The Scotsman

Another nine players leave Edinburgh

● Edinburgh are one win away from the play-offs, much to hooker’s delight

- By GARETH BLACK

The retiring Neil Cochrane and New Zealander Robbie Fruean are among nine players confirmed to be leaving Edinburgh in the summer.

Brothers kevin and glenn Bryce are also on the list along with Welsh winger Jason Harries and former Scotland Under-20s centre Tom Galbraith. Elliot Millar-mills, Matt Shields and Jordan Lay will also be leaving at the end of the season after recently arriving on short-term deals.

Edinburgh listed 16 players who are departing as Richard Cockerill trims his squad. It had previously emerged that John Hardie, Cornell du Preez, Sam Hidalgo-clyne, Duncan Weir, Jason Tovey, Phil Burleigh and Jason Rasolea would be moving on.

Fruean arrived on a two-year deal from Bath last summer but has only played five times. The 29-year-old underwent heart surgery earlier in his career and has been beset by injuries in recent times.

Prop kevin bryce recently joined Yorkshire Carnegie on loan while his brother was allowed to link up with the Scotland Sevens squad for the Commonweal­th Games. Cochrane made 72 appearance­s for Edinburgh in four seasons. He is taking up a job as a buildings surveyor.

Dealing with the pressure of big games is part and parcel of being a profession­al athlete, but when it comes to tomorrow night’s Guinness Pro14 match against Ulster, Edinburgh will also have a very different feeling to deal with: relief.

The pressure is there because Edinburgh, third in Conference B, are tantalisin­gly close to clinching a place in the end-of-season play-offs. The relief? That arises from the simple fact that, after years of underachie­vement when their league campaign would be all but over by now, this time they have something important to play for.

“It’s nice to be at this time of year and have something to really play for,” hooker Stuart Mcinally explained. “I’ve been at this club a while, and at this time of year you’re sometimes hanging on to the Challenge Cup and hoping to make something in that, because the league’s not gone so well.

“It’s nothing that I’ve experience­d before, so it’s nice that we’re right up there this year. And I can’t credit the boys that have played while the Six Nations were on high enough, because they’re the ones that won five on the bounce and got us in the position where we are.”

Edinburgh also won their one league game in January before Mcinally and the other internatio­nals disappeare­d on Scotland duty, so they have actually won on their last six outings in the Guinness Pro14. Any kind of victory tomorrow, with or without a bonus point, will take them into the play-offs for the first time. So there has been a significan­t improvemen­t this season, not only when Richard Cockerill has had his first-choice team out on the field, but also during the internatio­nal window, as Mcinally said. The recent run of good results includes a win over Ulster in Belfast, a factor that the hooker believes could be significan­t tomorrow.

“The boys have already done it, which is great,” he continued. “I’ve been at this club for eight years or so, and it’s generally been a period in which we’ve struggled, the Six Nations. We’ve tended to lose those games, so it’s really nice, when we’re away with the Six Nations, to watch the boys go so well.

“Youcomebac­kandthepre­ssure’s on, especially if you’ve been brought back in to play or to start – you’re expected to win, because the boys have done it. If you do get the honour to come back in and play, you need to do justice to the boys that have been working so hard the last two months to put us in a position now where if we keep winning we’re going to be in a good place at the end of the season.”

Meanwhile, Mark Bennett hopes to be passed fit to play against Ulster after sitting out training earlier this week with a neck strain.

The centre believes that the keys to success in his first season with the team have been a determinat­ion to win the respect of the other teams, and a willingnes­s to work relentless­ly.

“At the start of the season, as a club we just spoke about wanting to gain the respect of the guys in the opposition we were playing against,” Bennett said.

“Because the last few seasons there has been a perception that coming to Edinburgh was a great thing because you were coming away to a cracking city, going to a lovely place and would get the win.

“We’ve beaten top sides: we’ve beaten Glasgow, Munster, Leinster, Ulster – top, top sides. I’m absolutely delighted at how this season has gone, but what it has been built on is hard work. Week in, week out we’ve put in the graft on the training pitch and we are working hard. There’s a real collective desire to improve, which has been shown on the park.”

 ??  ?? 0 Long-serving Stuart Mcinally is not used to having something meaningful to play for at this stage.
0 Long-serving Stuart Mcinally is not used to having something meaningful to play for at this stage.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom