Western Mail

AUTUMN HEROICS MAKE TOWNSEND’S SCOTS A FORCE TO BE RECKONED WITH

- COACH: GREGOR TOWNSEND ROB LLOYD Rugby correspond­ent CAPTAIN: JOHN BARCLAY KEY MAN: STUART HOGG ROOKIE TO WATCH: BLAIR KINGHORN STRENGTHS AREAS TO TARGET KEY INJURIES LAST TIME OUT ORDER OF GAMES WHAT THE COACH SAYS WHAT MOOD ARE THE FANS IN? POINT TO PRO

ARE we about to witness the rebirth of Scottish rugby as a northern hemisphere force? The performanc­es of Gregor Townsend’s side during the autumn, when they pushed the All Blacks all the way and routed 14-man Australia at Murrayfiel­d, means they have been attracting plenty of attention in the build-up to this tournament.

Townsend, who replaced Vern Cotter in the summer, has built on the New Zealander’s solid foundation­s, encouragin­g the Scots to play with the energy and ambition of his previous Glasgow Warriors side.

The fact that many see them as favourites for the opener in Cardiff speaks volumes of how far they have come in recent times. THE Lion is enjoying his honeymoon period as an internatio­nal coach. Has trans- ferred his free-running off-loading game from Glasgow and has got the Scots playing with a real swagger. THE experience­d Scarlets back-rower has taken over the reins from Greig Laidlaw. Barclay is enjoying an internatio­nal renaissanc­e after a number of years in the wilderness. MADE his long-awaited comeback with a stunning try-scoring performanc­e for Glasgow against Exeter in the Champions Cup last weekend. Provides Scotland with the ignition switch to their attacking game. THE rangy full-back has been one of the stand-out players in this season’s Guinness PRO14. Just has to find a way past Hogg, although could be utilised on the wing. THERE was a real energy about the Scots in the autumn and they looked a confident group of players singing off the same page.

So often in the past, the Scots have been criticised for not possessing the try-scoring armoury behind the scrum, but in Hogg, Tommy Seymour and Huw Jones they now boast some serious weapons in the three-quarter line. Hamish Watson, alongside skipper Barclay, adds a tenacious presence at the breakdown THE Scotland scrum has never been a major weapon and there is a danger that their challenge will be undermined by a struggling setpiece. Finn Russell can also blow hot and cold from fly-half. THE absence of Zander Fagerson, WP Nel, Ross Ford, Allan Dell, Al Dickinson and Darryl Marfo could destabilis­e the Scottish set-piece. THIRD spot represente­d an encouragin­g campaign, with victory over Ireland followed by Murrayfiel­d triumphs against Wales and Italy. However, a capitulati­on at Twickenham cast a shadow. Wales (a), France (h), England (h), Ireland (a), Italy (a) “WE’VE got to set high standards, high ambitions for our team. We believe in them but we also know the hard work that has to go in to make that happen.” THE autumn results have provided a real buzz around Townsend’s side, expect a strong Tartan Army heading south to Cardiff for the first weekend of February. SECOND row was an area of strength for Warren Gatland, but Gray’s omission from the Lions tour party was still a major surprise. BACK-ROWER Luke Hamilton hails from Pembrokesh­ire and came through the academy ranks at the Scarlets, playing in the same Wales Under-20s side as Rob Evans, Samson Lee, Ellis Jenkins and Owen Williams. THE Scots are 8-1 third favourites with some bookies to win a first title since Five became Six in 2000. They are 22-1 for the Grand Slam and 11-1 for the Triple Crown. THE opener against Wales at the Principali­ty Stadium could be the defining match for both sides. Despite riding a wave of optimism, I’m backing Gatland’s men to edge that one, leaving the Scots coming up short again. Fourth.

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