The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Scots aim to learn from World Cup heartache

Aussie-born coach Taylor says team can’t wait to take on Wallabies again

- STEVE SCOTT stscott@thecourier.co.uk

The motivation for Scotland against Australia after last year’s Rugby World Cup quarter-final is not injustice but the knowledge that they had their own fate in their hands, believes assistant coach Matt Taylor.

The Australian-born defence coach like most has regrets about that day at Twickenham as the two teams meet again at BT Murrayfiel­d on Saturday, but they almost all relate to what Scotland did and didn’t do on the pitch rather than the outside factors.

“The quarter-final is a motivating factor, but in the sense that if we’d done things differentl­y we could have won that game,” he said.

“On that day we weren’t good enough, and that’s what the history books say. It’s gone and we’re looking forward to putting our best foot forward on Saturday.

“You’re always motivated for a Test match. We’re at home, in front of a record crowd (for the fixture), I believe. Whenever you play one of the top three or four sides in the world you’re always highly motivated to do well.”

Long before referee Craig Joubert’s interventi­on, Scotland were the architects of their own situation, argued Taylor.

“There were things we did well and other things not so well,” he said.

“I was really disappoint­ed with the amount of tries we let in and that probably had a lot to do with some of our discipline, in terms of giving yellow cards away and also giving them field position.

“We knew they score a lot off set-piece, particular­ly line-out, so we went into the game with a certain plan not to give them a lot of great set-piece ball, and we didn’t manage to do that.

“I think through our defence we managed to force a few tries through intercepts and charge-downs, so we’ll be looking to keep pressing them in that regard.”

Taylor was impressed with Australia’s dominating performanc­e in Cardiff on Saturday, but was most surprised with Wales rather than the Wallabies.

“Australia are a very good side when they’ve got the ball going forward, if you sit back and let them play they are one of the best sides in the world,” he said.

“They’ve got the first three or four patterns laid out from set-piece, so if you give them really good clean ball they’re going to be very good.

“I was a wee bit surprised by Wales, I thought they could have had a bit better line speed and been a bit better in the collision. In the past, defence has been one of Wales’ trademarks.”

His Australian roots make this Test match-up always a “funny one”, he admits.

“I have family who are Scots but a fair few back home are proud Australian­s, so it’s a strange one for me,” said Taylor.

“But I love it here. I’ve just signed on for another two years with Scotland, my family is really settled here, my kids love it. I’m here for at least two years after the next Six Nations.”

 ?? Picture: SNS Group. ?? Scotland defence coach Matt Taylor at the team’s training session ahead of their clash with Australia at BT Murrayfiel­d on Saturday.
Picture: SNS Group. Scotland defence coach Matt Taylor at the team’s training session ahead of their clash with Australia at BT Murrayfiel­d on Saturday.

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