Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

As it happenedended

Wales survive Scotland’s second-half onslaught to set-up Grand Slam tilt against Ireland

Relive all the action from the Six Nations clash at Murrayfield

Tom Kershaw
Saturday 09 March 2019 16:56 GMT
Comments
Scotland vs Wales: Alun Wyn Jones previews Six Nations clash

Your support helps us to tell the story

This election is still a dead heat, according to most polls. In a fight with such wafer-thin margins, we need reporters on the ground talking to the people Trump and Harris are courting. Your support allows us to keep sending journalists to the story.

The Independent is trusted by 27 million Americans from across the entire political spectrum every month. Unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock you out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. But quality journalism must still be paid for.

Help us keep bring these critical stories to light. Your support makes all the difference.

Wales survived a second-half onslaught from Scotland to prevail 18-11 at Murrayfield and take one step closer towards the Six Nations Grand Slam.

Wales were cruising to a fourth win out of four when at half-time it led 15-6, a scoreline that flattered the Scots, who were coming off two bumbling losses to Ireland and France.

Then Scotland suddenly came alive to own the second half. Grant Gilchrist was held up over the line, then Darcy Graham finished a brilliant backs move, and Scotland trailed by only four with 22 minutes to go and their crowd roaring them on.

Scotland had virtually all of the possession in the half, was forcing penalties, and had Wales pinned down, but the Scots found their progress hindered by their own errors, a spill or poor pass or turnover. Wales' renowned defense also came to the fore, as it made 138 tackles in the second half after 66 in the first.

The match finished with Wales in the Scotland 22 for the first time since the end of the first half, and Gareth Anscombe kicking a second penalty.

Relive all the action below.

Please allow a moment for the blog to load.

Doddie Weir is here today to watch the two teams battle it out for the trophy named in his honour. The anthems have been sung, the players are ready, and we're just seconds away from kick-off.

Tom Kershaw9 March 2019 14:15

And we're underway!

Tom Kershaw9 March 2019 14:15

2 min: It's a perfect day at Murrayfield with the predicted downpour easing away, however, it hasn't stopped an early knock-on from Blair Kinghorn almost immediately from kick-off handing an early scrum to Wales.

Tom Kershaw9 March 2019 14:18

4 min: Liam Williams chips into space towards the Scotland line with Josh Adams charging down but Finn Russell latches onto the loose ball and safely touches down.

From the dropout, Gareth Davies misjudges the ball's flight and knocks on the ball after an awkward bounce leaving Scotland with a scrum in a promising position in the Welsh half.

Tom Kershaw9 March 2019 14:22

7 min: A nice spell of play by Scotland who attack the left-hand side via Nick Grigg before Rob Evans secures the turnover leading to a kicking exchange. Blair Kinghorn then proceeds to test the the same area as Gregor Townsend's side secure the upper-hand.

Tom Kershaw9 March 2019 14:26

9 min Scotland 3-0 Wales: The pressure is eased as Stuart McInally passes foward before a break in play due to an injury to Jamie Ritchie.

However, Scotland then win a penalty in an attractive position in front of the posts after Ross Moriarty fails to roll away and Finn Russell secures the first points of the game

Tom Kershaw9 March 2019 14:29

13 min: TRY! Scotland 3-7 Wales (Josh Adams): Wales respond immediately! 

Tom Kershaw9 March 2019 14:31

A wonderful finish from Adams who was released down the left-wing after a series of phases. Blair Kinghorn was no match for the jinking Welshman and Gareth Anscombe makes easy work of the conversion.

Tom Kershaw9 March 2019 14:32

17 min: Scotland 3-7 Wales: Wales capitalise on the momentum from that breakthrough and strip Magnus Bradbury of the ball from the kick-off, but Alun Wyn Jones is then penalised for stopping Scotland from securing a turnover of their own. 

Blair Kinghorn kicks for touch and puts the home side back on the attack in the Welsh 22.

Tom Kershaw9 March 2019 14:36

20 min: Scotland 6-7 Wales: Darcy Graham comes just yards from from the Welsh line after the centre picks a gap and wriggles past three tackles before being brought down. Scotland pile on the pressure by the tryline and in Wales' desperate attempt to reset are penalised for tackling a player without the ball. 

Scotland deliberate about whether to go for the line but ultimately decide to let Russell sidefoot over the simplest of kicks. One point in it.

Tom Kershaw9 March 2019 14:41

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in