The Scotsman

SRU is failing the next generation of players as we get left behind by rivals

- Sportts@scotsman.com

Last week, Edinburgh became the first northern club in the URC to win in South Africa and, if they beat the Lions today, they will have brought off a notable double.

Glasgow, disappoint­ingly, let what should have been a commanding lead slip in Cardiff.

Neverthele­ss they, like Edinburgh, sit well up in the league table.

Given that, to some extent anyway, positions in this table reflect the strength or weakness of any nation’s profession­al game, this is pleasing and should be encouragin­g.

I insert these qualificat­ions for an obvious reason: so many of the Scotland team now play their club rugby in England.

Not all these players have moved south of course, some have always played for English clubs.

Neverthele­ss others – Stuart Hogg, Jonny Gray, Rory Sutherland and Duhan van der Merwe – have all left Glasgow or Edinburgh for English clubs, just as Finn Russell moved from Glasgow to Paris.

However, there was a pleasing reversal this week, with the news Sam Skinner is leaving Exeter for Edinburgh.

So it is quite an achievemen­t in the circumstan­ces for both Scottish clubs to be riding high.

However, one can’t but observe that they are doing so thanks to intelligen­t recruitmen­t of players from Argentina, New Zealand, Australia and South Africa, most of whom are not Scottish-qualified and never will be.

A good deal of this season’s victories have been made possible by try-scoring Argentinia­n wings. Well, that’s fine.

Yet it’s just a bit worrying – or should be – that there have been weeks when no more than 20 of the players starting for the Scottish clubs are, or ever will be, available

to Scotland. If we had three or four pro teams, this might be no cause for anxiety. As it is, one wonders about opportunit­ies for the next crop of young Scots.

There is reason to do so. The record of our under-20 team in the junior Six Nations has recently been lamentable. All five matches have again been lost in this year’s championsh­ip.

I doubt whether either the players or coaches deserve blame.

The truth surely is that for far too long the SRU has failed to provide an effective structure for the developmen­t of young players.

The current SRU leadership has things to be proud of.

Despite Covid and the disruption the pandemic has wrought, the union’s finances are in better shape than they were 10 years ago.

Moreover, week after week, or at least month after month, my inbox draws my attention to new commercial deals struck by the Union.

This is all very well, doubtless praisewort­hy, but one can’t but be aware of the contrast between the Union’s commercial success and its failure to create an effective youth developmen­t programme.

It can’t have escaped the notice of many Scottish fans that, while our age-group sides struggle bravely but lose, Italy’s under-20 team beat both Scotland and England this season.

Perhaps the SRU’S chief executive will explain why Italy now seems to be developing the next generation of internatio­nal players more successful­ly than Scotland.

Or, more likely, perhaps he won’t.

After all, we have for years heard nothing from Murrayfiel­d about the deep and widening gulf between Irish and Scottish rugby.

On a different note, it was a surprise to learn this week that Glasgow are not renewing Rob Harley’s contract.

If he never quite establishe­d himself as an indispensa­ble member of the Scotland team, perhaps because he was judged as not quite internatio­nal class as either lock or blindside flanker, he has been an outstandin­g club player for a dozen years, dating back to the days when Glasgow played before meagre crowds at Firhill.

Nobody, not even Alastair Kellock or Ryan Wilson, has given more to Glasgow or done more for the club.

Perhaps he will move on, either to England or France, and, like Tim Swinson, so often his partner at lock, now enjoying a new lease of life with Saracens, have a second flowering elsewhere.

But he’ll be missed in Glasgow and Scotstoun will be a lesser place without him.

A couple of years on he might be just the man to take charge of the SRU’S inadequate youth developmen­t – if, that is, he chooses to remain actively involved in the game and doesn’t seek to explore wider interests elsewhere.

 ?? ?? Scotland under-20 coach Kenny Murray endured a tough Six Nations
Scotland under-20 coach Kenny Murray endured a tough Six Nations

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