The Scotsman

Mcinally ‘in good place’ for his biggest-ever Edinburgh game

● Captain focused on celebratin­g his tenth year at club by reaching Pro14 final

- Duncan Smith STUART MCINALLY

It has been a turbulent year for amateur pilot, hooker and Edinburgh skip per Stuart Mcinally but he is calm and focused as he looks ahead to the biggest game he has played for his home city club in Saturday evening’ s Guinness Pro14 semi-final against Ulster at behind-closed-doors BT Murrayfiel­d.

It is coming up fora year since that deflating World Cup open erin Yokohama when Mc In ally, who went to the tournament as captain of his country, saw things fall apart as Scotland got off to a desperatel­y poor start.

The hook er was dropped and Greig Laid law took on the captaincy before a poolstage exit. Club coach Richard Cockerill, pictured, gave him a few months off and he returned fresh, finding club form again and featuring for Scotland in the Six Nations before the coronaviru­s shutdown brought everything to a shuddering halt.

“I feel in a good place,” said the 30 -year- old. “The World Cup feels a long time ago now. So much has happened since then on and off the field.

“I’m excited and fully focused on Edinburgh. It means a lot to me. This is my tenth year at the club now.

“I’ve been captain now for the last few years, so to lead out the team in such a big game is brilliant and to do it at home at BT Murray field makes it even more special.

“It’s obviously sad we’re not going to have fans there but totally understand­able. We’re looking forward to putting our best game out there and trying to reach our first-ever final.”

Vocal support would have been good but simply not possible at the moment as an empt y national stadium follows last weekend’s 700 -fan pilot which is being reviewed ahead of an expected government update about sporting events in the middle of the month.

Mcinally still believes home advantage comes with benefits as Edinburgh avoid the upheaval of overseas travel after more than six months of being not much further than their houses and Murrayfiel­d.

“We were delighted to secure the home semi-final,” he said “Things like being in our home changing room, not having to travel – these all keep us more familiar with our surroundin­gs and they just help, I think, in these games.

“The crowd factor’s not there – that would be another home advantage, I suppose–but we’re chuffed that we’ve got the home semi, that we earned it by finishing top, and that we get a chance to play in our familiar surroundin­gs.

It’s brilliant.”

Mcinally has been part of Edinburgh teams who have reached aHei ne ken Cup semi-final in 2012 and Challenge Cup final in 2015 but believes this Saturday is their biggest game ever in the “domestic” Pro14 competitio­n.

He points to the narrow 20-16 quarter-final loss to Munster in Limerick two years ago as one to remember heading into the Ulster clash. “The main thing I learned was that those big games just come down to really small moments. And small moments that happen in other games – it could be a lost lineout or a scrum penalty – sometimes you get away with them and you can then make up for it later in the game, or there’s time to score another try,” said Mcinally.

“In a knockout game, against the big teams, you can’t afford that. When a team loses they’ll look back on one or two moments and they’ll say, ‘Well, that potentiall­y cost us’. “That’ s one thing I feel we’ve learned. If you look back on those two games against Munster, they were both decided on small moments. They were both one -score games. That was something I was stressing to the boys: we just have to stay in the moment..”

Cockerill insists that Ulster’s history in the competitio­n as past winners and regulars at the business end make them favourites, but asked if he is telling his players something different, Mcinally revealed: “He certainly doesn’t tell us the opposition are rubbish.

“Wear every aware and he makes us aware of the threat that Ulster have. Not just their history, they play some really good rugby, have some quality players and are well coached.

“We have spent a good amount of time looking at Ulster because you’ve got to respect what they can do. They can cause a lot of teams problems.

“He [Cockerill] gives us confidence to go and play, that’s the best way I could describe it,” added Mcinally.

“He’s not putting us down or building us up, just giving us confidence to back ourselves and that the work we do in training will stand us in good stead during games.”

“We have spent a good amount of time looking at Ulster because you’ve got to respect what they can do. They can cause a lot of teams problems”

 ?? PICTURE: MARK SCATES/SNS ?? 0 Stuart Mcinally during training at BT Murrayfiel­d ahead of Edinburgh’s Guinness Pro14 semi-final on Saturday.
PICTURE: MARK SCATES/SNS 0 Stuart Mcinally during training at BT Murrayfiel­d ahead of Edinburgh’s Guinness Pro14 semi-final on Saturday.
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