How many times have we seen this? Scotland yet again threw away a lead and lost
a match which they should have won. Whilst
you cannot underestimate the heroic Italian performance, led by their
talismanic Captain Fantastic Sergio Parisse, the lack of composure and leadership
shown by Scotland is both extremely disappointing and is becoming a worryingly
ever present trait so close to the World Cup. They now face the prospect of picking
up their fourth wooden spoon in the Six Nations.
In the past couple of years under Scott Johnson, Scotland
seemed to make steady progress, recording wins against Italy and Ireland in the
2013 Six Nations Championship, finishing third which was their best finish
since 2006. This was a fantastic result
for the young side who even boasted a 9-6 win against Australia down under for
the first time in 30 years. Yet where
has the confidence, competence and composure gone? They seem to have taken a step back under
Vern Cotter losing all three of the opening matches of this year’s Six
Nations. They saw a narrow defeat
against France in Paris, an extremely difficult place to play and come away
with a win, and also to Wales at Murrayfield, when a lack of composure in the
final quarter of the game cost them the perfect revenge for their 51-3 drubbing
at the Millennium last year.
They are clearly a side lacking in confidence and any sort
of killer instinct. After having taken
an early 10 point lead against an Italy team lacking structure and a game plan,
it looked like plain sailing for Scotland, especially with Haimona struggling
to convert from the tee. So how did they
end up losing this Test match? They
somehow pushed the self-destruct button.
They lacked the killer instinct to finish the game off and really should
have had the game wrapped up. Their
discipline let them down, giving Italy both possession and field position,
allowing the ageing Italian pack to gain an upper hand and work their way back
into the game. This set the tone for the
rest of the game where the Scottish pack struggled, and were in constant
retreat to the increasingly powerful and dominant Italian pack. In the final 10 minutes Scotland were
desperately defending a 4 point lead, and the crucial moment came with 5
minutes remaining. Having just been
awarded a penalty in the own 22 having successfully defended a scrum, Peter
Horne, who had had a fantastic game, missed his kick for touch. A stupid mistake, one Finn Russell made two weeks ago as well; he had to make
touch and it came back to haunt them.
You would expect an international team of Scotland’s
pedigree to be more clinical in the dying moments of the game, but this never
showed. Perhaps this was due to their
big leaders leaving the field; both Laidlaw and Ford and been substituted,
leaving no leaders on the pitch. George
Clancy even struggled to find a captain in the Scottish team – when asked who
the captain was by the referee, not a single Scottish player put their hand up,
resulting in Scotland having no leader and consequently no structure. Two yellow cards and a collapsed maul later, Scotland
stared defeat faced once again. On the
other hand, Italy were led from the front by the stalwart captain Parisse, who
guided and inspired his pack in the same way he has done for the last 13 years,
something that Scotland so desperately lacked.
Yet again Parisse proved to be Italy’s outstanding player, marking his 111th
cap with a famous victory, only his 31st in an Italian shirt, a
figure that should be much higher for a player with his talent.
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