Six Nations: 'Can't believe it' - Scotland break 128-year drought with win over England, Irish streak away from Wales

By News / Wire

Duhan van der Merwe has scored a superb hat-trick as Scotland beat England 30-21 at Murrayfield to claim a fourth successive championship win in the fixture for the first time since 1896.

England, seeking a third Six Nations win of their own for the first time since 2020, led through a George Furbank try after five minutes and looked in control, only for Van der Merwe to strike twice and help the hosts to a somewhat flattering 17-13 halftime lead in Saturday’s fixture in Edinburgh.

The winger, who scored two superb tries in Scotland’s victory at Twickenham last season, collected a Finn Russell kick three minutes into the second half for his third, and two Russell penalties stretched Scotland’s lead to 30-16.

“I can’t believe it to be honest, but I have to thank the boys for giving me the opportunity,” Van der Merwe said after his side lifted the Calcutta Cup.

“We had a really good first phase, there was a lot of space open and I knew Finn was going to kick it to me. Lucky for me it bounced in my hands.”

England emptied their bench and replacement wing Immanuel Feyi-Waboso grabbed their second try after 66 minutes.

But, unlike in their opening wins over Italy and Wales, the English could not complete the comeback as Scotland claimed their second victory of this year’s championship, having agonisingly lost to France last time out.

“You have to celebrate these moments, especially when you have a trophy in the dressing-room,” Scotland coach Gregor Townsend, who has overseen five wins and a draw in the last seven Calcutta Cup matches, said.

“Duhan was great today. He saw the opportunities and went for it. 

“The first try was really special in that we didn’t have much ball, we weren’t in England’s half very often.”

The South Africa-born Van der Merwe became the first Scot to score a hat-trick against England in the Six Nations era. 

Zooming to 26 tries in his 37th Scotland Test, Van der Merwe is only one behind the Scotland record held by Stuart Hogg, who retired last year.

Scotland’s Duhan van der Merwe celebrates scoring his third try. (Photo by Jane Barlow/PA Images via Getty Images)

He finished the match in the sin bin, but received huge applause walking off after he was yellow-carded in the 79th minute for a dangerous tackle.

Van der Merwe’s finishing was complemented by captain Russell off the tee. He went six for six at the posts, and he’s perfect in the tournament with 15 out of 15.

George Ford tried to keep England close with 11 points, including a 35-metre drop goal. 

England coach Steve Borthwick relied on his regular line that his team were still learning.

“We have to give credit to Scotland, it was a very strong performance,” he said. “You saw a Scotland team that have been together a good number of years and are clear what they are trying to do against an England team that are trying to develop.”

Red-hot Irish run riot over Wales

Grand slam-chasing Ireland have made it three bonus-point Six Nations wins from three against Wales at the Aviva Stadium, racking up their 18th successive home win in the process with a 31-7 victory.

The hosts dominated the first half and led by 17-0 at the break on Saturday thanks to tries from Dan Sheehan and James Lowe. 

A penalty try for Wales and a yellow card for Ireland’s Tadhg Beirne just after halftime threatened to make things interesting.

But Ireland mostly resumed control with 14 men, though a ragged second half remained competitive until Australian-born Ciaran Frawley marked his first Six Nations start with a debut try on 67 minutes.

Then Beirne added the bonus-point try at the death as Wales sank to their 10th defeat in their last 11 Six Nations games.

Ireland travel to England in two weeks before hoping to play for their second successive grand slam at home to Scotland on March 16. 

Wales have back-to-back home games against France and Italy, with the latter now a potential wooden spoon decider.

Coach Andy Farrell felt his Irish charges still had a “bit of fixing to do” if they wanted to keep their slam bid on course against England.

He was critical of his team’s passiveness in attack in the first half and failure to take advantage of their dominance in the scrum, but praised the huge impact of his forward-heavy pack in earning the bonus-point late on.

“I suppose the bottom line is we got there in the end by being really tenacious and tough. We wanted to be better today but the opposition always has a say in that and Wales certainly did today,” Farrell said.

“We’ve a bit of fixing to do and hopefully we can get better for Twickenham.”

Wales coach Warren Gatland said his inexperienced team could take a huge amount from the performance, likening it to his time as a player with Waikato in New Zealand when they suffered big losses to Auckland before turning the tables on their rivals.

