The Scotsman

Grigg reveals the factors behind Glasgow Warriors’ winning form

- By STUART BATHGATE

GLASGOWWAR­RIORS 13 EMIRATES LIONS 9

Patience can be a difficult virtue to acquire at the best of times, and it must be especially tough for rugby players when they are playing at 100 miles an hour and throwing everything they have into attack for little or no reward.

Certainly, that was often the case for Glasgow in the recent past. They were so committed to an expansive game that, when it failed to pay dividends quickly, frustratio­n would set in, leading to the loss of matches they should have won.

This Warriors side, however, is learning to be more versatile, and they showed that quality in their 13-9 win over the Lions at Scotstoun on Saturday. Yes, there was some impatience on display early on in the United Rugby Championsh­ip match as they too often attempted risky passes rather than taking the ball into the tackle and building again. But they overcame that defect, and as a result emerged with a victory that took them up to third place in the table before yesterday’s game between Scarlets and Munster.

Danny Wilson’s side have now won six out of their last seven competitiv­e games, stretching back to last season’s Rainbow Cup, when they bounced back from a humiliatin­g defeat by eventual winners Benetton to claim four victories in a row. The good morale engendered within the team then has simply

been continued into this season, according to centre Nick Grigg, who also believes that the input from summer signings such as Sione Tuipulotu and Jack Dempsey has had a positive impact in that regard.

“I guess the end of last season we were on a bit of a roll,” he said. “We had a lot of energy going into games - we were winning games and it just kind of progressed from there. Coming into the new season we just rolled on from that high from last season. We’ve

got a few new faces in and they’re contributi­ng well. It’s going well at the moment.”

It went well right from the start against the Lions, as prop Jamie Bhatti scored a try in the second minute. But subsequent attacks failed to pay off, and there were times when the Warriors simply appeared tobetrying­toohardtof­orcean opening.

“The main message that was coming on in the first half was we’re cutting them apart but we need to watch those 50-50

passes when we get close to the line,” said Grigg. “We don’t have to score in the first couple of phases. We can take an extra few more to actually cut them open.”

The message was heeded, although as it turned out, Bhatti’s early touchdown was the only one of the game. The Lions’ EW Viljoen kept his team in touch with three penalties, while Warriors standoff Ross Thompson chipped in with eight points from a conversion and two penalties.

Thompson’s contributi­on was important but equally so were some big hits in defence - which Grigg saw as a significan­t improvemen­t on their previous outing against the Sharks, even though that win yielded a bigger points tally.

“Physicalit­y was our big thing against the Lions,” the centre added. “The previous week against the Sharks we made all our tackles but we weren’t physical enough. Against the Lions there were a few more hits out there.”

 ?? ?? 0 Glasgow Warriors centre Nick Grigg powers past Lion’s Stean Pienaar at Scotstoun on Saturday
0 Glasgow Warriors centre Nick Grigg powers past Lion’s Stean Pienaar at Scotstoun on Saturday

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