The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Price is right for Scotland

- Steve Scott

We’ll never forget Greig Laidlaw. As if you could. If you follow “Greeg” on Instagram you’ll know what I’m on about. The former Scotland captain, exemplar and game-saver is currently finishing his career in Japan, with the Shining Arcs.

Although they sound like a mid-70s European prog rock outfit, the Arcs are actually a top league team based in Tokyo.

“Mr Greig” was always hugely popular in Japan – much to the amusement of some team-mates – and playing there hasn’t diminished that one bit, if his almost daily instas are anything to go by.

They even have a blow-up mascot statue of him. I’m not kidding, they actually do.

Greig, of course, owes nothing to us in Scotland, although it’ll be nice if he comes and coaches here in the future. Four successive head coaches in Andy Robinson, Scott Johnson, Vern Cotter and Gregor Townsend thought he would excel at the job.

But in truth, we’ve not actually missed Greig on the field quite as much as we thought we would.

Maybe his gamemanage­ment skills would have plotted a path to wins against Wales and Ireland in the last Six Nations. But we’re being greedy. Scotland had the best internatio­nal season since profession­alism in 2021.

And the two men who replaced Greig in two key roles after he retired at the end of 2019 are our contenders for Scotland Player of the Year in 2021.

At scrum-half, many thought that Ali Price was a better player towards the end of Laidlaw’s tenure anyway. Laidlaw’s ability to direct a game and pinpoint goalkickin­g usually got him the nod, but even Greig at his peak would struggle to deny Price now.

It was a brilliant season by the Glasgow 9. He unequivoca­lly became the first choice in the position, and more than that. All elements of the scrumhalf’s arsenal – speed of delivery, speed to breakdown, pace of play generally, kicking, directing – were absolutely top class.

Against England in the first game of 2021, three of Price’s first half clearancek­icks were almost charged down by Maro Itoje. It was the last time he looked in bother during the year.

The Lions Tour, where he was arguably third choice 9 going and deservedly ended up with the test jersey, was maybe the pinnacle of the year. But for me, his performanc­e in the double-comeback, last-second, last-play victory over France was the defining mark of his year.

Price played all 86-and-ahalf minutes of the epic. Scrum-halves, constantly in motion, rarely play full matches nowadays. You can see in the 18-phase build-up to Duhan van der Merwe’s winning try that Ali is blowing a wee bit.

But he almost scores himself with a half-break, and he’s at every breakdown like an Energiser bunny. Finally Scotland work what they want, Price’s swift delivery to Adam Hastings for that long pass and Duhan’s step to the corner.

If anything, Price has improved in form since the Lions Tour. He’s Antoine Dupont’s only challenger as the best 9 in the north (and he’s outplayed him head-tohead three times in a row).

The other candidate was dropped twice this year; once for his club Exeter and once for the Lions. But as captain of Scotland, Stuart Hogg was bloody magnificen­t.

Although he has been convinced to stop trying to score a worldie every time he gets the ball, if anything Hogg became more prolific for Scotland in 2021.

He almost dragged the Scots to the win against Wales single-handedly, and then again against the Springboks. His kicking game entered a different dimension.

The long-establishe­d Scotland try-record finally fell to him, but that was always likely. Chris Paterson’s cap record is in full view. As regular readers will know, I consider Hogg to be the best player in Scotland rugby history, if not already, then certainly by the time he is done.

As a player, great, as a captain, brilliant

But we didn’t know what kind of captain he would turn out to be. Certainly fiercely proud and patriotic, like his close friend Laidlaw (with whom he still consults).

Certainly at times inspiratio­nal, as one of the most gifted players in the team.

But 2020, his first year, was a bit sticky. There was the Finn Russell affair.

The two are close, but Finn leaving camp and missing the Six Nations – in Hogg’s first week in the job – must have tested their friendship.

Hogg had to manoeuvre that narrative throughout his first year, and also two defeats to start his tenure, one of them arguably the result of his own mistake.

However’s he’s emerged as a great skipper.

He’s embraced differing, confidence-building philosophi­es. Yes, if I hear him say “we want to be the very best of ourselves” just one more time, I might crack. But the effect is obvious on the team.

But it’s making everyone valued. Before the French game he spoke eloquently and passionate­ly about wanting to win for the squad members who had worked so hard but weren’t playing.

There is the “tradition” he’s establishe­d of new caps lifting any trophies that require lifting. And when they took the Auld Alliance trophy from France, who picked it up? Ryan Wilson, an 11th hour call-up for injury, winning the 50th cap he thought he’d never get. That was special.

Hogg also got the tone spot-on in his obvious indignatio­n but quiet resolve at the circumstan­ces of that game.

Remember the Scots played without a full hand on a six-day window, after France made a cassoulet of their Covid precaution­s.

If I have to pick one, it’s Price. He advanced so far this year and was just outstandin­g.

Hogg had a blip here and there, although not in dark blue.

But I have a feeling that the foundation­s the skipper has built may be significan­t well beyond 2021.

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 ?? ?? CALM BEFORE STORM: Stuart Hogg jokes with Ali Price ahead of the Six Nations match against England in 2020.
CALM BEFORE STORM: Stuart Hogg jokes with Ali Price ahead of the Six Nations match against England in 2020.

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