The Official Scottish Rugby Thread
Beating Italy can’t be regarded as a given with their current form. Especially in Rome. I’d like to think we have too much firepower for them, but they were painfully close to a winning try at MF a year ago.
It is in truth not for glory, nor riches, nor honours that we are fighting, but for freedom - for that alone, which no honest man gives up but with life itself.
- S/Lt_Phillips
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Ah, humble apologies!Slick wrote: Sun Feb 25, 2024 5:31 pmI hadn’t put much thought into that, pleased to be brought back tk earthS/Lt_Phillips wrote: Sun Feb 25, 2024 5:13 pmNot sure. France have Wales & England to play - they should win both, and probably a BP against Wales. So that's 8 or 9 more points, which puts them on 14 or 15.Slick wrote: Sun Feb 25, 2024 5:01 pm Well…. Assuming we should beat Italy that just about secures us 2nd at least doesn’t it?
We're on 9, so a BP against Italy (by no means a certainty) puts us on 14. So we might need a LBP or 4 tries at least against Ireland.
But this is Scotland, so Garbisi hitting the post will be what denies us 2nd place. It is written.
Left hand down a bit
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A 4 try BP in Rome against this Italy side would be a very handy result.S/Lt_Phillips wrote: Sun Feb 25, 2024 5:13 pmNot sure. France have Wales & England to play - they should win both, and probably a BP against Wales. So that's 8 or 9 more points, which puts them on 14 or 15.Slick wrote: Sun Feb 25, 2024 5:01 pm Well…. Assuming we should beat Italy that just about secures us 2nd at least doesn’t it?
We're on 9, so a BP against Italy (by no means a certainty) puts us on 14. So we might need a LBP or 4 tries at least against Ireland.
But this is Scotland, so Garbisi hitting the post will be what denies us 2nd place. It is written.
Saturday was an odd game really. We very nearly beat the blitz on our first attack then rarely managed to get outside it.
As mentioned on the match thread I do wonder if Tuipulotu hurt his knee when the dummy runner crashed into him causing a knee on inside of knee collision.
Overall I thought the second rows stood up physically in what might be GGs last Murrayfield start. Cummings needs to keep that going. I thought the back row was workman like but feel that too often Darge is the one making the tackle rather than impacting the ruck regularly (not to say he wasn't impacting the ruck but not enough IMO). Dempsey was very physical in defence although quiet in attack.
White had his worst game of the 6N but I was impressed by his physicality in defence. Finn and Duhan are what they are (very good). Jones is now a more complete 13 than he has ever been. I honestly think spending time with Harris has helped his defence. Kinghorn was ok but after a few weeks out I wasn't expecting him to be perfect.
A nod to our bench. Considering the England bench was supposedly better I think they stood up well. EMM had a bullshit penalty against him, Ashman had good arrows, Skinner kept the physicality high, Christie was busy, and Redpath was good barring one major defensive mistake.
Two areas of concern for me, our attack hasn't really opened up in the 6N except for small spells and in the last 5min we gave away two basic penalties (Horne offside and DVDM tackle) that gave England a small glimmer of hope.
I'd bring Christie in for Ritchie v Italy and whichever of Redpath/McDowell assuming Tuipulotu is injured.
As mentioned on the match thread I do wonder if Tuipulotu hurt his knee when the dummy runner crashed into him causing a knee on inside of knee collision.
Overall I thought the second rows stood up physically in what might be GGs last Murrayfield start. Cummings needs to keep that going. I thought the back row was workman like but feel that too often Darge is the one making the tackle rather than impacting the ruck regularly (not to say he wasn't impacting the ruck but not enough IMO). Dempsey was very physical in defence although quiet in attack.
White had his worst game of the 6N but I was impressed by his physicality in defence. Finn and Duhan are what they are (very good). Jones is now a more complete 13 than he has ever been. I honestly think spending time with Harris has helped his defence. Kinghorn was ok but after a few weeks out I wasn't expecting him to be perfect.
A nod to our bench. Considering the England bench was supposedly better I think they stood up well. EMM had a bullshit penalty against him, Ashman had good arrows, Skinner kept the physicality high, Christie was busy, and Redpath was good barring one major defensive mistake.
Two areas of concern for me, our attack hasn't really opened up in the 6N except for small spells and in the last 5min we gave away two basic penalties (Horne offside and DVDM tackle) that gave England a small glimmer of hope.
I'd bring Christie in for Ritchie v Italy and whichever of Redpath/McDowell assuming Tuipulotu is injured.
Don't think there is much to argue about there. Difficult to tell exactly what Darge was up to at the ground, but he was certainly very prominent all game. Also thought the 2nd rows did more than hold their own, they were great, as was the whole pack, physically. Also agree, the bench did very well.Big D wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 9:36 am Saturday was an odd game really. We very nearly beat the blitz on our first attack then rarely managed to get outside it.
As mentioned on the match thread I do wonder if Tuipulotu hurt his knee when the dummy runner crashed into him causing a knee on inside of knee collision.
Overall I thought the second rows stood up physically in what might be GGs last Murrayfield start. Cummings needs to keep that going. I thought the back row was workman like but feel that too often Darge is the one making the tackle rather than impacting the ruck regularly (not to say he wasn't impacting the ruck but not enough IMO). Dempsey was very physical in defence although quiet in attack.
White had his worst game of the 6N but I was impressed by his physicality in defence. Finn and Duhan are what they are (very good). Jones is now a more complete 13 than he has ever been. I honestly think spending time with Harris has helped his defence. Kinghorn was ok but after a few weeks out I wasn't expecting him to be perfect.
A nod to our bench. Considering the England bench was supposedly better I think they stood up well. EMM had a bullshit penalty against him, Ashman had good arrows, Skinner kept the physicality high, Christie was busy, and Redpath was good barring one major defensive mistake.
Two areas of concern for me, our attack hasn't really opened up in the 6N except for small spells and in the last 5min we gave away two basic penalties (Horne offside and DVDM tackle) that gave England a small glimmer of hope.
I'd bring Christie in for Ritchie v Italy and whichever of Redpath/McDowell assuming Tuipulotu is injured.
Why might it be GG's last game? I haven't heard anything about this.
Loved the video piece with Christie after the game where he could hardly speak with excitement at the atmosphere he had just been part of.
All the money you made will never buy back your soul
We were having some good ol fashion pub chat about this at the weekend, it just seems to be mostly massively overstated..KingBlairhorn wrote: Sun Feb 25, 2024 12:35 pmAye, but apparently if your team only has x* number of poaches it’s fine.Biffer wrote: Sun Feb 25, 2024 11:28 amIt’s also a lot of fun when they rant on about foreign born players to point out their second try scorer is Welsh, by the standards that people hold us to.Begbie wrote: Sun Feb 25, 2024 10:40 am Heeds thumping, but reading the seeth from England fans on social media is helping ease the severe hangover.
