No. | Name | |
---|---|---|
15Stuart Hogg, - | ||
14Dougie Fife, - | ||
13Mark Bennett, - | ||
12Matt Scott, - | ||
11Tommy Seymour, - | ||
10Finn Russell, - | ||
9Greig Laidlaw, - | ||
1Ryan Grant, - | ||
2Ross Ford, - | ||
3Euan Murray, - | ||
4Jim Hamilton, - | ||
5Jonny Gray, - | ||
6Adam Ashe, - | ||
7Blair Cowan, - | ||
8David Denton, - | ||
Replacements | ||
16Fraser Brown, - | ||
17Alasdair Dickinson, - | ||
18Geoff Cross, - | ||
19Tim Swinson, - | ||
20Rob Harley, - | ||
21Sam Hidalgo-Clyne, - | ||
22Greig Tonks, - | ||
23Tim Visser, - |
*Players currently on the pitch are shown in bold
Match Commentary
Stay with ESPNscrum for full coverage of that match from Twickenham, where Tom Hamilton is our man in situ.
Tristan Barclay: You have to feel for Stuart Hogg there. He really deserved to see that one put down safely, given his individual performance today. Fantastic tackle by Jamie Heaslip, though, who has been immense all afternoon, even though O'Brien will likely steal the headlines.
Tristan Barclay: Excellent defence from Ireland gets them out of trouble there. They haven't really touched the ball since Sexton's penalty nudged them in front, but two Conor Murray kicks have turned Scotland back just when they looked to be threatening the visitors' line.
Tristan Barclay: A personal interest of mine (don't laugh) is the politics of silence for the kicker. We all know you're supposed to shut up when the fly-half's about to kick for goal, but Murrayfield is conveniently forgetting that today. Too much pride riding on the result.
Tristan Barclay: Back to square one almost for Ireland, but they only have themselves to blame for that Finn Russell try. A failed line-out attempt gifted Scotland possession, and Stuart Hogg (as so often is the case) made it happen for the hosts.
Tristan Barclay: The scoreboard makes for grim reading if you're a Scotland fan at the moment, but there's a ray of light in the world-class Stuart Hogg. His first jinking run inside Irish territory brings Murrayfield to its feet.
Tristan Barclay from his position at Murrayfield: "They started the day knowing the needed tries and who should step up to the plate but skipper Paul O'Connell. The roar from the crowd was as loud as any produced at the Aviva - you'd think it was a home fixture for Ireland!"
The teams are on their way back out, to the strains of the Proclaimers, Runrig and any other band that rumbles on about walking places or going to a loch. In other words, half-time "entertainment".
Ireland must win by 20 points or more to stand a chance of winning the Six Nations championship.