The Scotsman

Russell and half-back pal will

● Stand-off is senior partner but playing together for Warriors gives pair an edge

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He may only be 24 and have a carefree “just one of the lads” air about him but Finn Russell is embracing a role in the Scotland team that comes with added responsibi­lity.

The Glasgow stand-off has played the bulk of his 25-Test internatio­nal career alongside the wise head of Greig Laidlaw but the 31-year-old scrum-half’s tournament-ending injury in Paris meant that Russell had to take on the mantle of senior partner in that pivotal half-back pairing.

Ali Price, who is only a year younger at 23 but a relative novice at the highest level in comparison to his clubmate, wore the No 9 jersey in the win against Wales and, although Warriors co-captain Henry Pyrgos was backing up on the bench, Russell found himself in the unusual position of leading the back division.

If Price gets the nod again when Vern Cotter names his team to face England in Saturday’s massive Calcutta Cup showdown at Twickenham, Russell is confident that the pairing can be as fruitful as it proved against the Welsh.

“Yeah, I guess I’m the more experience­d one, rather than Greig being the more experience­d one,” said Russell. “I guess I’d take a little bit more… maybe not decision-making, because we’ve still got John Barclay and Jonny Gray to discuss decisions. But in terms of attack I’d maybe take a little bit more leadership there.

“Ali’s good. He’s happy to talk through the sessions and say what he’s thinking. He’s got a good brain, so it’s good to have him there.”

Of course, ahead of the Six Nations the youthful Glasgow half-backs were tearing it up in theeuropea­nchampions­cup, running amok against the likes of Leicester and Racing 92, and that experience meant the loss of long-time leader Laidlaw did not appear as calamitous as it might have done in that Wales game.

“I’ve not had to change too much, because I’ve played with Ali at Glasgow so much, so we’ve got a good understand­ing and we know how each other plays.

“I didn’t have to change too much at all – it was more a lot of stuff off the field I did with Ali rather than I would have with Greig. But when we played it was fine for us.”

Saturday will, of course, be Cotter’s penultimat­e match as national head coach and both he and Russell’s journey with Scotland began at the same time when the Kiwi handed the then 21-year-old his first cap against the United States in Houston on the 2014 summer tour.

As the end approaches, Cotter has already cast off a couple of painful records with a first opening win in the championsh­ip for 11 years and, more recently, ending a decade of misery against the Welsh.

Notching a first win at Twickenham for 34 years, scooping the Triple Crown and going into the last weekend gunning for the title would be stratosphe­ric in comparison to those two banished bogeys and Russell says the players would love to deliver that for their outgoing coach, though more importantl­y for themselves.

“Vern’s been great. The last three years he’s been here and I’ve only known him as a Scotland coach,” said Russell. “It’s been great the way he’s handled this, knowing he’s leaving but still giving his all and looking to be successful, as we all do. It’s his second last game and it’s a big one so we’ll definitely be going down there to get the win for him… and us as players.”

That said, Russell insisted that the approachin­g end of the Cotter era was not at the forefront of the players’ minds as they enter the championsh­ip’s final fortnight.

“No,iwouldn’tsayso.nobody is acting like that and he’s not either,” he added. “Although we all know Vern is going at the end of this competitio­n noone

0 Scotland stand-off Finn Russell at the Oriam Sports Performanc­e Centre in Edinburgh, where Scotland have been training for their

0 Scotland coach Vern Cotter. is really worrying about that, we’re just focusing on the games we have left.”

Asked if he reckons Cotter has loosened up a bit this season and moved away, slightly, from the “Stern Vern” caricature, Russell broke into a smile and said: “Vern is pretty relaxed. Once you get to know him he’s alright.

“He can be serious at times, obviously, as everyone is. On the training pitch he’s serious

RUSSELL ON ‘STERN VERN’ but off it he likes to have a bit of a joke.”

Former Clermont coach Cotter may be returning to France with Montpellie­r but his compatriot Jason O’halloran will be moving from the national squad to become Glasgow backs coach and Russell praised O’halloran’s contributi­on in turning Scotland into one of the most dangerous attacking units in the tournament. “I think he’s been real- ly good,” said the stand-off. “Jason coming in has changed a few small things.

“He’s brought a few things from the southern hemisphere to try to bring that into our attack which has been good. I enjoy that and I think the other backs do too. He sees the game in a slightly different way. For myself, next season he’ll be at Glasgow and I look forward to working with him there.”

With England looking to equal the world record with an 18th-straight Test win, not to mention keeping their Grand Slam hopes alive, there has been a bit of back and forth over who will feel most pressure on Saturday but Russell said: “I’d say there is pressure on both teams.

“It’s always going to be like that when it comes to the last couple of games in the comp. For them they’ve done so well to get this far. They’ll be confident. I suppose there are a lot of things on this game, but as a team we’re not really looking at all that. We’re just focusing on this game.” England have denied they have given Scotland an advantage heading into Saturday’s Calcutta Cup clash by unwittingl­y offering an insight into their team selection.

A photograph of two whiteboard­s positioned at the side of the training pitch at the squad’s Surrey training base on Tuesday morning revealed what appeared to be the starting XV for the Twickenham showdown.

The line-up showed four changes to the side which dispatched Italy in England’s last RBS Six Nations match, the most significan­t of which is Billy Vunipola’s return at No 8 in place of Nathan Hughes after three months out due to knee surgery.

In what would be a return to Eddie Jones’ strongest team,

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