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Hadden - It wasn't pretty

Image: Hadden: Messy win

Frank Hadden admitted he always expected Scotland to make hard work of beating Italy following their 26-6 win at Murrayfield.

Scotland boss relieved with hard-fought win

Frank Hadden admitted he always expected Scotland to make hard work of beating Italy following their 26-6 RBS Six Nations win at Murrayfield. A fantastic team try finished off by Simon Danielli - his first at Test level for five years - and a maiden international score for Scott Gray inspired the hosts to a morale-boosting win in Edinburgh. The victory, as well as staving off the threat of the wooden spoon, also snapped Scotland's two-game losing streak against the Azzurri in Six Nations rugby. Hadden said: "A roll always starts with one win and it was important to make sure that we got that win today. "It's always extremely difficult to play against Italy. Everybody finds it difficult to play against them, especially with their power up front and their rushing defence.

Slick work

"What you tend to find against a rush defence is you can't get the rhythm that you get - like we got in Paris - against a sliding defence. "But we made more line breaks at the end of the day and we created more try-scoring opportunities so sometimes it can be a bit messy. "But we stuck to our guns, we were very clear about what we needed to do to break down the rush defence." Danielli latched on to Graeme Morrison's neat pass following slick work from Mike Blair to cross in the 35th minute, a try which pleased Hadden. "The try of Simon Danielli was an example of what we had worked on hard during the week, specifically for this type of defence," he said. "Our defence was always in control in my opinion, conceding only one line break, considering the amount of possession we had. "And we were comfortable with that. We were happy to give them the ball and sniff around on the turnovers. "Our second try actually came from that kind of situation although it was more a counter-attack than a turnover."
Dynamic
He added: "A key area was the scrummage - it was a massive performance from us in there." "Allan Jacobsen, Ross Ford and Euan Murray were excellent, especially against such tough opposition. They created the sort of platform that in some ways we probably could have done better with." Scotland were second-best up front for long periods and Hadden said: "I thought we were physical enough today, perhaps not quite as dynamic as we had been in the contact last week." Hadden also revealed that the win came at the cost of a "shed load of injuries", with Jacobsen (shoulder), Max Evans (facial injury) Alastair Kellock (ankle) all doubtful for the penultimate game against Ireland in two weeks' time. Italy head coach Nick Mallett claimed his side were on the wrong end of some 50-50 decisions by Nigel Owens but refused to blame the referee for his side's third straight defeat in this year's tournament. "I don't like talking about refereeing decisions straight after the game, because it's very difficult to see exactly where there have been mistakes," Mallett said. "I'm certainly not complaining about the referee today and I'm not saying that was the reason we lost the game. That was not the case whatsoever. "But I think on two or three occasions I saw at half-time for example, there were two or three penalties that were given against us that I felt were a bit harsh. "These are 50-50 calls that went against us today but they didn't make the difference between winning and losing. "I thought on quite a few occasions we had the rough side of the call."