*x being the number they currently have. By adding an additional poach x changes. It is a flexible constant.
Z Fagerson - Jock
Turner - Jock
Schoooo - OK, not Jock. Poach. A great big Saffa. A wee bit like Nel though, you do get the impression he has settled. In 20 years time, Schoooo Jnr propping up our scrum.
Cummings - Jock
Gilchrist - Jock
Darge - Jock
Ritchie - Jock
Dempsie - He's an Aussie. Fully expect to see him down the cricket with a mullet and a tash at the Ashes. Poach. I think M Fagerson is perfectly capable anyway, but there you go.
White - He's got a Scottish grandfather, just isn't a poach. I'd personally start Horne anyway.
Finn - Jock
IrnDhu - A great big monstrosity of a Saffa. Poach
Jones - He was born in Leith, for fuck sake. Jock.
Tuipulotu - I get that people are desperate to paint Scotland as king poachers, but this man has a Scottish grandmother. It's hardly our fault we disperse and pop out good rugby players.
Steyne - Scottish mother. Mother bechrist, why am I even having to defend this? Filling in for Darcy anyway.
Kinghorn - Jock
Three poaches by my count.
C T wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 9:43 amWe were having some good ol fashion pub chat about this at the weekend, it just seems to be mostly massively overstated..KingBlairhorn wrote: Sun Feb 25, 2024 12:35 pmAye, but apparently if your team only has x* number of poaches it’s fine.Biffer wrote: Sun Feb 25, 2024 11:28 am
It’s also a lot of fun when they rant on about foreign born players to point out their second try scorer is Welsh, by the standards that people hold us to.
*x being the number they currently have. By adding an additional poach x changes. It is a flexible constant.
Z Fagerson - Jock
Turner - Jock
Schoooo - OK, not Jock. Poach. A great big Saffa. A wee bit like Nel though, you do get the impression he has settled. In 20 years time, Schoooo Jnr propping up our scrum.
Cummings - Jock
Gilchrist - Jock
Darge - Jock
Ritchie - Jock
Dempsie - He's an Aussie. Fully expect to see him down the cricket with a mullet and a tash at the Ashes. Poach. I think M Fagerson is perfectly capable anyway, but there you go.
White - He's got a Scottish grandfather, just isn't a poach. I'd personally start Horne anyway.
Finn - Jock
IrnDhu - A great big monstrosity of a Saffa. Poach
Jones - He was born in Leith, for fuck sake. Jock.
Tuipulotu - I get that people are desperate to paint Scotland as king poachers, but this man has a Scottish grandmother. It's hardly our fault we disperse and pop out good rugby players.
Steyne - Scottish mother. Mother bechrist, why am I even having to defend this? Filling in for Darcy anyway.
Kinghorn - Jock
Three poaches by my count.
Bear with me on this, but I wouldn't count Duhan as a poach, he came to Edinburgh with two pro games under his belt, out of contract and with a failed medical certificate, end of career stuff.
We don't have anyone else that can do what he does, though and it's not just the finishing, it's the big metres made in heavy traffic after contact. My only problem with him is that he doesn't seem to look as hungry with Edinburgh as he does with Scotland.
We also don't have anyone like Schooey, unfortunately. (btw, I thought Fagerson snr got a raw deal at the scrum decisions at the weekend)
Dempsey is obviously our first choice 8, but I don't think it's a huge step down to Fagerson Jnr, Bradbury or even, and I'll keep banging this drum, Crosbie at 8. Christie also plays 8, I think.
Dempsey qualifies on ancestry grounds. Wouldn't count him as a poach either.C T wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 9:43 amWe were having some good ol fashion pub chat about this at the weekend, it just seems to be mostly massively overstated..KingBlairhorn wrote: Sun Feb 25, 2024 12:35 pmAye, but apparently if your team only has x* number of poaches it’s fine.Biffer wrote: Sun Feb 25, 2024 11:28 am
It’s also a lot of fun when they rant on about foreign born players to point out their second try scorer is Welsh, by the standards that people hold us to.
*x being the number they currently have. By adding an additional poach x changes. It is a flexible constant.
Z Fagerson - Jock
Turner - Jock
Schoooo - OK, not Jock. Poach. A great big Saffa. A wee bit like Nel though, you do get the impression he has settled. In 20 years time, Schoooo Jnr propping up our scrum.
Cummings - Jock
Gilchrist - Jock
Darge - Jock
Ritchie - Jock
Dempsie - He's an Aussie. Fully expect to see him down the cricket with a mullet and a tash at the Ashes. Poach. I think M Fagerson is perfectly capable anyway, but there you go.
White - He's got a Scottish grandfather, just isn't a poach. I'd personally start Horne anyway.
Finn - Jock
IrnDhu - A great big monstrosity of a Saffa. Poach
Jones - He was born in Leith, for fuck sake. Jock.
Tuipulotu - I get that people are desperate to paint Scotland as king poachers, but this man has a Scottish grandmother. It's hardly our fault we disperse and pop out good rugby players.
Steyne - Scottish mother. Mother bechrist, why am I even having to defend this? Filling in for Darcy anyway.
Kinghorn - Jock
Three poaches by my count.
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
Although England have been pretty poor recently their pack is still full of big and experienced players and has gone ok in recent games, their major problems are mostly in the backs. England have always had a good set piece and are big and aggressive in the tight, however in multi phase open play they struggle with mobility in their front row and end up slowing it down. Our pack stood up well to theirs and we constantly stopped them getting over the gain line and getting fast ball. I was hoping before the game that if we had parity up front then our backs were more than capable of winning the game for us and they did. Our pack weren't flashy but very very effective and stopped England pack at source. The amount of hard graft in the tight, whilst not immediately obvious, was probably what won us the game ultimately - England backs were constantly trying to play off slow and poor ball with no forward momentum behind the gain line and they aren't good enough to do that so either lost the ball or kicked it aimlessly away.Slick wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 9:41 amDon't think there is much to argue about there. Difficult to tell exactly what Darge was up to at the ground, but he was certainly very prominent all game. Also thought the 2nd rows did more than hold their own, they were great, as was the whole pack, physically. Also agree, the bench did very well.Big D wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 9:36 am Saturday was an odd game really. We very nearly beat the blitz on our first attack then rarely managed to get outside it.
As mentioned on the match thread I do wonder if Tuipulotu hurt his knee when the dummy runner crashed into him causing a knee on inside of knee collision.
