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Scotland player ratings vs England | 2025 Six Nations

By Jack Tunney at Allianz Stadium, Twickenham
LONDON, ENGLAND - FEBRUARY 22: Duhan van der Merwe consoles Finn Russell of Scotland after missing a conversion following their sides third try during the Guinness Six Nations 2025 match between England and Scotland at Allianz Stadium on February 22, 2025 in London, England. (Photo by Shaun Botterill/Getty Images)

England defeated Scotland in a thrilling affair at the Allianz Stadium on Saturday afternoon in the third round of the Guinness Six Nations, as they collected the Calcutta Cup for the first time in many years.

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Here is how we rated the Scotland players:

15. Blair Kinghorn – 7.5
It was a mixed affair for the Toulouse star. Twice the giant fullback delivered a one-handed pass to an unsuspecting teammate. Firstly it was Kyle Rowe’s head, and just moments later it was Dave Cherry’s back – neither of which came off. Later a knock-on was caused by his insistence on running with the ball in one hand. He needs to remember he’s playing for Scotland here – not Toulouse. Otherwise, it’s easy to spot his star quality, but perhaps just needs to work out which wavelength his teammates are on. He did have the most carries out of everyone on that field, and made the most metres…so maybe he should be cut a little slack. Also, his kicking was pretty top-notch.

14. Kyle Rowe – 7.5
The star of the first quarter. Replacing the injured Darcy Graham was never going to be an easy task, but Rowe was more than up to it. Within the opening minutes, he had made a superb take from a high ball to step three opposition players, then knocked his opposite number Ollie Sleightholme onto his backside during the second carry. Later he showed great strength to stop Tom Curry from going over the line in the corner. His second half was much quieter.

13. Huw Jones – 8.5
The Glasgow centre made another statement to Lions selectors with a terrific all-rounded performance. He took his try well when he forced his way over in the corner. The former Quins star was impenetrable in defence, but his true contribution was demonstrated on the attack, easily stepping onto the outside of the England defence to create space for his wide men.

12. Tom Jordan – 6
Largely invisible for much of the first half and used mainly as a decoy runner, however when he did receive the ball he was impressive – beating a player every in other carry and making over 40 metres with the ball in hand. He will, however, remember taking a long ride along in a Fin Smith tackle.

Possession

Team Logo
16%
32%
27%
25%
Team Logo
3%
33%
39%
25%
Team Logo
Team Logo
5%
Possession Last 10 min
95%
42%
Possession
58%

11. Duhan van der Merwe – 8
The English tormentor did it again. The second-most carries of any player, his first major one took Ollie Lawrence to the cleaners as he stepped on his outside to help set up the first try for Huw Jones. Duhan is a confidence player, and boy was he confident today. Every time he collected the ball the crowd went silent in anticipation of what this man could do. Reminiscent of Jonah Lomu facing England in 1995. The whole rugby world thought he’d sunk English hearts once again with a final-minute try in the corner, but Russell failed to make the points count.

10. Finn Russell – 7
Wonderful from hand, bit off from the boot – although his open play spiral to the corner had to be admired. He grew into the game after a tetchy start. He dictated every passage of Scotland’s play as they regularly threatened a worried England defence. Missed the match-winning kick from the touchline.

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9. Ben White – 7
The experienced playmaker was brilliant throughout. He controlled the direction of play from minute one and was rewarded early with the first try of the game after running a deft cheat line behind the England defence.

Turnovers

7
Turnovers Won
5
12
Turnovers Lost
18

1. Pierre Schoeman –6.5
He came under fire in the scrum but held his own. Given plenty of work throughout, he used his solid frame to provide excellent cover at the breakdown.

2. Dave Cherry – 7
34-year-old Cheery provided slick hands to put Rowe through the gap early into the first half and remained involved in plenty of Scotland’s good play throughout the game. He worked the lineout well and created a solid platform for his team to attack.

3. Zander Fagerson – 6.5
Found his groove in defence and involved himself in multiple aspects of the attack. Like his prop partner, however, he struggled to make many metres with ball in hand.

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4. Jonny Gray – 5.5
Used sparingly in the attack and struggled to make metres when he was used. Provided solid cover in defence.

5. Grant Gilchrist – 7
Involved in everything, a true menace in defence as he used his giant frame to thwart the home attack.

