The Scotsman

Warriors aim to bounce back from Euro slump

● Murray wary of in-form Edinburgh

-

distinctio­n get lost amongst the base emotional impact of winning and losing?

“That will depend on which coach you ask. I’m sure [Edinburgh coach] Richard Cockerill will be saying they were able to rest a few players for this game; whereas for us it’s that we played against the best team in the French league, a real physical group of men, so we’re pretty battle-hardened from that game,” said Kenny Murray, the Warriors assistant coach.

“We didn’t suffer much injury-wise other than some bumps and bruises, so we’re in a really good place physically from the game at the weekend.

“We’re not going to contrast us losing with them winning because for me it’s apples and pears,” he added. “They’re playing a Russian team and scoring 78 points; we’re playing the best team in the French competitio­n as the results show.

“So, for us, it’s about looking at what Edinburgh do and we’ll spend a lot of time analys-

0 Coach Kenny Murray says Glasgow are battle-hardened after their tussles with Montpellie­r. ing what their strengths are, what their weaknesses are, where the opportunit­ies are and we’ll build a game-plan based around that.

“I probably won’t even look too much at the Russian game in terms of my preview, I’ll look at the games they played before against London Irish and the Ospreys – games where we can take a lot more from it.”

While it would be unfair to read too much into Warriors’ European record this season given the calibre of the opposition they have been up against, there is no escaping the fact that the air of invincibil­ity they had developed with their swashbuckl­ing league form has been cracked by the problems they have encountere­d against powerful driving play.

The lineout drive used to be a real strength of Edinburgh’s but they have been given license to play a far more varied approach since the arrival of Richard Cockerill during the summer, and the players have responded by playing with far more verve than we have seen for several seasons.

Murray recognises that Edinburgh may choose to revert back to their old stick-it-upthe-jumper approach, but suspects that they will continue the approach he has championed so far

“They do play a lot more rugby. I’ve been doing the preview for our defence looking at their attack and they definitely mix it up a bit and try to play with a little bit more width than they’re used to playing, so that’s an area we’ll need to be really good at,” he explained, before highlighti­ng that, just because Edinburgh now like to move the ball, doesn’t mean they have become a soft touch at the pit face.

“Edinburgh were pretty physical under Alan Solomons, they were very direct, and I think they’ve still got that about them with Richard Cockerill – just that mentality having come from that Leicester background of a forward pack that is really dominant.

“I think he’s got that into the team and you look back to the autumn Test series, there were a lot of Edinburgh players involved in that Scotland team, more than previous years, so we’re really clear about the challenge we have this week, particular­ly up front.” Manu Tuilagi faces being banned immediatel­y after making his return from the latest injury setback to have blighted his career.

Tuilagi has been cited for an alleged dangerous tackle on Chris Cloete in Leicester’s 25-16 Champions Cup defeat by Munster at Welford Road on Sunday and must appear before an independen­t disciplina­ry hearing today.

The entry-point sanction for a dangerous tackle is two weeks, the mid-range six weeks and the top end ten weeks to a year.

Tuilagiapp­earedtomak­e a high tackle on Cloete in the 49th minute after the Munster openside had dropped to the floor to grab Jonny May’s kick and risen to his feet.

The England centre was making his first appearance since knee surgery three months ago and played a full 80 minutes.

Serious chest, groin, knee and hamstring injuries have plagued his career for the past four years and his most recent internatio­nal appearance was against Wales in March 2016.

Tuilagi’s career has been chequered by repeated offfield disciplina­ry issues, including a conviction for assaulting two female police officers in 2015 that resulted in his exclusion from England’s World Cup squad later that year.

The 26-year-old’s most recent transgress­ion saw him sent home from England’s August training camp in disgrace after a late night drinking session with Denny Solomona.

However, his solitary suspension was the five weeks received for punching Chris Ashton in 2011.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom