The Scotsman

Borders Sevens lack the glamour of old but they remain fun afternoon of rugby

- Sportts@scotsman.com

The Borders Sevens aren’t what they were, haven’t indeed been that since profession­al rugby was permitted. Even so, the decline wasn’t immediate.

If one no longer saw current Scottish internatio­nalists, future ones were on view. At Melrose for instance around the turn of the century, the Player of the Tournament Award went in quick succession to Chris Paterson, Marcus Di Rollo and Mike Blair, none of whom, as I recall, would feature on the amateur Sevens circuit again. Moreover, now that some sort of order has been brought to the profession­al game even here in Scotland, comparably talented youngsters will now often have full profession­al contracts with Glasgow and Edinburgh from an early age. Once upon a time Stuart Hogg and Darcy Graham would have shone, probably for years, in a Hawick Seven, as well as in the Six Nations.

Selkirk could once field two British Lions in their Seven – John Rutherford and Iain Paxton – while another Lion of that 1983 vintage, Roger Baird, scored try after try in a great Kelso Seven which latterly included another future Lion, John Jeffrey. No wonder some feel that the glory has departed from the Sevens circuit.

Attendance­s at club matches have also declined, and one consequenc­e is that only the most knowledgea­ble spectators at any Sevens tournament will recognise the players on view. At the same time spectators no longer have the opportunit­y to mingle between ties with internatio­nal stars. What one may call the rugby family is now divided; and the Sevens are poorer as a consequenc­e, poorer because certainly less glamorous.

Neverthele­ss the clubs remain fully committed to the Sevens. The

King of the Sevens league table has proved a success, and an afternoon at the Sevens – Selkirk today – is still one of the happiest of rugby experience­s. Selkirk beat Melrose in last week’s Earlston final in a cracking match which you can watch on the Radio Borders video. There was plenty of skill and enterprise shown by both sides, but Selkirk’s victory was based on a determined and intelligen­t defence.

Defence may not win games, but defensive weakness and errors certainly lose matches, a thought that Edinburgh and Glasgow will – or should – be taking into their European Challenge Cup quarter-finals

today. Both clubs are coming off defeats. Glasgow lost both matches on their mini-tour of South Africa. Edinburgh, more surprising­ly and disappoint­ingly, went down to Ulster, losing their hitherto unbeaten record in their new stadium. Both are in danger of seeing what has been in many ways a pleasing season petering out. Both can in mitigation point to a longish injury list, but this is the case with most clubs in the last weeks of a long season.

On the face of it Glasgow have the more formidable task, away to Lyon while Edinburgh are at home to Wasps. French clubs have not always committed themselves

whole-heartedly to the Challenge Cup, and Glasgow may hope that Lyon, standing fifth in the Top14 but not yet assured of a place in the league’s playoffs, have at least one eye on their chance of domestic glory. On the other hand they might well think that the Challenge Cup offers them a better chance of a trophy. Be that as it may, away victories have always been rare for Scottish teams in France – or indeed in England and, recently, Ireland. Winning this evening would be Glasgow’s best result in a couple of years.

Edinburgh’s opponents,

Wasps, have had an indifferen­t season and languish in the lower half of the English Premiershi­p, having lost ten of their twenty-three league matches. Defeat today would leave them with nothing significan­t to play for in the last weeks of the season.

Edinburgh are not quite in that boat, not yet anyway, but having lost in South Africa before going down to Ulster, defeat today would surely take the gloss off what has been up to now a successful and exhilarati­ng season.

 ?? ?? Kelso’s 1984 Melrose Sevens team (from left) Roger Baird, Andrew Kerr, John Jeffrey, Eric Paxton, Gary Callender, Bob Hogarth and Ewan Common
Kelso’s 1984 Melrose Sevens team (from left) Roger Baird, Andrew Kerr, John Jeffrey, Eric Paxton, Gary Callender, Bob Hogarth and Ewan Common

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom