The Rugby Paper

Scottish find their feet in second-half comeback

- By STEVE JACKSON

LONDON Scottish won the basement battle at Grantchest­er Road, despite being 13-nil down at half-time. Brian Redpath’s side blew Cambridge away with a stunning second-half display that left Richie Williams’ men rooted to the bottom of the table.

With a prodigious breeze at their backs the Blood & Sand edged a competitiv­e first half, going in at the break ahead by virtue of an intercept try from Sam Hanks, converted by Steff James. James added a perfunctor­y penalty from the edge of the 22, followed by another of similar ilk from Eli Caven.

Both sides blew chances to get over the line – Sam Edwards fell short following a two-on-one where it looked easier to score; and James sprinted into his 22 to bring down Scottish wing Will Talbot-Davies who’d looked odds on to go under the sticks.

Redpath felt his side were always in with a shout at the interval, as they should have been further behind: “We’d played too much tippy-tappy rugby and weren’t decisive enough. Playing into a strong wind we should have been 20 points down. After the break we were direct and played at a higher tempo. We’ve been very competitiv­e all year and just not been able to finish teams off. Last week we did, today we did, and we crack on next week.”

Playing with the wind in the second half, Scottish scored 11 minutes in when lovely interplay down the left hand side saw Archie White touch down. Within two minutes the try tally had doubled, again down the left as Noah Ferdinand outpaced the defence.

Two more followed – a break down the middle was finished by Ben Waghorn, and Jack Musk followed suit with the bonus point try. Bryn Bradley profited from a loose pass for the fifth. Two intercepti­ons kept the scoreboard ticking over as the visitors ran riot – Luke Mehson and Jonathan Law putting a gloss on the result.

Richie Williams apologised to the home support, but refused to blame being ‘down to bones’ for their poor second half. He said: “We were missing a few but with that second half we have to take a hard look at ourselves. We started reasonably well, created some good opportunit­ies, but they haven’t had to work too hard for some of their tries. If you give teams opportunit­ies at this level they’ll hurt you.”

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