Overall I thought the second rows stood up physically in what might be GGs last Murrayfield start. Cummings needs to keep that going. I thought the back row was workman like but feel that too often Darge is the one making the tackle rather than impacting the ruck regularly (not to say he wasn't impacting the ruck but not enough IMO). Dempsey was very physical in defence although quiet in attack.
White had his worst game of the 6N but I was impressed by his physicality in defence. Finn and Duhan are what they are (very good). Jones is now a more complete 13 than he has ever been. I honestly think spending time with Harris has helped his defence. Kinghorn was ok but after a few weeks out I wasn't expecting him to be perfect.
A nod to our bench. Considering the England bench was supposedly better I think they stood up well. EMM had a bullshit penalty against him, Ashman had good arrows, Skinner kept the physicality high, Christie was busy, and Redpath was good barring one major defensive mistake.
Two areas of concern for me, our attack hasn't really opened up in the 6N except for small spells and in the last 5min we gave away two basic penalties (Horne offside and DVDM tackle) that gave England a small glimmer of hope.
I'd bring Christie in for Ritchie v Italy and whichever of Redpath/McDowell assuming Tuipulotu is injured.
Why might it be GG's last game? I haven't heard anything about this.
Loved the video piece with Christie after the game where he could hardly speak with excitement at the atmosphere he had just been part of.
- Paddington Bear
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- Joined: Tue Jun 30, 2020 3:29 pm
- Location: Hertfordshire
Coming in peace.
First up - congrats on the win. Over the last ‘cycle’ I think the domination chat was overdone, all four games could have gone either way at any point. Saturday was chastening and Scotland were barely made to sweat. It’s a pity you won’t get a chance to chase a Grand Slam.
Re: poaching. I wouldn’t take most of it too seriously. Every set of fans likes to shoot the breeze, we all like to take the piss out of the other side and justify a poor performance due to some external bullshit. It’s obviously particularly incongruous when it’s someone with a name like Duhan Van de Merwe and the appearance of never having eaten a non-biltong based meal winning games. There was always noticeably less stick for England playing someone with a name like Brad Barritt than there was Mauritz Botha, same principle and obvious nonsense.
That leads to point two - we’re all massive hypocrites. We all notice ‘poaches’ so much more when it’s the opposition than our own. Feyi-Waboso’s reasons for playing for England seem much more understandable to an England fan than a Welsh one. Likewise Lowe for Ireland etc.
the Home Nations have massive complications on eligibility anyway. Any kids I have will be eligible for England and Scotland, and would have a very justifiable case for electing for either. I do some work tangentially with Finn Smith’s dad. A prouder Scotsman you’d struggle to meet, he still reportedly was in tears when Finn ran out for his first England cap.
Lastly, all the teams are somewhat international, and all of us have benefited from this. To my mind you can either have that, and accept that these are just rugby matches and park the nationalism, or you can have a highly restrictive eligibility system, all sons of the soil and go full blood and thunder. The former is preferable and seems to be reflected in a much calmer atmosphere at Home Nations games, so most people seem to get the point. Certainly my Dad, who I think went to just about every Calcutta Cup game at Murrayfield through the 80s and 90s, was very pleasantly surprised at the change in atmosphere at the game and throughout Edinburgh this weekend.
This isn’t unique or intended as a dig -English nationalism has always had more of an output through football, and has noticeably declined (though not to extinction) as the team has become more diverse. Same principle applies.
Anyway, please beat Ireland. We won’t
First up - congrats on the win. Over the last ‘cycle’ I think the domination chat was overdone, all four games could have gone either way at any point. Saturday was chastening and Scotland were barely made to sweat. It’s a pity you won’t get a chance to chase a Grand Slam.
Re: poaching. I wouldn’t take most of it too seriously. Every set of fans likes to shoot the breeze, we all like to take the piss out of the other side and justify a poor performance due to some external bullshit. It’s obviously particularly incongruous when it’s someone with a name like Duhan Van de Merwe and the appearance of never having eaten a non-biltong based meal winning games. There was always noticeably less stick for England playing someone with a name like Brad Barritt than there was Mauritz Botha, same principle and obvious nonsense.
That leads to point two - we’re all massive hypocrites. We all notice ‘poaches’ so much more when it’s the opposition than our own. Feyi-Waboso’s reasons for playing for England seem much more understandable to an England fan than a Welsh one. Likewise Lowe for Ireland etc.
the Home Nations have massive complications on eligibility anyway. Any kids I have will be eligible for England and Scotland, and would have a very justifiable case for electing for either. I do some work tangentially with Finn Smith’s dad. A prouder Scotsman you’d struggle to meet, he still reportedly was in tears when Finn ran out for his first England cap.
Lastly, all the teams are somewhat international, and all of us have benefited from this. To my mind you can either have that, and accept that these are just rugby matches and park the nationalism, or you can have a highly restrictive eligibility system, all sons of the soil and go full blood and thunder. The former is preferable and seems to be reflected in a much calmer atmosphere at Home Nations games, so most people seem to get the point. Certainly my Dad, who I think went to just about every Calcutta Cup game at Murrayfield through the 80s and 90s, was very pleasantly surprised at the change in atmosphere at the game and throughout Edinburgh this weekend.
This isn’t unique or intended as a dig -English nationalism has always had more of an output through football, and has noticeably declined (though not to extinction) as the team has become more diverse. Same principle applies.
Anyway, please beat Ireland. We won’t
Old men forget: yet all shall be forgot, But he'll remember with advantages, What feats he did that day
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- Joined: Tue Jun 30, 2020 9:37 am
Poach just means not born in Scotland in this discourse.Biffer wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 10:43 amDempsey qualifies on ancestry grounds. Wouldn't count him as a poach either.C T wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 9:43 amWe were having some good ol fashion pub chat about this at the weekend, it just seems to be mostly massively overstated..KingBlairhorn wrote: Sun Feb 25, 2024 12:35 pm
Aye, but apparently if your team only has x* number of poaches it’s fine.
*x being the number they currently have. By adding an additional poach x changes. It is a flexible constant.
Z Fagerson - Jock
Turner - Jock
Schoooo - OK, not Jock. Poach. A great big Saffa. A wee bit like Nel though, you do get the impression he has settled. In 20 years time, Schoooo Jnr propping up our scrum.
Cummings - Jock
Gilchrist - Jock
Darge - Jock
Ritchie - Jock
Dempsie - He's an Aussie. Fully expect to see him down the cricket with a mullet and a tash at the Ashes. Poach. I think M Fagerson is perfectly capable anyway, but there you go.
White - He's got a Scottish grandfather, just isn't a poach. I'd personally start Horne anyway.
Finn - Jock
IrnDhu - A great big monstrosity of a Saffa. Poach
Jones - He was born in Leith, for fuck sake. Jock.
