The Scotsman

Fagerson shrugs off late bonus for Japan

- By DUNCAN SMITH

Scotland prop Zander Fagerson is refusing to dwell on the agonising and puzzling last few seconds of Saturday’s Japan-samoa match which has made Gregor Townsend’s side’s task of reaching the Rugby World Cup quarter-finals a tougher one.

The hosts grabbed a lastgasp bonus point in their 38-19 win to move top of Pool A on 14 points, with second-placed Ireland on 11 and Scotland, who play their game in hand against Russia in Shizuoka on Wednesday on five.

It means the Scots must look to beat the Russians with a bonus point then defeat Japan while denying them any in Yokohama next Sunday in what is shaping up as a momentous finale to the pool stage in front of a crowd of 70,000.

Essentiall­y, Scotland must take at least four more points than Japan from a win. If they fail to take a bonus point against Russia that rises to five. In the unlikely but not impossible scenario that Scotland, Japan and Ireland all finish on 15 points it would come down to points difference.

“It has made the picture clearer for us, what we need to do against Russia first and what we need to

do against Japan in the last game. The picture is very clear now,” was Fagerson’s positive take on the situation.

There has been much anger from Scottish fans on social media about the way the last few, potentiall­y pivotal seconds played out in Toyota.

Japan had only just got themselves to three tries minutes before when, with the clock past 80 minutes, Samoa were awarded a free kick. At 31-19 down, they could have kicked out to end the game but instead opted to scrum against a rampant Japanese pack. They were then picked up by South African referee Jaco Peyper for a squint put in – something which has hardly, if ever, been penalised in the tournament so far.

Japan turned the screw and got the try they needed through Kotaro Matsushima, left.

Fagerson said: “We have Russia first and, if we don’t get the job done against Russia, there is no point in even thinking about Japan because we need those five points. Everything is focused on Russia now and getting that bonus-point win.”

Glasgow tighthead Fagerson said he is ready to play a part in both matches, which will be played just four days apart. “If the opportunit­y arises, I will grasp it with both hands,” said Fagerson.

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