6. Jamie Ritchie – 8
Fantastic in the breakdown, causing a vital turnover in the early minutes of the game and continued throughout. Will, however, be smarting after taking a major hit from Ollie Lawrence midway through the first half.

7. Rory Darge –  7
Brutal in the tackle, England couldn’t go anywhere without him being involved. Although he didn’t contribute much in attack, his efforts in defence were to be admired.

8. Jack Dempsey – 6
The former Wallaby was regularly used off of first-phase possession to create a solid base. Used well but to no spectacular avail.

Replacements – 6
The initial introduction off the bench proved calamitous for the visitors, with their existing rhythm altered, allowing England to gain a foothold in the match. England’s replacements proved much more effective, eventually coming away winners by a single point.

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Comments

3 Comments
M
MW 24 days ago

England did not win the game- Scotland lost. 6 points to convert,which on another day…… It was the same against France!

M
MS 24 days ago

Some curious scoring, especially when compared with those for the England players. Although it’s not altogether surprising when they’ve been produced by a self-styled ‘rugby fanatic’, yet who doesn’t appear to know Jones plays for Glasgow, rather than Edinburgh. I know that and I’m not even British. Perhaps a more neutral - or at the very least more knowledgeable or engaged author, would be more appropriate next time?

B
Bull Shark 24 days ago

Scotland lost because they didn’t score all their tries between the posts.

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JW 1 hour ago
'France may leave top players at home but will still be serious contenders in New Zealand'

The country turned septic on Foster for losing a series to what was arguably the best Irish side in history and one that may not have been ranked number one in the world when they arrived, but were by the time they left.

Imagine how feral the nation will be if Robertson’s All Blacks lose to what is supposedly going to be a French ‘B’ team?

This author proving he has less of an understanding of rugby than the general population.


The country was septic because of how easily they got beat Paul. The country is smart enough to rate the relative level of performances, and if Razors team goes backwards like Fosters the criticism you suggest might come will be fully deserved. If France B perform as good as France A and win by the same margins then those with the criticism the team should be winning every game will also be deserved. But the inference that the public didn’t give Ireland the credit they deserved couldn’t be further from the truth imo.

France have beaten the All Blacks on the last three occasions the two sides have met, and that the former has used 38 players in the process.

France could leave 40 players at home in July and still be a serious contender

And to the vibe of this article, it provides abosolutely zero reason to believe the next 38 best French are going to be as good as these first 38. Paul got one thing right, it’s no joke that France will be leaving behind 40 players.


France have a 45 man squad for 6N (well using Wiki), the team could be made up of these leftovers from the teams not likely to get close to Toulouse and Bordeaux, given that just the third place team is doing commendably well not to be in negative for and against like the rest.

Uini Atonio ——— Prop

Giorgi Beria ——— Prop

Georges-Henri Colombe ———- Prop

Jean-Baptiste Gros ——— Prop

Dany Priso ——— Prop

Rabah Slimani———- Prop

Hugo Auradou ——— Lock

Mickaël Guillard ——— Lock

Matthias Halagahu ——— Lock

Romain Taofifénua ——— Lock

Esteban Abadie ——- Back row

Grégory Alldritt ———- Back row

Paul Boudehent ———- Back row

Oscar Jégou ——— Back row

Nolann Le Garrec ——— Scrum-half

Gaël Fickou ——— Centre

Antoine Frisch ——— Centre

Émilien Gailleton ——— Centre

Noah Nene ——— Centre

Théo Attissogbé ——— Wing

Gaël Dréan ———- Wing

Gabin Villièren —— Wing

Léo Barré ——— Fullback


One wouldn’t think Atonio is going to come (I’d be surprised if Fickou is still not rested or he and Le Garrec aren’t involved in a relegation playoff game) but a few good players there like Leo Barre, Le Garrec, Taofifénua, and that back row, but also a distinct lack of a spine with the 3 best playmakers playing in the Final at home.


What are the possibilities to fill out these missing spots? looking at Opta’s stats hub Serin and Couilloud provide good back up for Le Garrec by fact of having the highest try involvements in the Top14 (along with Michael Ruru). And Serin’s partner Herve looks the most threatening to carry on the teams style with his elusiveness?

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