Tuipulotu - I get that people are desperate to paint Scotland as king poachers, but this man has a Scottish grandmother. It's hardly our fault we disperse and pop out good rugby players.
Steyne - Scottish mother. Mother bechrist, why am I even having to defend this? Filling in for Darcy anyway.
Kinghorn - Jock
Three poaches by my count.
The reason we're singled out more than other unions as poachers is that it I think we'd be uncompetitive without use of project players and the SQ pathway. Everyone thinks it and I think we do too. It's a nonsense that English born players are seen as poaches because we're all the same nationality in a very fluid union at this point in time.
We play within the rules though, if enough people don't like it they should change them.
Don't know if that was partly in response to a post I made earlier about the atmosphere in and out the stadium, but I found it noticeably more amicable and was much, much better for that.Paddington Bear wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 10:55 am Coming in peace.
First up - congrats on the win. Over the last ‘cycle’ I think the domination chat was overdone, all four games could have gone either way at any point. Saturday was chastening and Scotland were barely made to sweat. It’s a pity you won’t get a chance to chase a Grand Slam.
Re: poaching. I wouldn’t take most of it too seriously. Every set of fans likes to shoot the breeze, we all like to take the piss out of the other side and justify a poor performance due to some external bullshit. It’s obviously particularly incongruous when it’s someone with a name like Duhan Van de Merwe and the appearance of never having eaten a non-biltong based meal winning games. There was always noticeably less stick for England playing someone with a name like Brad Barritt than there was Mauritz Botha, same principle and obvious nonsense.
That leads to point two - we’re all massive hypocrites. We all notice ‘poaches’ so much more when it’s the opposition than our own. Feyi-Waboso’s reasons for playing for England seem much more understandable to an England fan than a Welsh one. Likewise Lowe for Ireland etc.
the Home Nations have massive complications on eligibility anyway. Any kids I have will be eligible for England and Scotland, and would have a very justifiable case for electing for either. I do some work tangentially with Finn Smith’s dad. A prouder Scotsman you’d struggle to meet, he still reportedly was in tears when Finn ran out for his first England cap.
Lastly, all the teams are somewhat international, and all of us have benefited from this. To my mind you can either have that, and accept that these are just rugby matches and park the nationalism, or you can have a highly restrictive eligibility system, all sons of the soil and go full blood and thunder. The former is preferable and seems to be reflected in a much calmer atmosphere at Home Nations games, so most people seem to get the point. Certainly my Dad, who I think went to just about every Calcutta Cup game at Murrayfield through the 80s and 90s, was very pleasantly surprised at the change in atmosphere at the game and throughout Edinburgh this weekend.
This isn’t unique or intended as a dig -English nationalism has always had more of an output through football, and has noticeably declined (though not to extinction) as the team has become more diverse. Same principle applies.
Anyway, please beat Ireland. We won’t
Absolutely gutted I didn't get to see you old man, we just kept missing each other by a few minutes. Next time. I think he was with my dad for several of those 80's/90's trips
All the money you made will never buy back your soul
PRL being arseholes, the English clubs are fine with releasing players when there are no games, but they are not allowed to
https://www.theoffsideline.com/gregor-townsend-prl/
https://www.theoffsideline.com/gregor-townsend-prl/
Not his last game but maybe his last start at Murrayfield. He is 34 by the start of next season, and at some point there going to be a change as there is only so much more we can eek out of GG and Gray Snr.Slick wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 9:41 amDon't think there is much to argue about there. Difficult to tell exactly what Darge was up to at the ground, but he was certainly very prominent all game. Also thought the 2nd rows did more than hold their own, they were great, as was the whole pack, physically. Also agree, the bench did very well.Big D wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 9:36 am Saturday was an odd game really. We very nearly beat the blitz on our first attack then rarely managed to get outside it.
As mentioned on the match thread I do wonder if Tuipulotu hurt his knee when the dummy runner crashed into him causing a knee on inside of knee collision.
Overall I thought the second rows stood up physically in what might be GGs last Murrayfield start. Cummings needs to keep that going. I thought the back row was workman like but feel that too often Darge is the one making the tackle rather than impacting the ruck regularly (not to say he wasn't impacting the ruck but not enough IMO). Dempsey was very physical in defence although quiet in attack.
White had his worst game of the 6N but I was impressed by his physicality in defence. Finn and Duhan are what they are (very good). Jones is now a more complete 13 than he has ever been. I honestly think spending time with Harris has helped his defence. Kinghorn was ok but after a few weeks out I wasn't expecting him to be perfect.
A nod to our bench. Considering the England bench was supposedly better I think they stood up well. EMM had a bullshit penalty against him, Ashman had good arrows, Skinner kept the physicality high, Christie was busy, and Redpath was good barring one major defensive mistake.
Two areas of concern for me, our attack hasn't really opened up in the 6N except for small spells and in the last 5min we gave away two basic penalties (Horne offside and DVDM tackle) that gave England a small glimmer of hope.
I'd bring Christie in for Ritchie v Italy and whichever of Redpath/McDowell assuming Tuipulotu is injured.
Why might it be GG's last game? I haven't heard anything about this.
Loved the video piece with Christie after the game where he could hardly speak with excitement at the atmosphere he had just been part of.
Hopefully one more international season out of him, but with Cummings and then Gray(s) and Henderson hopefully getting over their injuries by November plus maybe wanting to look at the younger players there is a chance that was his last Murrayfield start,
- Paddington Bear
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- Joined: Tue Jun 30, 2020 3:29 pm
- Location: Hertfordshire
I’d seen your post but it was more from my parents. They had seats apart from each other and based on past experience Dad was a little concerned for Mum on her own, so I checked in afterwards. Both had a great time.Slick wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 11:24 amDon't know if that was partly in response to a post I made earlier about the atmosphere in and out the stadium, but I found it noticeably more amicable and was much, much better for that.Paddington Bear wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 10:55 am Coming in peace.
First up - congrats on the win. Over the last ‘cycle’ I think the domination chat was overdone, all four games could have gone either way at any point. Saturday was chastening and Scotland were barely made to sweat. It’s a pity you won’t get a chance to chase a Grand Slam.
Re: poaching. I wouldn’t take most of it too seriously. Every set of fans likes to shoot the breeze, we all like to take the piss out of the other side and justify a poor performance due to some external bullshit. It’s obviously particularly incongruous when it’s someone with a name like Duhan Van de Merwe and the appearance of never having eaten a non-biltong based meal winning games. There was always noticeably less stick for England playing someone with a name like Brad Barritt than there was Mauritz Botha, same principle and obvious nonsense.
