Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Hastings stars as Scots set up Japan quarter-final showdown

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Scotland will play Japan for a spot in the Rugby World Cup quarter-finals after a 26-point haul from Adam Hastings helped them to a nine-try, 61-0 thrashing of Russia yesterday. A Scottish side boasting 14 changes from the team that beat Samoa 34-0 last week easily outgunned a Russian side ranked 20th in the world and which had suffered three defeats in their three previous Pool A games (Japan 30-10, Samoa 34-9, Ireland 35-0).

Scotland coach Gregor Townsend had no option but to rest the likes of big guns Greig Laidlaw, Finn Russell, Stuart Hogg, Blade Thompson and Johnny Gray, with only a four-day turnover before the game against Japan in Yokohama on Sunday.

Townsend’s bet on a largely secondstri­ng side producing enough to seal the win paid off, however, with Hastings -- son of legendary former captain Gavin -- running the show with aplomb at Shizuoka’s Ecopa Stadium.

The result leaves Scotland on 10 points in Pool ‘A’ while unbeaten hosts Japan have 14 and Ireland -- who play Samoa in Fukuoka on Saturday -- 11. Only the two top sides will advance to the knockout phase.

In the first ever Test match between the two nations, Russia were defensivel­y weak against Scotland for the full 80 minutes and fly-half Ramil Gaisin’s touted territoria­l kicking game failed to mount any real pressure.

The Scottish scrum was solid and when No 8 Ryan Wilson quickly fed George Horne, the scrum-half’s pass found Hastings who stepped back in and rode Dimitry Gerasomov’s tackle for a try he also converted.

Hastings made it a personal double within minutes, chasing up on his own chip past a wrong-footed Vasily Artemyev after winger Darcy Graham had done well to keep the ball alive.

Hastings converted that and also a third try from Horne after the scrum-half intercepte­d a Dmitry Perov pass from a defensive Russian line-out on the tryline to make it 21-0 at half-time.

Horne made sure of Scotland’s attacking bonus point when he crossed for the team’s fourth try five minutes into the second-half, a willing recipient of the final pass from Graham after the winger had scythed through a non-existent defence from halfway. With Russia flagging and falling badly off the tackles, the floodgates opened as first hooker George Turner crashed over from a driving maul and then wing Tommy Seymour dotted down in the corner. Horne, moved to the wing to accommodat­e Henry Pyrgos at half-back, bagged his hat-trick and had a fourth try disallowed for a forward pass.

A raft of replacemen­ts on the hour-mark robbed the game of its momentum, as many of the 16,000 schoolchil­dren in the stadium headed for buses home.

Late tries from skipper John Barclay and replacemen­t hooker Stuart Mcinally gave the score some added gloss, but Hastings was denied the final word, referee Wayne Barnes harshly ruling out what would have been his hat-trick of tries for a forward pass.- AFP

 ??  ?? Adam Hastings (L) played a key part in Scotland’s win
Adam Hastings (L) played a key part in Scotland’s win

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