see his team take advantage in the same way as the Italians’ new preference to play freely allows.

Conditions would seem to favour Italy’s style this week. Apart from a light shower on Wednesday it has been dry and sunny all week in Rome, and at kick-off it is expected to be a balmy 18C under a cloudless sky.

The Italians, now with 24 successive Six Nations defeats, are inured to suffering and lack of expectatio­n. They also don’t seem to be wholly on board with their new coach’s open philosophy quite yet.

The staples of the Italian game have long been set-piece strength and grunt rather than flair, but Italy haven’t won a home game in the championsh­ip since 2013.

But even these dreadful records have to end sometime. There does seem to be new purpose about an Italy freed perhaps from over-reliance on their veteran captain Sergio Parisse, who is postponing his stage-managed exit from internatio­nal rugby until their match against England.

Scotland need big games from their potential difference makers – Stuart Hogg, who has seemed slightly weighed down with the captaincy; and Adam Hastings, who has to prove that the team don’t need Finn Russell.

An injection of youthful vigour from George Horne and Rory Hutchinson might have been welcome in the starting team, but they can bring something off the bench if required.

Even without Jonny Gray, Scotland have a pack that should have the measure of the Italians, and if the lineout is functionin­g they should have a set-piece advantage.

That has to be enough to eke out a vital win ahead of the real test in two weeks’ time.

 ?? Picture: SNS/SRU. ?? Under pressure: Narrow defeats are becoming far too common for Scotland, suggesting the team under Townsend don’t have what it takes to get over the hump.
Picture: SNS/SRU. Under pressure: Narrow defeats are becoming far too common for Scotland, suggesting the team under Townsend don’t have what it takes to get over the hump.
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