That leads to point two - we’re all massive hypocrites. We all notice ‘poaches’ so much more when it’s the opposition than our own. Feyi-Waboso’s reasons for playing for England seem much more understandable to an England fan than a Welsh one. Likewise Lowe for Ireland etc.
the Home Nations have massive complications on eligibility anyway. Any kids I have will be eligible for England and Scotland, and would have a very justifiable case for electing for either. I do some work tangentially with Finn Smith’s dad. A prouder Scotsman you’d struggle to meet, he still reportedly was in tears when Finn ran out for his first England cap.
Lastly, all the teams are somewhat international, and all of us have benefited from this. To my mind you can either have that, and accept that these are just rugby matches and park the nationalism, or you can have a highly restrictive eligibility system, all sons of the soil and go full blood and thunder. The former is preferable and seems to be reflected in a much calmer atmosphere at Home Nations games, so most people seem to get the point. Certainly my Dad, who I think went to just about every Calcutta Cup game at Murrayfield through the 80s and 90s, was very pleasantly surprised at the change in atmosphere at the game and throughout Edinburgh this weekend.
This isn’t unique or intended as a dig -English nationalism has always had more of an output through football, and has noticeably declined (though not to extinction) as the team has become more diverse. Same principle applies.
Anyway, please beat Ireland. We won’t
Absolutely gutted I didn't get to see you old man, we just kept missing each other by a few minutes. Next time. I think he was with my dad for several of those 80's/90's trips
And yes, I believe it was your Dad who persuaded mine not to buy a ‘Grand Slam winners 1990’ shirt, probably a factor in my existence
Old men forget: yet all shall be forgot, But he'll remember with advantages, What feats he did that day
We’ll have to agree to disagree about all being the same nationality. We all have the same passport, which isn’t quite the same thing. But genetically everyone is a mongrel nowadays.I like neeps wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 10:56 amPoach just means not born in Scotland in this discourse.Biffer wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 10:43 amDempsey qualifies on ancestry grounds. Wouldn't count him as a poach either.C T wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 9:43 am
We were having some good ol fashion pub chat about this at the weekend, it just seems to be mostly massively overstated..
Z Fagerson - Jock
Turner - Jock
Schoooo - OK, not Jock. Poach. A great big Saffa. A wee bit like Nel though, you do get the impression he has settled. In 20 years time, Schoooo Jnr propping up our scrum.
Cummings - Jock
Gilchrist - Jock
Darge - Jock
Ritchie - Jock
Dempsie - He's an Aussie. Fully expect to see him down the cricket with a mullet and a tash at the Ashes. Poach. I think M Fagerson is perfectly capable anyway, but there you go.
White - He's got a Scottish grandfather, just isn't a poach. I'd personally start Horne anyway.
Finn - Jock
IrnDhu - A great big monstrosity of a Saffa. Poach
Jones - He was born in Leith, for fuck sake. Jock.
Tuipulotu - I get that people are desperate to paint Scotland as king poachers, but this man has a Scottish grandmother. It's hardly our fault we disperse and pop out good rugby players.
Steyne - Scottish mother. Mother bechrist, why am I even having to defend this? Filling in for Darcy anyway.
Kinghorn - Jock
Three poaches by my count.
The reason we're singled out more than other unions as poachers is that it I think we'd be uncompetitive without use of project players and the SQ pathway. Everyone thinks it and I think we do too. It's a nonsense that English born players are seen as poaches because we're all the same nationality in a very fluid union at this point in time.
We play within the rules though, if enough people don't like it they should change them.
It is in truth not for glory, nor riches, nor honours that we are fighting, but for freedom - for that alone, which no honest man gives up but with life itself.
15. Smith
14. Graham
13. Jones
12. McDowall
11. Kinghorn
10. Russell
9. Horne
8. M Fagerson
7. Darge
6. Ritchie
5. Gilchrist
4. J Gray
3. Z Fagerson
2. Turner
1. Sutherland
Reps: Patterson, Hastings, Dobie, Crosbie, Cummings, Walker, Harrison, Bhatti
You could field a decent competitive side with only players born in Scotland, if you wanted. I’d also make the point that you could put Finlay Christie in at 9 with Horne on the bench, Tom Roebuck in at 11 with Kinghorn moving back to 15 and Smith to the bench, and Bevan Rodd in place of Bhatti. Because the traffic isn’t all one way.
14. Graham
13. Jones
12. McDowall
11. Kinghorn
10. Russell
9. Horne
8. M Fagerson
7. Darge
6. Ritchie
5. Gilchrist
4. J Gray
3. Z Fagerson
2. Turner
1. Sutherland
Reps: Patterson, Hastings, Dobie, Crosbie, Cummings, Walker, Harrison, Bhatti
You could field a decent competitive side with only players born in Scotland, if you wanted. I’d also make the point that you could put Finlay Christie in at 9 with Horne on the bench, Tom Roebuck in at 11 with Kinghorn moving back to 15 and Smith to the bench, and Bevan Rodd in place of Bhatti. Because the traffic isn’t all one way.
It is in truth not for glory, nor riches, nor honours that we are fighting, but for freedom - for that alone, which no honest man gives up but with life itself.
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Yeah I phrased badly but the passport is the key point. I don't think there is anywhere else globally where internal movement is as easy and therefore as likely as Scotland) England/Wales/NI due to passports and language.Yr Alban wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 8:21 pmWe’ll have to agree to disagree about all being the same nationality. We all have the same passport, which isn’t quite the same thing. But genetically everyone is a mongrel nowadays.I like neeps wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 10:56 amPoach just means not born in Scotland in this discourse.Biffer wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 10:43 am
Dempsey qualifies on ancestry grounds. Wouldn't count him as a poach either.
The reason we're singled out more than other unions as poachers is that it I think we'd be uncompetitive without use of project players and the SQ pathway. Everyone thinks it and I think we do too. It's a nonsense that English born players are seen as poaches because we're all the same nationality in a very fluid union at this point in time.
We play within the rules though, if enough people don't like it they should change them.
What do people expect really? Scotland to just ignore a huge pool of players with real ties next door?
Particularly given that (and I apologise, because I’ve said this all before) rugby in Scotland is a middle-class game (the Borders excepted) and middle-class people are more likely to be professionally mobile and to move where the work is, which in the UK is disproportionately London and the Home Counties. Which leads to a load of young players who are ethnically Scottish who are brought up in England. The best ones are generally picked up by England (look at Fin Smith) but we get to select some of the others - at which point we are criticised for doing it.I like neeps wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 8:34 pmYeah I phrased badly but the passport is the key point. I don't think there is anywhere else globally where internal movement is as easy and therefore as likely as Scotland) England/Wales/NI due to passports and language.Yr Alban wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 8:21 pmWe’ll have to agree to disagree about all being the same nationality. We all have the same passport, which isn’t quite the same thing. But genetically everyone is a mongrel nowadays.I like neeps wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 10:56 am
Poach just means not born in Scotland in this discourse.
