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England boss Steve Borthwick sends message to Gregor Townsend critics

By PA
Scotland's head coach Gregor Townsend on the field ahead of the Autumn Nations Series international rugby union match between Scotland and Argentina at Murrayfield in Edinburgh on November 16, 2025. (Photo by ANDY BUCHANAN / AFP) (Photo by ANDY BUCHANAN/AFP via Getty Images)

England head coach Steve Borthwick is surprised by the scrutiny of Gregor Townsend’s position as Scotland boss ahead of Saturday’s Guinness Six Nations clash at Murrayfield.

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The Scots are reeling after being ambushed 18-15 by Italy in Rome, plunging them to 10th in the global rankings behind the Azzurri and placing doubt over Townsend’s ability to continue until the 2027 World Cup as contracted.

Former national team captain John Barclay declared this week that if they fail to finish in the top three then it “becomes a necessity to see a change”.

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Townsend was unable to guide Scotland out of the group stage of the 2019 and 2023 World Cups and has never finished higher than third in the Six Nations during his nine years in charge.

But Borthwick said ahead of England’s attempt to claim a first win at Murrayfield since 2020: “I think Gregor Townsend is a wonderful coach.

“I was told recently that he has the best win record of any Scotland coach in the professional era. Sir Ian McGeechan had two spells and Gregor sits above that.

“The way he has coached the attack they have and the way they move the ball, when they do that they look terrific.

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“I have immense respect for him as a coach and I find it surprising that people are not spending more time talking about Scotland rather than not supporting their coach.

“He’s a phenomenal coach and they should spend more time supporting him.”

Head-to-Head

Last 5 Meetings

Wins
4
Draws
0
Wins
1
Average Points scored
25
19
First try wins
40%
Home team wins
80%

In an indication of the rivals’ contrasting fortunes, England head to Murrayfield as odds-on favourites to retain the Calcutta Cup despite the ground being the graveyard of their title ambitions in recent times.

A 12-Test winning run means they march north of the border full of confidence and they have captain Maro Itoje back in the starting XV after he was picked on the bench for the 48-7 rout of Wales following the recent death of his mother.

Luke Cowan-Dickie is promoted at hooker in the only other change to the starting XV with Jamie George and Alex Coles dropping to the replacements, where Fin Smith ousts Marcus Smith having recovered from from a calf injury.

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Henry Pollock continues in his super-sub role after being given license to roam by Borthwick as England look to build positional flexibility for the 2027 World Cup.

The Northampton flanker continues to be seen as an option for the wing during matches.

“Henry’s got incredible pace and super handling skills and you see not just his ability to make breaks, but how he supports breaks,” Borthwick said.

“How often do you see him on somebody’s shoulder taking an offload and then running on and scoring or potentially giving another offload for somebody else to score?

“His skill set and the way he plays the game is less within a structure and more within having a freedom roam to go and find the ball and find where he needs to be. I’m very confident with him in that position.”

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Comments

2 Comments
J
JB 45 days ago

Borthwick’s defence hinges on win percentage and attacking style, but context matters. Scotland’s best generation in 30 years should not be defined by isolated statement wins and moral victories. Great Test coaches convert talent into consistency, pressure wins, and tournament momentum. Townsend has not.

The timing of Borthwick’s support is also revealing. Scotland beat England in the Calcutta Cup last year again. That rivalry result carries disproportionate weight in how Townsend is viewed externally. But beating England does not equate to sustained excellence, and it certainly does not erase nine seasons of underachievement in championships and World Cups. None of this means Townsend is a bad coach. He isn’t. But “great” is a different standard entirely. Great coaches evolve, fix chronic weaknesses, and prevent the same failures from repeating themselves year after year.

Scotland’s problems, set-piece fragility, collision softness, poor game control under pressure have been visible for half a decade. If they are still unresolved after nine years, responsibility ultimately sits with the head coach.

Support from rival coaches is nice. Results are what matter. And Scotland’s results, over a long enough timeline, tell a far more honest story.

u
unknown 45 days ago

England actually won the Calcutta Cup last year but all your other points are spot on

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