The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Hastings in for Russell as Scots braced for Dublin test

Head coach throws in a few surprises for opener against Ireland in Dublin

- STEVE SCOTT

Stand-off Adam Hastings has been given the job of replacing Finn Russell as Scotland kick-off their Guinness Six Nations campaign against Ireland on Saturday.

Russell was told by head coach Gregor Townsend he would not be involved at the Aviva Stadium after being discipline­d for breaching team rules last week following an alleged late-night drinking session at the Dark Blues’ team hotel.

It remains to be seen if the Racing 92 star will feature at all during this year’s championsh­ips but Hastings will get his chance to prove he can plot a route to success after being handed the number 10 jersey for the Dublin opener.

Edinburgh number eight Nick Haining will also win his first cap against Andy Farrell’s team while his club team-mate prop Rory Sutherland will make his first internatio­nal appearance in three-and-ahalf years.

The match will also see Stuart Hogg lead out the team for the first time since being handed the Scotland captaincy on a permanent basis.

Ireland swept Townsend’s team aside 27-3 at the World Cup last September.

Well, Gregor Townsend can’t be accused of the Einstein theory in selection at least.

The Scotland head coach has not picked a similar line-up expecting different results with his team to start the Guinness Six Nations against Ireland in Dublin tomorrow.

Two-thirds of the team have been dropped, retired, are injured or have stormed off in the huff since the Scots last played Ireland, in Yokohama in the World Cup back in September, and got thoroughly and anti-climactica­lly hammered.

Just five players – Stuart Hogg, Sean Maitland, Sam Johnson, Jonny Gray and Hamish Watson, who didn’t last the first half – are retained from the starting team that sodden and dispiritin­g night. Ireland, in contrast, have changed just two, and one of those was enforced by the retirement of Rory Best.

Townsend made the obvious changes – Adam Hastings for Finn Russell, which wouldn’t have happened but for the hotel nightcap last week, Fraser Brown for Stuart Mcinally, Zander Fagerson for WP Nel and Jamie Ritchie for John Barclay.

But he threw in a good few less obvious moves – a recall for Huw Jones, Scott Cummings instead of the stalwart fixture Grant Gilchrist, and most notably, the inclusion of Australian-born Nick Haining at No8 and Rory Sutherland at the problem spot of loosehead.

The Edinburgh duo of the uncapped Haining and Sutherland, who has just three caps, all three of them won four years ago, have barely 12 appearance­s for Edinburgh between them this season.

“We know the performanc­e in Yokohama wasn’t anywhere near good enough but this is a new team,” said Townsend, before quickly adding: “The players are looking forward rather than back.”

That seems to be another coded reference to the Russell affair, which he otherwise refused to discuss further.

“I think we covered that last week. I’m talking about the team and the squad that is going to Dublin now,” he said when asked of the squad’s mood.

But he was very keen to point out the squad members were buoyant after a few days spent with the sun on their backs at the camp in Alicante.

“I think they’ve been really together as a group for the past two weeks,” he said. “They’ve come in with enthusiasm, energy, open minds.

“We have a couple of new coaches with new ideas in our group and they have fitted in really well.”

Unlike someone whose name may not be uttered, one might add, but Townsend conceded he’d felt exactly like this prior to the last meeting with Ireland in Japan only to have the team appear listless in the warm-up and equally bad in the game.

“It’s difficult to say,” he said when asked about it.

“For whatever reason we just didn’t get things right before the game in the warm-up and, in that first 10 to 20 minutes in the game, those were areas we didn’t do as well as we could.

“Just now, the mood of the players in the camp is good. We had a tough session this morning, the players were leading in the meetings and on the training field, and that’s what you want from a coaching perspectiv­e. We’ve done the detail. There is a bit of a hard edge around defence and the players are the ones doing the talking.

“The game is to come so it’s now up to us all, but especially the players, to ensure we are ready for a huge challenge – that we are confident and ready to work very hard for 80 minutes.”

New cap Haining has just eight appearance­s since coming to Edinburgh from Bristol in the summer, but benefits from injuries to Blade Thomson and Magnus Bradbury. Sutherland has played a couple of European games well for Edinburgh against Wasps and Bordeaux, but has been easing himself back after a nightmare 2018 and 2019 with injury,

“In the games he has played, he has stood up to whatever has been in front of him,” added Townsend. “He did that in the scrum out in Bordeaux and he had an excellent game down at Wasps. That stuck out in our minds.

“The feedback from Edinburgh has been good. Sometimes players don’t get a huge amount of opportunit­y at their clubs but, if they play well when they get the opportunit­y and what you hear and see from the training is positive then you feel it is their time, they’re opportunit­y to go out and grab.”

Jones, who was left out of the Japan trip, has looked back to his best in recent games for Glasgow after getting a consistent run in the team maybe for the first time in his two years there.

“He is playing with real confidence in defence and attack. I know from the feedback at Glasgow how well he has been training and also contributi­ng to meetings, and we’ve seen that here over the past two weeks,” said Townsend.

“Sometimes players have to go through adversity at times in their careers. It has been great to see the character of Huw to get through that and be back enjoying his rugby again.”

Hastings was the obvious choice for 10, having shown strong form for Glasgow in the last two months and being as much like-for-like to Russell as is available – although more likely to play to orders.

He also kicks goals well, a necessity with Greig Laidlaw’s retiral potentiall­y ending the run of sure-thing placekicke­rs which has been Scotland’s only consistent excellence in 21st Century rugby.

Better than his Dad? “If you do your work on the stats, there’s only one clear winner there,” said Townsend, a team-mate of Gavin’s.

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