The reason we're singled out more than other unions as poachers is that it I think we'd be uncompetitive without use of project players and the SQ pathway. Everyone thinks it and I think we do too. It's a nonsense that English born players are seen as poaches because we're all the same nationality in a very fluid union at this point in time.
We play within the rules though, if enough people don't like it they should change them.
What do people expect really? Scotland to just ignore a huge pool of players with real ties next door?
The irony is that rugby itself turning professional is now leading to these situations. Cam Redpath was born in France and brought up in England because that’s where Bryan’s career took him.
It is in truth not for glory, nor riches, nor honours that we are fighting, but for freedom - for that alone, which no honest man gives up but with life itself.
- clydecloggie
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This may have been true until recently but I'm not sure it holds any longer. England would have loved to have Ben White playing for them, I would assume, for instance.Yr Alban wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 11:43 pmParticularly given that (and I apologise, because I’ve said this all before) rugby in Scotland is a middle-class game (the Borders excepted) and middle-class people are more likely to be professionally mobile and to move where the work is, which in the UK is disproportionately London and the Home Counties. Which leads to a load of young players who are ethnically Scottish who are brought up in England. The best ones are generally picked up by England (look at Fin Smith) but we get to select some of the others - at which point we are criticised for doing it.I like neeps wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 8:34 pmYeah I phrased badly but the passport is the key point. I don't think there is anywhere else globally where internal movement is as easy and therefore as likely as Scotland) England/Wales/NI due to passports and language.Yr Alban wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 8:21 pm
We’ll have to agree to disagree about all being the same nationality. We all have the same passport, which isn’t quite the same thing. But genetically everyone is a mongrel nowadays.
What do people expect really? Scotland to just ignore a huge pool of players with real ties next door?
The irony is that rugby itself turning professional is now leading to these situations. Cam Redpath was born in France and brought up in England because that’s where Bryan’s career took him.
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He got hit with a double whammy of Leicester's inability to manage their youth talent and Eddie Jones being allergic to picking any 9 not named Ben Youngs. Suspect that under any other coaching regime he would've been capped.clydecloggie wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2024 8:27 amThis may have been true until recently but I'm not sure it holds any longer. England would have loved to have Ben White playing for them, I would assume, for instance.Yr Alban wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 11:43 pmParticularly given that (and I apologise, because I’ve said this all before) rugby in Scotland is a middle-class game (the Borders excepted) and middle-class people are more likely to be professionally mobile and to move where the work is, which in the UK is disproportionately London and the Home Counties. Which leads to a load of young players who are ethnically Scottish who are brought up in England. The best ones are generally picked up by England (look at Fin Smith) but we get to select some of the others - at which point we are criticised for doing it.I like neeps wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 8:34 pm
Yeah I phrased badly but the passport is the key point. I don't think there is anywhere else globally where internal movement is as easy and therefore as likely as Scotland) England/Wales/NI due to passports and language.
What do people expect really? Scotland to just ignore a huge pool of players with real ties next door?
The irony is that rugby itself turning professional is now leading to these situations. Cam Redpath was born in France and brought up in England because that’s where Bryan’s career took him.
Is rugby in Scotland a middle class game? Outside of the FP clubs the one thing I was really struck by when I moved back up as an adult was how "working class" most of the clubs and players seemed to be, or at the very least a very big mix. It seems to me to be a much more mixed bag than England.Yr Alban wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 11:43 pmParticularly given that (and I apologise, because I’ve said this all before) rugby in Scotland is a middle-class game (the Borders excepted) and middle-class people are more likely to be professionally mobile and to move where the work is, which in the UK is disproportionately London and the Home Counties. Which leads to a load of young players who are ethnically Scottish who are brought up in England. The best ones are generally picked up by England (look at Fin Smith) but we get to select some of the others - at which point we are criticised for doing it.I like neeps wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 8:34 pmYeah I phrased badly but the passport is the key point. I don't think there is anywhere else globally where internal movement is as easy and therefore as likely as Scotland) England/Wales/NI due to passports and language.Yr Alban wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 8:21 pm
We’ll have to agree to disagree about all being the same nationality. We all have the same passport, which isn’t quite the same thing. But genetically everyone is a mongrel nowadays.
What do people expect really? Scotland to just ignore a huge pool of players with real ties next door?
The irony is that rugby itself turning professional is now leading to these situations. Cam Redpath was born in France and brought up in England because that’s where Bryan’s career took him.
Also slightly disagree with the bolded bit, I think there is a massive mix of reasons and allegiances. Watson wouldn't have played for anyone else despite not being born here. As someone who grew up in England I find it really difficult to understand the motivation for anyone either born here, or even with Scottish parents, wanting to play for anyone else, but there is obviously a lot of individual factors.
All the money you made will never buy back your soul
Nationality means different things to different people. For some it is an identity and for others it means very little beyond the very basics.Slick wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2024 9:55 am
Also slightly disagree with the bolded bit, I think there is a massive mix of reasons and allegiances. Watson wouldn't have played for anyone else despite not being born here. As someone who grew up in England I find it really difficult to understand the motivation for anyone either born here, or even with Scottish parents, wanting to play for anyone else, but there is obviously a lot of individual factors.
Increasingly now there is a clear business reason why remaining EQ for as long as possible even up to caps is the right thing to do.
P.s totally agree about the working/middle class thing.
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Nothing Huw Jones enjoys more than signing for relegation threatened teams in the south of France.
I like neeps wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2024 10:57 amNothing Huw Jones enjoys more than signing for relegation threatened teams in the south of France.
If Montpellier go down I'll eat my hat, worst case scenario for them is that they are in a playoff against the top of Pro D2.
It's a funny old league though, La Rochelle are currently 9th
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It's not always black-and-white - I'm dual national British Irish with an English father and Irish mother but would only ever want to represent England as it was where I was brought up. If both of my parents were Irish I might have had a different perspective.Big D wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2024 10:19 amNationality means different things to different people. For some it is an identity and for others it means very little beyond the very basics.Slick wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2024 9:55 am
Also slightly disagree with the bolded bit, I think there is a massive mix of reasons and allegiances. Watson wouldn't have played for anyone else despite not being born here. As someone who grew up in England I find it really difficult to understand the motivation for anyone either born here, or even with Scottish parents, wanting to play for anyone else, but there is obviously a lot of individual factors.
Increasingly now there is a clear business reason why remaining EQ for as long as possible even up to caps is the right thing to do.
P.s totally agree about the working/middle class thing.
I can understand a player born in England with Scottish parents would consider themselves Scottish, I can equally understand if they consider themselves English. It's up to them.
