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Nerves hit four-timer Paterson

Image: Paterson: Set for fourth World Cup

Chris Paterson has admitted there were plenty of nerves before being named in Scotland's World Cup squad for a fourth time.

Full-back reveals there is plenty of hard work to do

Chris Paterson has admitted there were plenty of nerves before being named in Scotland's World Cup squad for a fourth time. Paterson, Scotland's most-capped player and record points scorer with 105 appearances and 786 points, made his World Cup debut back in 1999 and will be the first Scot to appear to four finals. But despite being through it all before, the 33-year-old Edinburgh full-back experienced the same nervous anticipation as 12 years ago when Robinson unveiled his squad. "The announcement was probably one of the most nerve-wracking things I've done," said Paterson.

Jangling

"The squad was announced at a meeting yesterday and the nerves were jangling; way back in '99 it was a phone call you were waiting for. "That feeling never leaves you and the desire to do well never leaves you. "It was a huge goal of mine to make this World Cup. I'm delighted to do that, but the hard work starts again tomorrow when we get back to training and fight for that starting place." Paterson suffered a damaged kidney in the 2010 RBS 6 Nations clash with Wales in Cardiff and made his international return last November as a replacement against South Africa. Consistent performances for Edinburgh saw Paterson return to the Test starting line-up for February's Six Nations clash with Ireland and he is likely to travel to New Zealand as the first-choice full-back, while also covering the fly-half position occupied by Dan Parks and Ruaridh Jackson. Scotland's World Cup campaign begins in Invercargill on September 10 against Romania, with fixtures against Georgia, Argentina and England, on October 1 in Auckland, to follow. Paterson is focused on the first fixture. He said: "There's no point looking too far ahead - you deal with what's in front of you. Romania and Georgia are two hugely physical sides, sides you really should hope to beat, but you have to beat them - they'll take a lot of wearing down.

Prospect

"There's a lot to work to be done, a lot of fine-tuning, but that will hopefully be done in the next two to three weeks." There is the tantalising prospect that the clash with England will determine Scotland's passage to the quarter-final stage, but Paterson is not looking too far ahead. He added: "It will be a big game. The Scotland-England rivalry is second to none. "It will be a strange scenario being played on foreign soil, but there are three games before that that are hugely important for Scotland."