Italy surprise by beating Scotland in Six Nations
Italy ended their two-year wait for a Six Nations victory with a hard fought 16-12 victory over Scotland at the Stadio Flaminio here on Saturday.
They thus ended a seven-match losing run in the competition dating back to their 23-20 victory over the same opponents in the last match of the 2008 season.
For Scotland it was a ninth straight defeat away from home in the Six Nations and no less than they deserved in a disjointed and stuttering display.
But the Italians showed great spirit and scored a wonderful try by replacement scrum-half Pablo Canavosio – their first in this year’s tournament created by their own play – to boost their chances of avoiding the wooden spoon for the third year in a row.
The first half was a largely forgettable affair that finished all square at two penalties apiece.
It didn’t look likely to be that way as Italy made a bright start with an attack down the left but Mirko Bergamasco spilled a pass from Josh Sole.
Bergamasco put the hosts ahead on 10 minutes with a penalty from inside the 22 after Scotland were penalised for offside and four minutes later he doubled the lead with another penalty from an almost identical position.
Scotland were slow to get a foothold in the game but once Dan Parks’s right boot started to function, the visitors wrestled their way back into the game.
Parks brought the score to 6-3 with a penalty from inside the 22 to the right of the posts after John Barclay made a break from a stolen Italy line-out.
Parks levelled the scored with another penalty, from the left this time, before Italy’s failing line-out put them in trouble again.
Captain and hooker Leonardo Ghiraldini threw the ball over all his own players’ heads from inside his own 22 and Barclay made another break but Scotland were held up two yards from the line.
Scrum-half Tito Tebaldi was next to fluff his lines with a woeful and ill-advised grubber kick in his own half that saw Scotland counter to within five yards of the try-line before Parks missed a penalty from wide right.
Italy probably welcomed the half-time whistle and the break did them some good as Bergamasco kicked them back into a three point lead three minutes after the restart.
Scotland came straight back and went left and then right with prop Allan Jacobsen burrowing over the line but being held up.
However moments later Parks hit a drop goal from under the posts and it was all square again.
Halfway through the second half Italy got the crowd going with a break down the left but Bergamasco ran out of options as Luke McLean, his only support, somehow got himself directly behind his team-mate rather than to either side and the chance went begging.
And they were made to pay on 65 minutes as Parks kicked the visitors into a 12-9 lead.
But suddenly, out of nothing, Italy struck.
Gonzalo Canale made a brilliant slaloming, scything break through the midfield and then offloaded in the tackle to Canavosio who cut in from the left and found a channel that arrived under the posts for his fifth try in 28 tests, with Bergamasco converting for a 16-12 lead.
Scotland came charging back and for the second time Jacobsen burrowed over the line but was once again denied a try by the video referee because it was impossible to see the ball.
[AFP]
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