I post this only to reinforce the earlier point that UK nationalities in particular are essentially notional, and the idea of 'poaches' is a bit meaningless in this context.
inactionman wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2024 11:11 amIt's not always black-and-white - I'm dual national British Irish with an English father and Irish mother but would only ever want to represent England as it was where I was brought up. If both of my parents were Irish I might have had a different perspective.Big D wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2024 10:19 amNationality means different things to different people. For some it is an identity and for others it means very little beyond the very basics.Slick wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2024 9:55 am
Also slightly disagree with the bolded bit, I think there is a massive mix of reasons and allegiances. Watson wouldn't have played for anyone else despite not being born here. As someone who grew up in England I find it really difficult to understand the motivation for anyone either born here, or even with Scottish parents, wanting to play for anyone else, but there is obviously a lot of individual factors.
Increasingly now there is a clear business reason why remaining EQ for as long as possible even up to caps is the right thing to do.
P.s totally agree about the working/middle class thing.
I can understand a player born in England with Scottish parents would consider themselves Scottish, I can equally understand if they consider themselves English. It's up to them.
I post this only to reinforce the earlier point that UK nationalities in particular are essentially notional, and the idea of 'poaches' is a bit meaningless in this context.
There was an article posted on the Glasgow bored a few days ago about Reuben Logan, son of Kenny and Gabby, so he had three choices
https://www.premiershiprugby.com/conten ... 2qXgSgHZwU
If any of my children played representative sport then I'd love them to play for Scotland (one plays tag rugby, the others have no interest), but at the end of the day if they ran out for England I'd still be there supporting the heck out of them, almost certainly with tears of pride too.
Looks like Embra are getting 8 back from Scotland for Friday - Nel, Sebastian, Skinner, Young, Watson, Healy, Price and Paterson.
The perfect scenario would see Glasgow coming away with all the points in Treviso, leaving them with nothing, and us finally clicking and getting a BP win against Ospreys.
Bulls and Stormers losing wouldn't hurt either - edit - that might prove difficult as they are playing each other
The perfect scenario would see Glasgow coming away with all the points in Treviso, leaving them with nothing, and us finally clicking and getting a BP win against Ospreys.
Bulls and Stormers losing wouldn't hurt either - edit - that might prove difficult as they are playing each other
Sean has said Mark Bennett is starting this week to bring up his 100Tichtheid wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2024 2:09 pm Looks like Embra are getting 8 back from Scotland for Friday - Nel, Sebastian, Skinner, Young, Watson, Healy, Price and Paterson.
The perfect scenario would see Glasgow coming away with all the points in Treviso, leaving them with nothing, and us finally clicking and getting a BP win against Ospreys.
Bulls and Stormers losing wouldn't hurt either - edit - that might prove difficult as they are playing each other
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There seems to be a concerted effort not to use Nel in this tournament. It may be that he has communicated that he intends to retire at the end of the season or simply that Toonie has recognised having a 50 year old as reserve tighthead is problematic.Tichtheid wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2024 2:09 pm Looks like Embra are getting 8 back from Scotland for Friday - Nel, Sebastian, Skinner, Young, Watson, Healy, Price and Paterson.
The perfect scenario would see Glasgow coming away with all the points in Treviso, leaving them with nothing, and us finally clicking and getting a BP win against Ospreys.
Bulls and Stormers losing wouldn't hurt either - edit - that might prove difficult as they are playing each other
If he does retire I really hope he stays on and Edinburgh / Scotland find a place for him in the coaching department somewhere - he must have so much to offer from his experiences.
Slightly confused as to your meaning here. Did you mean you couldn’t understand the motivation of anyone born in Scotland, or with Scottish parents, wanting to play for anyone other than Scotland? Because that’s where I’m at (Scots parents, born and lived in England until age 13). But different people feel differently about these things.Slick wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2024 9:55 amIs rugby in Scotland a middle class game? Outside of the FP clubs the one thing I was really struck by when I moved back up as an adult was how "working class" most of the clubs and players seemed to be, or at the very least a very big mix. It seems to me to be a much more mixed bag than England.Yr Alban wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 11:43 pmParticularly given that (and I apologise, because I’ve said this all before) rugby in Scotland is a middle-class game (the Borders excepted) and middle-class people are more likely to be professionally mobile and to move where the work is, which in the UK is disproportionately London and the Home Counties. Which leads to a load of young players who are ethnically Scottish who are brought up in England. The best ones are generally picked up by England (look at Fin Smith) but we get to select some of the others - at which point we are criticised for doing it.I like neeps wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 8:34 pm
Yeah I phrased badly but the passport is the key point. I don't think there is anywhere else globally where internal movement is as easy and therefore as likely as Scotland) England/Wales/NI due to passports and language.
What do people expect really? Scotland to just ignore a huge pool of players with real ties next door?
The irony is that rugby itself turning professional is now leading to these situations. Cam Redpath was born in France and brought up in England because that’s where Bryan’s career took him.
Also slightly disagree with the bolded bit, I think there is a massive mix of reasons and allegiances. Watson wouldn't have played for anyone else despite not being born here. As someone who grew up in England I find it really difficult to understand the motivation for anyone either born here, or even with Scottish parents, wanting to play for anyone else, but there is obviously a lot of individual factors.
It is in truth not for glory, nor riches, nor honours that we are fighting, but for freedom - for that alone, which no honest man gives up but with life itself.
Reuben Logan’s an odd one. I wonder if declaring for England is his way of stepping out of both of his parents’ shadow. Don’t understand it myself, but so it goes.Tichtheid wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2024 11:16 aminactionman wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2024 11:11 amIt's not always black-and-white - I'm dual national British Irish with an English father and Irish mother but would only ever want to represent England as it was where I was brought up. If both of my parents were Irish I might have had a different perspective.Big D wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2024 10:19 am
Nationality means different things to different people. For some it is an identity and for others it means very little beyond the very basics.
Increasingly now there is a clear business reason why remaining EQ for as long as possible even up to caps is the right thing to do.
P.s totally agree about the working/middle class thing.
I can understand a player born in England with Scottish parents would consider themselves Scottish, I can equally understand if they consider themselves English. It's up to them.
I post this only to reinforce the earlier point that UK nationalities in particular are essentially notional, and the idea of 'poaches' is a bit meaningless in this context.
There was an article posted on the Glasgow bored a few days ago about Reuben Logan, son of Kenny and Gabby, so he had three choices
https://www.premiershiprugby.com/conten ... 2qXgSgHZwU
If any of my children played representative sport then I'd love them to play for Scotland (one plays tag rugby, the others have no interest), but at the end of the day if they ran out for England I'd still be there supporting the heck out of them, almost certainly with tears of pride too.
