The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Townsend says Scots focused on French test

- STEVE SCOTT

Scotland’s focus is squarely on reaching the final of the Autumn Na t i o n s Cup and not on recordwinn­ing runs going into Sunday’s visit of France to BT Murrayfiel­d.

With next week’s game against Fiji cancelled due to the Covid-19 outbreak in the Pacific Islanders’ squad, the second meeting with France this year – Scotland won 28-17 in the Six Nations at Murrayfiel­d in March – becomes a virtual semifinal for the new postlockdo­wn competitio­n.

A win would also mean the Scots’ sixth successive victory, matching the alltime record (it was previously reached by the Grand Slam teams of 1925 and 1990, as well as two occasions in the late 19th Century), but the team seem uninterest­ed.

“We’ve never mentioned it in at any of our meetings or among the coaches,” said Townsend.

“I couldn’t tell you if the players talk about it. But whether it’s on the back of six defeats, one win, or no wins – this is a great game for us to get stuck into.

“The opportunit­y is about winning this game and what that would mean to this group in terms of getting into the final to play for first or second in a couple of weeks’ time.

“We know what a challenge France are going to bring – one of the best teams, if not the best team, in the world right now, so that’s all we’re thinking about.”

Townsend made five changes to the team that defeated Italy in Florence last week, before he knew for certain that the Fiji game was off.

Here are the main talking points from selection:

Matt Fagerson has a chance to nail down the problem No 8 position

The younger Fagerson brother has been injured early in both his starts at Murrayfiel­d for Scotland, but no one has grabbed the spot between sure-picks Jamie Ritchie and Hamish Watson yet.

“Matt started against Georgia, picked up an injury, has done really well to come back and was available last week after a full week of training. We see him now getting this opportunit­y.

“We were pleased with how Blade (Thomson) played in the last two games. He’s been involved more and more, especially in the last 20 minutes of the Italy game where he was excellent in defence.

“Now it’s up to Matt to show what he can do. He’s been in excellent form for his club and he works really hard in attack and defence. We’ll need that from him this weekend.”

Rory S u t h e r l a n d ’s ankle injury is not as bad as was feared

Oli Kebble has done well in three replacemen­t appearance­s and was an obvious choice to play in S u t h e r l a n d ’s absence, although it will be his first start since completing residency qualificat­ion.

“Better news – a lot better than we were expecting,” said Townsend of Sutherland. “It’s hard to put a timeline on it. Let’s call it two to three weeks, maybe more, maybe less. We’re not ruling him out for the rest of this tournament.

“We have one game left in a couple of weeks, so we’ll just see how he goes once when he starts to move around again. I think we’re all feeling it could have been a lot worse.”

Sean Maitland is back and his experience is vital

Maitland was discipline­d for being part of the group that breached coronaviru­s protocols while with the Barbarians, but is on the bench and has been “a very important player for us over the last couple of y e a r s ”, according to Townsend.

T he coach said: “He understood the consequenc­es of his actions and how it let down people, but he said straightaw­ay if he does get the opportunit­y to be back involved then he would get his head down and work hard in training, and he has done.

“He’s scored a number of crucial tries, including the two against France in March. Just having his experience and his determinat­ion to be involved is a great thing for us.

“With Duncan Taylor on the bench as well, we know we have two players who will get into the game straightaw­ay if they get the chance to come on.”

It might have been a different side had the Fiji game not been cancelled

“Would we have changed things? Maybe, yes,” said Townsend. “We’d looked at this campaign as a chance to see other players play.

“It has been disappoint­ing for some of our players in

that they have worked hard and are not going to get the chance. We had hinted to some that they would play against Fiji.”

It has logistical issues as well, with Scotland players representi­ng 10 different clubs who might like their players back for a weekend.

“We’d obviously all like to carry on being together, but we’ ll see how we manage that,” he continued.

“We’ve been together now almost seven weeks.

“It was going to be an intense training week going into that Fiji game, but now we have that twoweek build- up to finals weekend.”

An empty Murrayfiel­d is “strange”, but the Scots have been working on that

The contrast between 67,000 roaring on Scotland in March and this game behind closed doors will be stark, but Townsend says they’ve made adjustment­s.

“I found ( the Georgia game) a very strange atmosphere,” he said.

“We learned from that we have to do more as staff and subs to create that energy for the players and I feel we’ve done that well in the past two games, in Wales and Italy.

“It is about responding to moments in games, whether we win a scrum penalty or we’ve had a good defensive set.

“We want the team to encourage each other on the field, but also those not in the 15 or 23, including the management.”

 ??  ?? WELCOME RETURN: Sean Maitland, right, at training with captain Stuart Hogg.
WELCOME RETURN: Sean Maitland, right, at training with captain Stuart Hogg.

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