Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Jones – lay-off Scotland coach

- BY ANTHONY BROWN

HUW Jones batted away any notion that Scotland head coach Gregor Townsend was under pressure after Saturday’s Guinness Six Nations implosion in Italy.

The Scots blew their chance to set up a shootout for the title with Ireland in Dublin next weekend as they went down 31-29 in Rome despite holding a 22-10 lead after an encouragin­g start.

It was the Azzurri’s first Six Nations victory at home for 11 years and their first in the championsh­ip since winning in Wales two years ago.

The surprise defeat cranks up the heat on Townsend just five months after the Scots suffered a second consecutiv­e World Cup group-stage exit on the 50-yearold’s watch.

However, Jones claimed the players should carry the can for the debacle in Rome and appeared irritated by the suggestion it would place the long-serving head coach under renewed scrutiny.

“I don’t know about that,” said the experience­d centre. “We’re all behind the coaches, we’re all behind Gregor.

“We love the way we play, the way we want to play. We have a good plan. When we execute it, it’s brilliant and we play some good rugby. I don’t think this defeat was on Gregor, I think it was on the players.

“We didn’t execute our plan well enough and Italy played well.”

Scotland looked in control after three tries in the opening half hour from Zander Fagerson, Kyle Steyn and Pierre Schoeman.

But a disallowed George Horne touchdown – after a foul in the build-up by Schoeman was detected – two minutes into the second half when they led 22-16 proved pivotal.

Italy, who had scored in the first half through Martin PageRelo, turned the screw with tries from debutant Louis Lynagh and substitute Stephen Varney, and some excellent kicking under pressure from Paolo Garbisi took the game away from the Scots before Sam Skinner’s late try gave them a glimmer of what ultimately proved false hope.

Saturday was one of Jones’ most soul-destroying days in a Scotland jersey, and he said: “We hate losing. It’s really tough to take, hugely disappoint­ing.

“We spoke during the week before the game about having our best performanc­e, having an 80-minute performanc­e, but we were really poor in the second half. We let the game slip away from us.

“Credit to Italy, they were good, but we had that try chalked off and then conceded four or five penalties in a row. We couldn’t get back in the game and they managed that period better.”

While the manner of the defeat itself was bad enough, there was further reason for Scottish frustratio­n later in the day when Ireland’s surprise defeat to England meant Townsend’s men had effectivel­y squandered a golden chance to set up a last-day title shootout with Ireland.

 ?? ?? BACKING: Scotland’s Huw Jones says the players should be blamed for losing to Italy in the Guinness Six Nations clash.
BACKING: Scotland’s Huw Jones says the players should be blamed for losing to Italy in the Guinness Six Nations clash.

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