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Scotland 31-20 England: Calcutta Cup regained as reborn hosts extend Murrayfield misery for rivals

Scotland reclaim Calcutta Cup with rousing victory over England to ease pressure on head coach Gregor Townsend; England's 12-Test winning streak runs aground at Murrayfield as Grand Slam hopes evaporate at hands of age-old rivals

Scotland
Image: Sione Tuipulotu lifts the Calcutta Cup after Scotland defeat England 31-20 at Murrayfield

Scotland unleashed another Murrayfield nightmare on England as they regained the Calcutta Cup - and eased the pressure on Gregor Townsend - with a 31-20 victory that extinguished their rivals' 12‑Test winning run.

England, chasing a first Murrayfield win since 2020, arrived in Edinburgh full of expectation on the back of a year‑long winning streak, only to be met with a sobering and all-too familiar reality check.

Henry Arundell's early sin‑binning set a disastrous English first half in motion, one from which there was no way back as a rampant Scotland, led by the inspirational Finn Russell, plundered tries from Huw Jones and Jamie Ritchie inside the opening quarter of an hour.

Arundell looked to have ignited a first-half England fightback with a try on his return from the bin, but Ben White capitalised on an Ellis Genge error to tighten Scotland's grip on the contest before Arundell saw yellow for a second time - and a 20-minute red - for taking Kyle Steyn out in the air.

Scotland kept an improved England at arm's length in the second half and ended the contest for good when George Ford's attempted drop goal was charged down by Matt Fagerson, who released Jones to race clear for his second - and Scotland's bonus‑point‑clinching fourth try.

Scotland's response to their opening‑round loss in Italy was so rousing that Ben Earl's late score amounted to little more than scant consolation for an England side comprehensively beaten for the first time in a long while.

Scotland 31-20 England - Score summary

  • Scotland - Tries: Jones (10, 53) Ritchie (14), White (27); Conversions: Russell (11, 15, 28, 54); Penalties: Russell (4).
  • England - Tries: Arundell (21), Earl (78); Conversions: Ford (23, 78); Penalties: Ford (26, 45).

Scotland inflict latest Murrayfield nightmare on England

If Finn Russell's early penalty settled Scottish nerves, then Arundell's sin‑binning for not releasing in the tackle gave them the extra impetus they needed. By the time Arundell returned, Scotland had scored 14 unanswered points.

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Russell's stunning off‑the‑cuff flick sent Jones over in the corner, before Sione Tuipulotu's looped pass put Ritchie over untouched as Scotland made full use of the numerical advantage.

Huw Jones scores Scotland's first try
Image: Huw Jones scores Scotland's first try

Trailing 17-0 inside the opening quarter of an hour, a shell‑shocked England began to claw themselves off the canvas.

A Ford penalty got them on the board, before the fly‑half's deft hands sent Arundell - minutes after returning to the field - over under the posts.

Scotland's Ben White (centre left) celebrates scoring their third try
Image: Scotland's Ben White (centre left) celebrates scoring their third try

But just when England looked to be mounting a comeback, Scotland reasserted their dominance. The fleet‑footed Russell weaved through multiple missed tackles before hacking ahead, and Genge's spill put a third Scotland try on a plate for scrum‑half White.

A nightmare first period was not done there, with Arundell the recipient of a 20-minute red card after being shown a second yellow for an unfortunate, unintentional challenge on Scotland wing Steyn in the air.

Arundell
Image: Henry Arundell was shown two first-half yellow cards

Another Ford penalty saw England score the first points of the second half, but Scotland used their numerical advantage to restrict them to just that before hitting them with a game-clinching fourth try.

Ford was thrown the ball after England had lost momentum in attack, but his drop goal was charged down by substitute Fagerson, who gathered the rebound and then offloaded Jones, who raced half the length of the field for a stunning breakaway score.

And there was no way back for England, who saw Earl's late try deny Scotland their biggest win over them in 40 years - but it came too late to wake them from their latest Murrayfield nightmare.

Scotland's Huw Jones (right) celebrates with team-mates after scoring a try
Image: Jones' breakaway second moved Scotland out of sight

Tuipulotu: We got behind our coach

Scotland captain Sione Tuipulotu: "Beyond proud. I'm proud of everyone involved. I see everything that goes on behind closed doors that everyone else doesn't get to see.

"I stand by what I said during the week and I'm happy we got behind our coach today and put in a performance we can be proud of.

"The main message at half-time was to come out here and press them and we pressed them.

"I want to enjoy tonight with my teammates but make no mistake we'll be all hands on deck. We'll prepare to the best of our abilities to back up this performance."

scotland
Image: Scotland have won five of the last six Calcutta Cup matches against England

'Some of the best rugby we've played' - Townsend

Scotland head coach Gregor Townsend: "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. It's all you want as a coach.

"We really fought for each other and the supporters. We were true to ourselves. We played the ball away from contact, were aggressive in contact and played with speed.

"The decision-making around the half-backs was outstanding. It was one of Finn Russell's best performances for Scotland.

"The work-rate, the overall effort and togetherness was superb. We're really pleased we got the victory. For coaches it's more relief, for players it's joy."

'Tough day at the office'

England captain Maro Itoje: "It was a tough day at the office, we didn't get firing in the way we wanted to but that is the nature of the beast.

"We have to learn our lesson and move forward. We didn't start well, we were not as accurate and precise as we wanted to do be, in the scrum especially, all of those areas need to be better.

"I think over the last 12 months we have been good at riding the wave and finding a way but today, we were not good at that. We will learn from it."

What's next?

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, while England look to bounce back when they host Ireland at Allianz Stadium, Twickenham on February 21 at 2.10pm.