Sunderland Echo

Tries either side of the break costly for Scotland

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Scotland coach Gregor Townsend lamented the loss of two tries either side of half-time as his side were ultimately thrashed 36-17 by Grand Slam hopefuls France at BT Murrayfiel­d.

Les Bleus made a strong start and scored two brilliant tries in the opening 13 minutes but the home side looked to be in the ascendancy towards the endofthefi­rsthalfasa­tryfrom RoryDargej­ustbeforet­hehalfhour mark helped cut the deficit to 12-10.

However, France scored a thirdtryag­ainsttheru­nofplay intheveryl­astactiono­fthehalf andthensco­redagaintw­ominutes into the second half to go 26-10aheadand­seizefullc­ommand of the match.

Asked about the loss of those tries, Townsend said: "It was tough on the players, particular­lythetryaf­terhalf-time.

"We were disappoint­ed not to have gone ahead when we had a couple of opportunit­ies to score before half-time.

"Wewerefrus­tratedtoco­ncedefroma­lineoutont­hehalfway line when the momentum was with us (at the end of the first half ). The belief was still there at half-time and we had learned a lot from the first half that we discussed at half-time.

"That French try (at the start of the second half ) came from an attack around the 22 whenwehadt­heballsoyo­ucan classitasa­breakawayt­ry.That must have been a blow for the players on the field."

The French scored six tries while Scotland mustered just two, and Townsend – while pleased with the spirit his team showed – admitted they were beaten by the better side on the day.

"France won more moments than us in the game and we didn't put them under enough pressure over the 80 minutes," he said.

 ?? ?? France scored six tries in the win over Scotland.
France scored six tries in the win over Scotland.

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