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The visit that has taken Scotland’s Tuipulotu brothers by surprise

By PA
The Tuipulotu brothers greet a surprise visitor to the Scotland dressing room (Screen grab via Scottish Rugby)

Mosese Tuipulotu has revealed that he and brother Sione were taken by complete surprise after their Greenock-born grandmother made a secret journey from Australia to Edinburgh to watch them represent Scotland this weekend.

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Scottish Rugby released a video on Wednesday afternoon showing the emotional moment the siblings – who thought they were going to meet a fan – walked into the dressing room at Murrayfield on Tuesday to find 77-year-old Jacqueline Thomson, who had been flown over by Skyscanner, Scotland’s official travel partner.

Jacqueline, who left Scotland when she was a child, is the reason both players are eligible for the national team. She will watch Edinburgh centre Mosese, who has been part of Gregor Townsend’s squad for the first time this month, play for Scotland A against Chile at Hive Stadium before attending nearby Murrayfield the following day to watch Glasgow centre Sione captain the Scots in their final autumn Test against Australia.

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“It was awesome actually,” said Mosese, who left Australia in the summer to sign for Edinburgh. “It was a massive surprise just because me and my brother didn’t know anything about it.

“They did pretty well to keep it under wraps but it was a pretty emotional one also just because when I left back home to say goodbye and move over here for rugby, you never quite know when you’re going to see your family again, just based off our rugby years.

Team Form

Last 5 Games

4
Wins
2
2
Streak
2
26
Tries Scored
16
87
Points Difference
0
4/5
First Try
3/5
3/5
First Points
4/5
4/5
Race To 10 Points
3/5

“It was a very special moment to see my gran again. And I’m sure it will be more special for my brother just because he hadn’t seen her in such a long time (four years). Obviously he did that stint in Japan before (moving to Glasgow in 2021) so it was really special.”

The Tuipulotu siblings did not believe their gran would ever be able to watch them play in Scotland given her age and health. Mosese, 23, admitted her presence for this weekend’s matches has merely added to the emotion of an autumn campaign in which he earned his first national team call-up and his 27-year-old brother was appointed captain.

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“She has kind of gone a full circle,” said Mosese. “She left here as a young girl and now she is back here where she grew up and being able to watch both her boys pulling on a Scotland jersey, so it will be cool for her, I’m sure. She has always been a big, big influence in our life growing up.

“She has always been around, sometimes when our parents weren’t around, she would take care of us. She is a great woman with plenty of character so we love her. She is super excited to be in the stands. It will be her first time watching us play for Scotland, but the first time watching Sione in a while, probably since school, so it will be special for her.”

Mosese has not featured in any of the three Tests so far and will not play against Australia either but he has enjoyed being in camp and is relishing his first chance to wear the dark blue in Saturday’s second-string fixture against Chile as he bids to bolster his chances of a recall for the Six Nations.

“I’m trying not to put any more pressure on myself,” he said. “I know that if I just play my game, hopefully things will work out. But it’s obviously a step up from playing club (rugby). I have only played five games for Edinburgh, so I know this will be a step up.”

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SK 6 hours ago
'Razor's conservatism is in danger of halting New Zealand's progress'

Its an interesting few points you raise Nick. Rassie has been way bolder than Razor in selection but then again he really has to be as he plots towards 2027. The reality is more than half his squad from 2023 may have to be culled and this includes some of the best players the Boks have ever had on their books. The age profile of his team was such that he needed to blood all these young players and he will do the same next year with even more players as he tries to put together a squad with enough experience to take to 2027. Razor on the other hand has a large number of players that will make 2027. Alot of players will be over 100 caps and these players would have multiple caps together. A large amount of these are starters as well. He is trying to build combinations and a rigid style of play. Razor wants absolute control and you can see it. He wants his players to follow his instructions to the tee. He will not accept anything less. He has included some young guns who he will stick with and older players who have earned his trust. Razor goes with what he knows and appears reluctant to accept quick change. He is the kind of coach who will change incrementally and that may not be a bad thing given his position and the profile of his squad. It also gives the players time to setlle into their roles and to work within his system. Razor has a narrow focus on winning. he wants results now and wont take any risks in selection while he believes the current group can win. He is the most conservative NZ coach in the last 25 years to take the top job. This could stall NZ progress or it could create a team that is unstoppable and ready for anything going into 2027 albeit without the same level of depth as the Boks.

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