“I can’t question the effort of the players and just how hard they worked,” Gatland  said, saying the scoreline reflected the greater experience of the Irish side.

The Crowd Says:

2024-02-27T10:27:20+00:00

Brendan NH Fan

Roar Rookie


True but they have looked like they have lost games v those three and panic so much more than v France or England. 2018 was the last time NZ beat England who Scotland now have there best run for 100 years against.

2024-02-27T05:05:43+00:00

Lucky

Roar Rookie


Yes it should be! In the final round too. Can't wait to see how it goes

2024-02-26T21:29:47+00:00

JD Kiwi

Roar Rookie


Forgot to mention – I also agree that Scotland play a good brand of rugby.

2024-02-26T21:27:07+00:00

Ruckin' Oaf

Roar Rookie


Could be that they are the best three teams in the world right now. You'd expect em to beat anybody else.

2024-02-26T21:22:33+00:00

Ruckin' Oaf

Roar Rookie


Or are could just throw em to the wolves. Pick Lynagh against the ABs and see what happens.......

2024-02-26T21:20:52+00:00

Ruckin' Oaf

Roar Rookie


Ireland v Scotland could be a cracker of a game

2024-02-26T21:19:41+00:00

Ruckin' Oaf

Roar Rookie


I thought Ireland might suffer from a bit of a world cup hangover. But nup

2024-02-26T19:42:01+00:00

JD Kiwi

Roar Rookie


Agreed that it was close and that people like close games.

2024-02-26T19:40:44+00:00

JD Kiwi

Roar Rookie


That's a good point Brendan. They do tend to drag a team down to their level. It can at least lead to a close game, even if the quality is not high.

2024-02-26T11:24:13+00:00

Brendan NH Fan

Roar Rookie


I think the big thing for them is getting over their mental block with NZ, SA and Ireland, everyone other team they feel they can win and have good records against them but those three teams they just don't seem to me able to win.

2024-02-26T11:22:44+00:00

Brendan NH Fan

Roar Rookie


They want to show that Oz players can win things :silly:

2024-02-26T11:16:57+00:00

Brendan NH Fan

Roar Rookie


Few teams look like they play well against England because that is now they play. Hard to compare it against other teams. Put Oz in the 6Ns and see how Wales do against them.

2024-02-26T11:15:22+00:00

Brendan NH Fan

Roar Rookie


Its alot of money to miss out on if you finish a place lower. Scotland would have been expected to get 2nd if they had beaten France and that could be a bit of money lost, same with Italy and that final kick. Pivac and Jones got sacked for their 6Ns form not their other games.

2024-02-26T10:26:57+00:00

Perthstayer

Roar Rookie


See that so often. Childish really as it is not relevant. I just read about Wigan's "shock" defeat of Penrith. Roar can be one eyed.

2024-02-26T05:02:30+00:00

Just Nuisance

Roar Rookie


This is one of the better Scotland teams in recent memory ..They definetely have that great performance in them but imo play a bit too loose to consistently challenge the big guns ..Jim Hamilton calls it lacking killer instinct ..Im not sure about that .. Coach Townsend has publically stated that playing entertaining rugby is non negotiable even if it means losing they wont compromise ..I am not sure I agree with that philosophy ..Trophies matter to fans too.

2024-02-26T04:03:40+00:00

Derm

Roar Guru


3 yellow cards to date though.

2024-02-26T04:01:54+00:00

Derm

Roar Guru


Australian-born Frawley?? Bit of a red herring. His family returned to Ireland when he was 3.

2024-02-26T01:51:59+00:00

Tom G

Roar Rookie


Both Ireland and Scotland do amazingly well considering limited playing stocks and relatively small budgets. England on the other hand have access to a very deep pool of talent, most of whom are perennially overlooked in favour of ‘safer options’ and a pile of cash. Their Eddie assisted descent down the rankings has not been halted by Borthwick who is looking massively out of his depth at this level

2024-02-26T01:41:39+00:00

Footy Franks

Roar Rookie


Yeah Australia is obsessed with wingers. We pay them a fortune

2024-02-25T23:12:14+00:00

Bliksem

Roar Rookie


Scotland has played fantastic and captivating rugby and you can just look at the stands to realise that this is the rugby people like to watch. It is these close highly competitive games that people like to watch and the quality was also pretty good.

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