If either of my sons had been good enough at anything to play internationally (which they emphatically weren’t) then Wales was probably more likely than England. I’d have been upset, just like Kenny Logan, but then you can’t tell your kids who they are, and I’d have been there supporting the heck out of them too. (Can’t pretend that all the tears would have been ones of pride though!)
It is in truth not for glory, nor riches, nor honours that we are fighting, but for freedom - for that alone, which no honest man gives up but with life itself.
Yes, exactly what I meanYr Alban wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2024 5:24 pmSlightly confused as to your meaning here. Did you mean you couldn’t understand the motivation of anyone born in Scotland, or with Scottish parents, wanting to play for anyone other than Scotland? Because that’s where I’m at (Scots parents, born and lived in England until age 13). But different people feel differently about these things.Slick wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2024 9:55 amIs rugby in Scotland a middle class game? Outside of the FP clubs the one thing I was really struck by when I moved back up as an adult was how "working class" most of the clubs and players seemed to be, or at the very least a very big mix. It seems to me to be a much more mixed bag than England.Yr Alban wrote: Mon Feb 26, 2024 11:43 pm
Particularly given that (and I apologise, because I’ve said this all before) rugby in Scotland is a middle-class game (the Borders excepted) and middle-class people are more likely to be professionally mobile and to move where the work is, which in the UK is disproportionately London and the Home Counties. Which leads to a load of young players who are ethnically Scottish who are brought up in England. The best ones are generally picked up by England (look at Fin Smith) but we get to select some of the others - at which point we are criticised for doing it.
The irony is that rugby itself turning professional is now leading to these situations. Cam Redpath was born in France and brought up in England because that’s where Bryan’s career took him.
Also slightly disagree with the bolded bit, I think there is a massive mix of reasons and allegiances. Watson wouldn't have played for anyone else despite not being born here. As someone who grew up in England I find it really difficult to understand the motivation for anyone either born here, or even with Scottish parents, wanting to play for anyone else, but there is obviously a lot of individual factors.
All the money you made will never buy back your soul
Logan is Welsh by grandparent, his English born Mum is Welsh by parentage. At some point the lineage gradually becomes tenuous. If he feels Welsh, what about his kid who isn't eligible for Wales?Yr Alban wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2024 5:29 pmReuben Logan’s an odd one. I wonder if declaring for England is his way of stepping out of both of his parents’ shadow. Don’t understand it myself, but so it goes.Tichtheid wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2024 11:16 aminactionman wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2024 11:11 am
It's not always black-and-white - I'm dual national British Irish with an English father and Irish mother but would only ever want to represent England as it was where I was brought up. If both of my parents were Irish I might have had a different perspective.
I can understand a player born in England with Scottish parents would consider themselves Scottish, I can equally understand if they consider themselves English. It's up to them.
I post this only to reinforce the earlier point that UK nationalities in particular are essentially notional, and the idea of 'poaches' is a bit meaningless in this context.
There was an article posted on the Glasgow bored a few days ago about Reuben Logan, son of Kenny and Gabby, so he had three choices
https://www.premiershiprugby.com/conten ... 2qXgSgHZwU
If any of my children played representative sport then I'd love them to play for Scotland (one plays tag rugby, the others have no interest), but at the end of the day if they ran out for England I'd still be there supporting the heck out of them, almost certainly with tears of pride too.
If either of my sons had been good enough at anything to play internationally (which they emphatically weren’t) then Wales was probably more likely than England. I’d have been upset, just like Kenny Logan, but then you can’t tell your kids who they are, and I’d have been there supporting the heck out of them too. (Can’t pretend that all the tears would have been ones of pride though!)
For any EQ player playing in England, especially one who has seen a former club go bust, they really should maintain their EQ status for as long as possible unless the SRU/WRU plan to really look after them. And we know thr SRU won't at that age.
Plus at U20 you'd want to be playing at the top table to get experience. No guarantees we will be next season either.
Mark Bennett an Edinburgh centurion, I didn't think he'd been with the club that long - time flies etc.
Regarding Nel, Everitt said his neck is liable to flair up from time to time and he's going through that at the moment, I remember reading that it was his neck that caused him to miss games a couple of weeks ago.
On Logan jnr - the young players in England have to commit to England U20s if they are chosen for the squad, the reality is that they are more likely to get a professional club contract if they do.
Regarding Nel, Everitt said his neck is liable to flair up from time to time and he's going through that at the moment, I remember reading that it was his neck that caused him to miss games a couple of weeks ago.
On Logan jnr - the young players in England have to commit to England U20s if they are chosen for the squad, the reality is that they are more likely to get a professional club contract if they do.
I have a strong suspicion that Cam Redpath always wanted to play for Scotland, but was obliged to maintain his EQP status, including U20 selection, until he got a proper pro contract from Bath. At which point he appeared in the next squad. The only bit that doesn’t fit is that he was selected for an England summer tour squad, though he withdrew with an injury.Tichtheid wrote: Wed Feb 28, 2024 8:14 am Mark Bennett an Edinburgh centurion, I didn't think he'd been with the club that long - time flies etc.
Regarding Nel, Everitt said his neck is liable to flair up from time to time and he's going through that at the moment, I remember reading that it was his neck that caused him to miss games a couple of weeks ago.
On Logan jnr - the young players in England have to commit to England U20s if they are chosen for the squad, the reality is that they are more likely to get a professional club contract if they do.
It is in truth not for glory, nor riches, nor honours that we are fighting, but for freedom - for that alone, which no honest man gives up but with life itself.
His contract at Sale obliged him to go with England if they asked. It is one of the reasons he left for Bath who had no such clause.Yr Alban wrote: Wed Feb 28, 2024 8:52 amI have a strong suspicion that Cam Redpath always wanted to play for Scotland, but was obliged to maintain his EQP status, including U20 selection, until he got a proper pro contract from Bath. At which point he appeared in the next squad. The only bit that doesn’t fit is that he was selected for an England summer tour squad, though he withdrew with an injury.Tichtheid wrote: Wed Feb 28, 2024 8:14 am Mark Bennett an Edinburgh centurion, I didn't think he'd been with the club that long - time flies etc.
Regarding Nel, Everitt said his neck is liable to flair up from time to time and he's going through that at the moment, I remember reading that it was his neck that caused him to miss games a couple of weeks ago.
On Logan jnr - the young players in England have to commit to England U20s if they are chosen for the squad, the reality is that they are more likely to get a professional club contract if they do.
I used to work with his grandfather who was not aware of the clause. He was dumbfounded when Cam went to England. Apparently had he gone on that squad there was a gentleman's agreement he would not play. But it would expose him to being part of the England set up which was seen as helping the England recruitment effort.
That seems a bit odd as it meant carrying effectively dead weight on the tour, but that was what I was told.