The Scotsman

General Jackson

Experience­d playmaker back at stand-off as Scots seek winning start to summer tour.

- Allan Massie

Alone among what we used to call the Dominions, Canada has never establishe­d itself as a rugby power. South Africa and New Zealand have been for much of rugby’s history the two strongest teams, with Australia not far behind. All three have won the World Cup more than once. But Canadian rugby has never promised much. No doubt this is partly on account of geography, the two rugbyplayi­ng provinces, Ontario and British Columbia being far apart, and no doubt it is also on account of the savage Canadian winter. Be that as it may, England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland have rarely fielded a full-strength side against Canada.

Certainly Gregor Townsend’s one tomorrow might be rated half-strength at most. Perhaps only two or three would start in a Six Nations game. Ruaridh Jackson, at stand-off where he has hardly played for a long time, has more caps than the rest of the back division put together, and if, as is likely, young Adam Hastings replaces him at some point, that will see a 32-cap player give way to a debutant; should be fun.

The forwards are more experience­d, though one wouldn’t expect more than three of them to start in a Six Nations match.

It’s not so long since this sort of selection would have had one feeling more than a touch apprehensi­ve – no matter who the opponents were. Yet now it would be a surprise as well as a disappoint­ment if they didn’t win.

Of course all the Six Nations countries are in the same boat when it comes to these summer internatio­nals. Injuries and the need to rest key players coming off a long hard season with a longer and harder one coming up. Ireland will play Australia without several of the Leinster players who have just brought off the European Cup and Guinness Pro14 double. Wales are without Leigh Halfpenny, Dan Biggar, and Alun Wyn Jones against Argentina, while several other stars are missing, injured.

England are an exception. The team Eddie Jones is putting out against South Africa at Ellis Park is the strongest he has available, any absent star players being injured, not resting.

Of course victory is very important for Jones and England, given that they are coming off a run of three defeats, four if you count the Barbarians jamboree. A hammering at Ellis Park where South Africa rarely lose, even to New Zealand, would have alarm bells ringing in the committee room at Twickenham.

Sometimes one wonders whether with 23-man match squads and a dozen or so internatio­nals in a season or calendar year, the cap itself is a bit devalued.

On a quick count I reckon that, including the new caps in tomorrow’s squad, there are more than 50 Scottish capped players still active and not retired from the internatio­nal game, and I daresay a more careful count would yield a few more. One sometimes thinks that in any pro game it’s the players without internatio­nal experience who are the exceptions.

Magnus Bradbury is some-

TOO MANY CAPS “One wonders whether, with 23-man squads and a dozen or so internatio­nal sin a year, the cap is devalued. There are more than 50 Scottish capped players still not retired from the internatio­nal game”

one whose performanc­e on this tour will be watched with special interest. After being picked by Vern Cotter in the autumn internatio­nals of 2016 he fell away somewhat and then experience­d what one may politely call a spot of disruption in the first weeks of the home season just finished. Now, after playing outstandin­gly for Edinburgh at its tail-end he has another chance, an important opportunit­y in view of the injury to John Barclay which will keep him off the field for months.

There’s something of Munster and Ireland’s Peter O’mahony about Bradbury, something too of that great Scottish and Lions forward and captain towards the end of the amateur era, Finlay Calder.

Canada may have lost their last six matches, and haven’t played an internatio­nal since June of last year. So their recent record can’t inspire them with confidence, their last two defeats being at home to Romania and Georgia. Neverthele­ss optimism, even confidence, should be tempered with caution. Our own away record isn’t brilliant, and there are several unfamiliar combinatio­ns in this team. We may neverthele­ss reasonably hope that the days when any victory was greeted with a sigh of relief may be behind us – for the time being anyway.

Meanwhile, over Saturday breakfast, you may be watching Jacques Brugnon’s France daringly venturing into the lions’ den or wolf-pit of Eden Park only a week after the Pro 14 final. This, however, is less significan­t than it might have been since there seemed to be at least as many South Africans as Frenchmen in the Montpellie­r and Castres teams. Of equal interest is the earlier game between Japan and Italy, significan­t indeed since Japan are in the same pool as us in next summer’s World Cup.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Ruaridh Jackson has played most of his rugby at full-back for Glasgow this season but is selected at fly-half for tonight’s Test match against Canada in Edmonton, the first game of three-match tour.
Ruaridh Jackson has played most of his rugby at full-back for Glasgow this season but is selected at fly-half for tonight’s Test match against Canada in Edmonton, the first game of three-match tour.
 ??  ?? Magnus Bradbury: Fell away.
Magnus Bradbury: Fell away.

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