The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Russell has not been guilty of many Scotland mistakes

- Steve Scott

Saturday’s Heineken Champions Cup final was a microcosm of what kind of player Finn Russell is, most seem to agree – inspiratio­n or calamity, sometimes in the same game.

It was such for the Scotland stand-off playing for Racing 92 against Exeter. Unleashing a lot of his considerab le distributi­ve arsenal, Finn slashed the Chiefs to pieces on occasion, especially for the pass for Simon Zebo’s first score and in the build-up to Juan Imhoff ’s try.

But he fumbled a routine pass behind his own line, had a grubber kick rebound and counter-attacked, and threw a howler of an intercepti­on to Henr y Slade. Three errors, three tries (eventually) for Exeter, and the difference in the game.

Typical Finn, seems to be the verdict. Great talent, but he loses you games.

He’s not the reliable fulcrum Warren Gatland will want for the Lions on that showing, we hear. Much better to have Owen Farrell or Dan Biggar, who don’t make mistakes and don’t take silly risks. What utter claptrap. To address the last bit first – Gatland is never going to pick Russell as his Lions 10. Finn’s far too much of a free-thinker for Gat ’s regimented style already and nothing, from Saturday’s game through to next June, is going to change his mind.

Gat will pick Farrell (fair enough, I’d say) or Biggar first, even though the Lions outside backs can wave goodbye to any serviceabl­e attacking ball if he sticks with his old Welsh reliable.

As for the idea that every Russell performanc­e is a mixture of glory or farce, it

is comple te nonsense, especially when he plays for Scotland.

I’ve gone back through his 49 caps thus far looking for a game where a heinous bit of Finn trickery has cost the national team a game, or e ven a tr y. T here’s nothing that stands out, maybe a couple of loose kicks and one dropped ball in a World Cup warm-up game against Fr a n c e springs to mind, but nothing blatant.

There have been games when he hasn’ t played terribly well, for sure. But you can’ t pin those on mistakes caused by

unnecessar­y risk. Fo r Scotland, F i n n’s been overwhelmi­ngly reliable.

Indeed, you can even look at two players considered at various times as “the reliable option” to Finn.

I’m certainly not decrying th e ab i l i t i e s o r contributi­ons of Duncan Weir and Peter Horne, but playing for Scotland they’ve both thrown passes intercepte­d for tries, and Finn to date hasn’t.

Furthermor­e, you look at the number of tries scored when Finn’s been the one doing the intercepti­ng and you see this “maverick” is

statistica­lly a far greater problem for the opposition conceding gift scores than benefittin­g by them.

Gregor Townsend agrees with this, even though this spring ’s contretemp­s between the two suggested a fundamenta­l difference in philosophy.

“It’s great to see players having the courage to go for what they believe is right and with someone l ike F inn w ith h is experience and skill set, those decisions will be the right ones far more often than they ’re n o t ,” he pointed out.

Errors happen, said

Townsend – and he should know, during his early career, the late great rugby journalist Jack Adams took to calling any error on a rugby pitch a “Gregor”.

They even happen to ultra-reliable legends like Johnny Sexton, last seen in an Ireland shirt fumbling the ball behind his own line to gift a try to England at Twickenham, you might recall.

Sexton’s mistake was even rarer than Finn’s have been for Scotland, of course, and clearly there’s more to it than just that: Russell plays far more loosely than the Irish great.

And you know, that’s fine by me. I’d rather see Scotland give it a lash with Finn throwing loop passes all over the shop than try to play station- to- station, dull-as-ditchwater rugby as Ireland often played under Joe Schmidt or Wales have done under Gatland.

Yeah, they’ve won many games and some Slams playing that way, and well done. Scotland don’t have the resources to play the way they do, and mimicking them with a grunt game has never worked for us.

Finn will get his 50th cap o ff the bench against Georgia, and I think it’s reasonable that if Adam Hastings is halfway decent on Friday night, Townsend should be allowed to let the young man finish the job he did in the Six Nations by playing in the closed doors game against Wales.

But after that, we should see Russell regain the shirt that is really his. The positives outweigh any negatives by such a distance that they can’t even be measured.

THE LIONS AT MURRAYFIEL­D

One hopes fervently that there CAN be a crowd when the Lions play their Te s t against Ja p a n at Murrayfiel­d next June.

The occasion deserves one, and I for one can’t wait to see the Brave B lossoms aga in , so inventive and entertaini­ng were they in the World Cup.

How many Scots will be on the pitch, however? Probably not that many.

I c a n’ t see Wa r r e n Gatland doing anything other than picking what he knows and has relied on in the past, especially as he has been out of the European game for more than a year now.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? POST-FINAL: Finn Russell, left, in conversati­on with Scotland captain Stuart Hogg after the Champions Cup final.
POST-FINAL: Finn Russell, left, in conversati­on with Scotland captain Stuart Hogg after the Champions Cup final.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom