Gregor Townsend's Caledonian cyclone can blow through a Rugby World Cup pool of death

By Pundit / Roar Guru

Scotland’s dynamic, shapeshifting, miracle ball attack has dazzled rugby fans, and also has the element of systemic progress that can see them tilt the balance against key opponents like Ireland and South Africa in the World Cup.

With their excellent run of prolific play, can they possibly upset the odds and escape a pool of death unscathed, based on their excellent attack?

Much like a tornado, the deceptive patterns and skilful chess moves can unravel any top defence, ripping defensive organisation into the aftermath of a hurricane.

To understand the baseline of the structure one must see it without Finn Russell, who is a merlin of attacking witchcraft and wizardry that ignites their structure.

Ben Healy gives you much of the same benefits-excellent mid to long range passing, tactical nous, creativity, and attacking kicks; but with him playing the units of their attack are a bit more clearly defined, allowing the attack to be broken down.

The Deep Cutter

Scotland like to layer their 10 behind a hammer/strike pod to be able to make the killer passes in the wider areas and unlock the defenses in the wider areas.

Off a lineout, a double screen play allows Healy to line up at the edge, committing them in the wider channels and executing the overlap. He passes a little too early here, which is a trend with his play. Due to his lack of a proper threat of a carry or outside break, he is not able to stay square/dangerous before the pass, succumbing to a drift. Finn Russell in a similar situation fixes defenses and converts the clean break.

Healy doesn’t give you the squareness in delivering flat crash up balls or fix and pass situations. What he does give you is accurate decision making at pace and at the line.

Expansive attack around the 3-3-X

On the return sequence, he takes the ball behind a pod, playing it through the layers and allowing the ball to get wide for a try, ripping the pass into the right areas and organising the 3-3-X to facilitate expansive play. The use of a wide forward ensures heavy power is out wide to barge through pacy cover defence.

The 1-3-3-1 thus acts as physical anchors of widely spaced 3-man groups of forward running individual lines, amplifying the flat threat to create space out behind. That’s the default structure of their attack, with crisp passing, and multiple variations with the application of depth and width.

The Finn-tastic Flame

However, the key element is nonchalant execution right at the line, blending creativity and accuracy.

Here, The wide ball seems to target the seam, using a wide line by 12, to have the pivot hitting the 13 channel. England do well to rush across, and the tight midfield on defense is reminiscent of both Ireland and South Africa.

This killer pass and manipulation using a 10 who can do it all on attack-step and break, innovate and execute is at the heart of the Scottish attack. That allows them to go into hyperdrive with strike runners at 13 and 15 and even a lethal inside power wing.

From there, Finn Russell sacrifices short gains to shift the point of focus. On return passages, defences need to reshuffle more and more to be able to make it back up. Russell fires the class pass, sending his carrier bundling into English tacklers and resparking the momentum, keeping the break threat alive on each phase.

This depth results in the blindside opening up for a second, allowing Ben White to sneak in and score a stunner.
Much like Johnny Sexton, Finn Russell spins the winds with an element of gravity that only cornerstones possess. Despite the loose evolving nature of the attacking pieces, his chess moves disabling defences with a touch of flair.

His delayed passing, optimal choice of pass target, as well as his vision and balance between micro- and macro-view of an attacking sequence are crucial elements to creating havoc on the pitch. Prime Scotland seamlessly work from phase to phase, with 2-3 hitter options targeting holes, and the shallow link from there to midfielders and outside backs, without needing mechanical over-under plays.

The crosskicks from typical passing set ups in a variation of 1-3-2-2 are trademark to unlock the Boks, and have flourished the last time they did battle.

While the Hype is much around Finn, this hasn’t been doable without options around him.

Finn Russell. (Photo by Ross MacDonald/SNS Group via Getty Images)

Their squad is full of power running threats, a rock solid front 5, and a barnstorming back row full of pace and soft hands. The ability of locks to make catch passes, and backs to bash it up creates a Fijian interchangeability with the most entertaining side in the world.

In the backs, Duhan Van Der Merwe is a massive power runner, with Darcy Graham acting as a pure finisher. Their midfield has matured, with Sione Tuipolutu acting as a flat ball player to support Russell floating wider to pull the trigger on key plays.

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Huw Jones has ran classic lines at strong pace, with his X-factor line-breaks combined with elite handling turning into a creative magician and line break merchant for the Scots. Blair Kinghorn has big shoes to fill in the place of Stuart Hogg, but the figurehead strike runner role can be compensated for with strike power at 11, and 13 to take up some of those touches.

To demonstrate their potential to beat Ireland, who have a tight press leaving few gaps in their defence, but space on the outside, let’s look at this Huw Jones try from 2021.

