The Herald - Herald Sport

Murray left to lick his wounds as miserable

- DAVID BARNES

Scotland U20 Italy U20

THIS thumping defeat for Scotland Under-20s extended their miserable run without a win to a dozen matches, as Italian power proved too much for Kenny Murray’s side to cope with.

The Scots flew out to this Summer Series full of hope that they could stride forward after a tough Six Nations whitewash thanks to more players having been given exposure to Super6 rugby than was previously the case. However, on the evidence of this ineffectua­l performanc­e, and the 45-15 drubbing to

Wales last Saturday, the gap has widened significan­tly rather than been reduced.

There is a chance of some sort of redemption against Georgia next Wednesday but, given that the Eastern Europeans have been far more competitiv­e in their two matches to date, that feels like a forlorn long shot at the moment.

Thereafter, it is a cross-pool match against either Ireland, England, France or South Africa – all serious heavyweigh­ts – which could be gruesome.

“We’re obviously disappoint­ed, again,” said head coach Murray. “We made so many individual errors to out ourselves under pressure and that hurt us. We didn’t take our chances when we got them and conceded five line-out drive tries, which was the game.”

“Physically, we’re not where we need to be at under-20 level, so that’s a big thing, and we just need to be bringing through better quality players to compete at this level, so there is a lot of work to be done.”

It started ominously for Scotland with Italy taking the lead when clean line-out ball was shipped right across the park for winger Federico Cumineti to muscle past opposite number Kerr Johnston and over the line, with only one minute and 22 seconds played.

When the Azzurri scrum blew the Scottish eight apart just three minutes later, it looked like the writing was on the wall already for Murray’s men, but they managed to hang in there for the next 20 minutes – helped by several instances of Italian inaccuracy – before the Azzurri eventually doubled their account through second-row Alessandro Ortombina, who got the downward pressure off a line-out maul.

Whenever the Scots had possession, they found themselves running into a brick wall, until a couple of flashes of inspiratio­n managed to pierce their opponents’ previously untroubled defence just before the half hour mark.

Ben Afshar’s broke from a quick tap-penalty and when he was eventually brought down, Patrick Harrison followed the scrum-half’s lead by picking up at the base of the ruck and taking route one before the Italian’s had set. The hooker then showed some impressive pace to round the final man to touch down under the posts.

Euan Cunningham’s straight-forward conversion from right in front of the posts briefly hauled it back to a three-point game, but Scotland then lost lock Josh Taylor to the sin-bin, paying the price for persistent team infringeme­nts, and Italy took immediate advantage, with hooker Lapo Frangini touching down at the conclusion of another powerful line-out drive.

The second-half was a stalemate, with both teams struggling to impose themselves, until Italy once again imposed themselves through their lineout drive on 65 minutes, with replacemen­t hooker Giovanni Quattrini getting the final touch.

That definitive­ly killed off Scotland, with Dewi Passarella and Quattrini again both adding to the home try-count, yet again from attacking line-out opportunit­ies.

An injury-time try from Andy Stirratt provided scant consolatio­n, although an optimist could argue that it provided the young Scots with some momentum to take into their final pool match against also winless Georgia on Wednesday.

 ?? ?? Alessandro Ortombina was one of five Italy players who touched down
Alessandro Ortombina was one of five Italy players who touched down

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