Hamish Watson knows Scotland defence will need to trump tries

Hamish WatsonHamish Watson
Hamish Watson
Saturday's Calcutta Cup showdown at BT Murrayfield is the hottest ticket of the Scottish sporting year so far, with assistant coach Matt Taylor revealing on Monday that he had never had so many requests for help in scoring access to the 67,000 sell-out.

Capacity crowds are commonplace now, but not so long ago there would often be the embarrassing sight of empty seats at Scotland’s home Six Nations. A losing team is one thing but a dull, losing team makes for an even harder sell.

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For much of the Six Nations era, the Scots were routinely allergic to the opposition tryline but the record in the biggest draw of all, the biennial visit of oldest rivals England, continues to be the one most likely to elicit a cringe.

A measly two, yes two, touchdowns have been registered in the fixture since the Five Nations became Six at the turn of the century and the there hasn’t been one for the home crowd to cheer for a full 14 years, dating back to wing Simon Danielli’s chargedown consolation effort against Clive Woodward’s recently-crowned world champions.

The only other was Duncan Hodge’s aquaplaning effort which denied an English Grand Slam, and a Scottish whitewash, in 2000.

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The excitement which has grown in the past three or four years around this Scotland team owes much to the fact that tries, often of the thrilling variety, have become an almost guaranteed rather than occasional treat.

Dynamic openside flanker Hamish Watson has become a vital weapon linking the forwards with an exciting backline and he insists the aim will be to break the English defence to give Scotland the best chance of ending their ten-year losing run.

“England still defend very well, but just looking at ourselves as a team, I think compared to ten years ago, five years ago, we do score a lot more tries, so we’ve been working on that,” said the Edinburgh back-rower.

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“If we put England to one side for a while, we are scoring more tries against most of the other teams, so we’ve got to try to implement that against England.”

Of course, Scotland have managed to beat England without scoring tries, as the boots of Chris Paterson and Dan Parks were enough in the back-to-back triumphs of 2006 and 2008 and the next match in the sequence nudged the unbeaten home record out to three after a 15-15 draw.

“I don’t think we have to score tries to win, but that means our defence is going to have to be pretty top notch,” said Watson.

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“In the past we’ve had all kicks from Mossy [Paterson] to win games before and I think the players and the fans would take that if it came to that.

“Obviously we’re going to try to stick to our gameplan and try to score tries, but if it comes down to that we’ll definitely take that.”

Ironically here have been plenty of Scottish tries at Twickenham down the years but no wins since 1983.

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“Last year at Twickenham [a record 61-21 loss] we got a three tries, but that was mainly at the end when the game was definitely gone,” continued Watson. “As a team we’ve got a very good back-line, an exciting back-line and forwards who can also score tries.

“So we’re very capable of scoring tries, but a big emphasis on this game is going to be our defence. We’ve got to defend well and that will give us a chance against them.

“It [ten years] is a very long time not to beat a team and we’ve got to try to put that right.”

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He may be Manchester-born but Watson has a Christian name befitting his Scottish grandparentage and is braced for an emotion-charged occasion come kick-off late on Saturday afternoon.

“It’s a match that for most Scots, most Scottish fans, it is the biggest game of the year, but you’ve got to control that emotion as best you can,” he said as he hopes to be named in Gregor Townsend’s team this morning for what would be an 18th cap.

“We’re going to have to start well, which obviously we tried to do against France,” he said. “It didn’t turn out that way and we did really well to get back into that game, but against England they are a good team and you want to start well against them and put them under the cosh.”