Finn Russell runs the shape excellently, with the inside looping winger of Duhan forming a ‘pod’ with Hamish Watson underneath him. Stuart Hogg’s pacy pedigree combined with Duhan’s power puts James Lowe in two minds, being able to exploit the defensive behaviour of the winger. A perfect flat pass from Hogg finds Huw Jones to burst through for a try.

Hence, the guileful integration of multiple threats into an attacking shape is crucial for the Scots to be able to punch above their weight and perform when it counts. The Scots have a solid defence with multiple fail safes. They have a strong pack, and a classy backline of flair and composure. Their attack remaining a cut above the rest is crucial, if they are to become the dark horses of this year’s World Cup.

2019’s Springboks were in an identical situation, and the latest win over France could be a key statement ahead of the World Cup.

The Crowd Says:

2023-08-27T12:29:03+00:00

James Clark

Roar Rookie


Rusty, much though I enjoy the Scottish attack (I’m Scottish), I have long viewed the Boks’ power game as the decisive element in our previous encounters. We’ve lived with your Boks for much of a match, only for them to turn up the power intensity for a spell and put us irrevocably behind on the scoreboard, and silence the back’s flair by hammering the tackle area. Having just witnessed the Boks’ power game (& lineout defence) deployed so effectively against the AB’s, I’m thinking that they may be unstoppable this year. Back to back WC’s a distinct possibility.

2023-08-13T17:00:56+00:00

Rusty

Roar Guru


After yesterday's game I am becoming a believer - Scots were very impressive again

AUTHOR

2023-08-13T14:33:05+00:00

Pundit

Roar Guru


3 9s and one 10 is a worry for most teams. But Wille is a de facto 10, and a Wille/Kolbe axis works just as well

AUTHOR

2023-08-13T14:30:01+00:00

Pundit

Roar Guru


Harris edges Kriel, but Kriel offers a all rounded operation on attack. DDA beats Tuipolutu. Pollard and Russell are the best flyhalves of different archetypes. The Bok back three have the edge. 2021 test, they did edge them through the backs with Wille Le Roux pulling the strings.

AUTHOR

2023-08-13T14:28:01+00:00

Pundit

Roar Guru


Scotland are inside laners for Pool B. 1-1 w France, a french team that apart from ireland, lost to nobody else, putting a vintage one over ENG in 6N. Scotland(much like 2019 Japan) may be so burnt out from group stage heroics that they crash in the quarters in the ultimate tragedy

2023-08-11T19:02:51+00:00

Rusty

Roar Guru


of late - we have never beaten them through the backs - we have overpowered them. They have a good pack but it hasnt been able to 80min with ours

2023-08-11T16:56:39+00:00

Just Nuisance

Roar Rookie


Shouldn't like your post but see your logic ....Boks however do have that potency in the forwards ...Cannot be discounted ...That's not just Scotland's challenge but every other team who face them .

2023-08-11T14:50:35+00:00

Rusty

Roar Guru


you say that but I dont think thats where we will bedazzle them - it will be the usual/old way with this version of Scots ... via the power game and a suffocating mid field defence.

AUTHOR

2023-08-11T14:32:26+00:00

Pundit

Roar Guru


Dont see the Boks beating them. The flash structure with Libbok dazzles the highlight reels, but as th scoreline goes, gives u max 1-2 tries per game. You only catch them napping so often

2023-08-11T14:16:22+00:00

Rusty

Roar Guru


Big fan of the Scots - love the expression in their play and belief in it. 21-3 down.. no problem!! Been a few of those get out of jails for the Scots over the years where the in the prior era that would have signalled an incoming blow-out. I will of course be happy if they dont do this to my Boks in the opening game :stoked:

2023-08-11T14:13:49+00:00

Rusty

Roar Guru


this match is our banana peel - get past it and the game with Ireland is almost irelevent as the QF is a crap shoot either way. No easy paths What could be an interesting turn of events would be if we were to win both games against Scotland and Ireland as that would see the final pool game between both as a winner takes all to the QF.

2023-08-10T21:20:45+00:00

high horse

Roar Rookie


how many players they got due to the residency rule and someone having a scottish grandmother?

2023-08-10T18:53:50+00:00

Just Nuisance

Roar Rookie


Many already writing Scotland off in the pool stages ..But I’m not sure why …But even if they do get through first quarter final opponent either NZ or France and here I’m not sure they have the depth to go deeper.. But they are a very good team , well drilled ,settled , well coached . A few match winners in guys like Russell and Van der Merwe ..But to get through they are going to have to target either South Africa or Ireland as a must win match ..They play SA first and can definitely capitalize on Erasmus and Nienabers musical chairs selection in the RC . May be slightly unsettled early on and maybe , just maybe Townsend will have taken note of the lightning fast start by NZ against the Boks basically blowing them away in the first 20 min . Also Boks will start as clear favourites . Not the optimum mindset for them historically .I will confess I am actually pretty nervous about this match .

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