Rugby Union Feb 16, 2026

Six Nations: Discipline, Murrayfield effect, masterful Finn Russell – where it went wrong for England in Scotland defeat

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By Admin
Sports Journalist
Six Nations: Discipline, Murrayfield effect, masterful Finn Russell – where it went wrong for England in Scotland defeat

England’s latest Murrayfield nightmare left more questions than answers as Scotland reclaimed the Calcutta Cup with a resounding Six Nations victory. Your Site examines where it all went wrong as their 12-game winning streak came to a shuddering halt.

England spent 30 of the opening 58 minutes down to 14 men after Henry Arundell followed an early sin‑bin for failing to release in the tackle with a 20‑minute red card for making contact with Kyle Steyn in the air.

Referee Nika Amashukeli's second decision left England with little room for complaint, given how clear the protocol is around challenges in the air.

There may be some debate over how quickly the Georgian official produced the first yellow, but the reckless way Arundell collided with an opponent while already on a card was indefensible.

Steve Borthwick, in typically diplomatic fashion, refused to be drawn on either decision but was left with no room but to concede how influential Arundell's multiple dismissals were.

"Clearly, playing such a huge part of the game without a winger against a team that was moving the ball to that edge so much, that hurt us and ultimately gave us too much to do in the second half," the England head coach said.

England had swept aside allcomers over the past year - New Zealand, France, Argentina among them - but arrived in Edinburgh facing a true litmus test of their progress.

Murrayfield, the home of their oldest rivals, has been their least happy hunting ground for a decade, and nothing about this visit suggested that run was about to change any time soon.

A previously swashbuckling England froze under Scotland's early onslaught. Errors compounded, a baying Murrayfield smelt blood, and Scotland went in for the kill.

The numbers tell their own story: Scotland have now five of the last six Calcutta Cup matches at home, and seven of the last nine.

Fly-half Finn Russell proved a master at work, conducting his backline to two fabulous first-phase tries, creating another for Ben White - helped by Ellis Genge's crucial mistake - and kicked off the tee like a dream, landing all five from all angles.

Head coach Gregor Townsend picked Russell out for specific attention in his post-match thoughts. "The decision-making around the half-backs was outstanding. It was one of Finn Russell's best performances for Scotland.

"It's quite emotional. I'm just so proud of the way we played tonight. The first 20 minutes was some of the best rugby we've ever played."

The maverick fly-half firmly proved himself one of the world's best as the British and Irish Lions' Test playmaker in the 2-1 series win over Australia in the summer, and he was purring on Saturday in Edinburgh with England simply unable to quell his influence.

In some senses this was a bizarre Test where everything landed for Scotland, both in attack and in terms of last-ditch defence, and very little came off for England.

Yet, to merely describe it as that would do a disservice to the fact Scotland's attack proved exceptional when it needed to, while England significantly underperformed.

Only one England forward made carries into double figures, Ben Earl, while the visitors shipped a colossal 18 turnovers compared to Scotland's paltry five. Not only were England bested at the breakdown, they made so many knock-on errors, both forced and unforced.

Scotland gained more metres in the Test, made twice the line breaks of England (10 vs five) and beat 25 defenders compared to England's 19. Defensively, Scotland's tackle completion rate was also better than England at 90 per cent versus 83 per cent.

England dominated Scotland's scrum, but really did not gain an edge in any other area on the day as the home side's lineout held firm too.

It may sound strange given the one‑sided final score, but when England review the tapes of this latest Murrayfield ordeal, they may well find evidence of a missed opportunity.

They enjoyed the lion's share of possession, territory, attacking minutes and, crucially, clear dominance at the scrum - yet failed to turn any of it into meaningful scoreboard pressure.

That wastefulness was compounded by Scotland's knack for swinging momentum at exactly the right moments.

Ben White's try came just as Arundell had given England a flicker of hope. Matt Fagerson's charge‑down on George Ford and assist for Huw Jones delivered another decisive blow.

It ultimately created a 10‑point swing that England never recovered from, even after returning to 15‑a‑side a few minutes later.

Scotland look to follow up their victory when they travel to Wales in the third round of the Six Nations on February 21 at 4.40pm. England will attempt to bounce back when they host Ireland at Allianz Stadium, Twickenham on February 21 at 2.10pm.

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