Scottish Rugby

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  1. Everitt takes 'confidence' from rivals Glasgow's journeypublished at 14:58 GMT 22 January

    Sean Everitt and Franco SmithImage source, SNS
    Image caption,

    Edinburgh head coach Sean Everitt with Glasgow Warriors counterpart Franco Smith

    Edinburgh head coach Sean Everitt takes "confidence" from Scottish rivals Glasgow Warriors' recent success and progress after agreeing a new contract with the capital side until the summer of 2028.

    Everitt's men return to United Rugby Championship action at home to Bulls on Friday evening, after beating Gloucester and losing to Bath in the Champions Cup.

    Edinburgh are 10th in the URC, eight places and 17 points below 2024 champions Glasgow.

    "We take a lot of confidence out of what Glasgow are doing and the plan we have in place for Edinburgh going forward," said Everitt.

    "They're sitting with a group that have been together now for a number of years. You've just got to look at their backline as an example to see that. The only real change to their team is Adam Hastings coming at 10. That was to obviously fill a hole that was left by Tom Jordan, who's comfortable in that position as well.

    "They're a settled team, they've built a lot of experience and I'm sure at some stage in the near future, they're going to have to be looking at the replacements of the likes of a Huw Jones etc.

    "We do look at them as a way forward. We take confidence of what they have achieved in Europe as well as in the URC over the years."

    Everitt says Edinburgh are "looking at evolving our squad".

    "Consistency in the coaching group goes a long way towards success and building a future for a club that's sustainable," he explained.

    "We're not the finished article. There's been a lot of movement within our group for some time now and with the youngsters coming through, it's really exciting times for Edinburgh.

    "Over the longer term, we want to build a squad that is sustainable for a period of time and not just over two years but over the next two to eight years and that's important for us and that will bring success to the club."

  2. Stephen eyes 'special' trophy double with Glasgowpublished at 14:56 GMT 22 January

    Seb StephenImage source, SNS

    Hooker Seb Stephen is convinced Glasgow Warriors can win both the Champions Cup and the United Rugby Championship this year.

    Glasgow lifted the URC trophy in 2024 for the first time in nine years and are currently second in the table.

    They continue their Champions Cup glory bid - after a perfect group-stage campaign - in April with a last-16 tie at home to the Bulls.

    When asked if winning both the URC and Champions Cup was a stretch, 20-year-old Stephen said: "I don't think so.

    "That's definitely something Franco has mentioned to us. It would be pretty special to do that.

    "I don't know if it's been done before but I definitely think we've got the capabilities to do it."

    The last team to win the URC and Champions Cup double was Leinster in 2017-18.

  3. Glasgow & Edinburgh's Champions Cup dates confirmedpublished at 08:40 GMT 22 January

    Glasgow Warriors and Edinburgh playersImage source, SNS

    Glasgow Warriors will face Bulls in the Champions Cup on Saturday, 4 April, with a 17:30 BST kick-off at Scotstoun Stadium.

    And for Edinburgh's tie, they will visit four-time winners Leinster on Sunday, 5 April, again with a 17:30 start.

    Warriors progressed to the round of 16 after finishing top of Pool 1. Edinburgh were fourth in Pool 2.

    Should the Scottish sides reach the quarter-finals, those ties will take place from 10-12 April.

  4. Van der Merwe back as Edinburgh make seven changes for Bullspublished at 17:38 GMT 21 January

    Duhan van der Merwe is back for EdinburghImage source, SNS

    Edinburgh welcome back Duhan van der Merwe for Friday's United Rugby Championship visit of Bulls after the Scotland winger missed last week's Champions Cup mauling at Bath with a calf problem.

    Experienced forwards Grant Gilchrist and D'Arcy Rae also return from injury, while Pierre Schoeman, Magnus Bradbury, Wes Goosen and Liam McConnell are restored after being rested at The Rec.

    "It's fantastic to welcome back such an experienced cohort of players for what is undoubtedly one of our biggest tests of the season," said head coach Sean Everitt.

    "Having the likes of Duhan, Grant and D'arcy back from injury, alongside Pierre, Wes and Liam gives the squad a massive lift.

    "We know exactly what the Bulls bring. Their squad is packed with Springbok talent and they play a physical, high-intensity brand of rugby. We have to match that physicality from the very first minute if we want to come out on top."

    Edinburgh can boast a 100% record at the Hive Stadium this season and sit 10th in the URC table, one point above the South African visitors, who have finished runners-up in three of the past four seasons.

    Edinburgh: Paterson, Graham, Goosen, Lang, Van der Merwe, Thompson, Vellacott; Schoeman, Ashman, D'arcy Rae, Young, Gilchrist, McConnell, Douglas, Bradbury.

    Replacements: Morris, Venter, Hill, Hunter-Hill, Muncaster, Shiel, Scott, O'Conor.

  5. Townsend guilty of picking 'favourites over form'?published at 13:41 GMT 21 January

    Scottish rugby your views

    We asked for your views on Gregor Townsend's Scotland squad for the Six Nations.

    Here's what some of you had to say:

    Dave: Surprised by the omissions in the forwards. It hasn't really recognised the success of Glasgow and what it has been built on - young players learning and playing while maintaining a winning culture. Gregor Hiddleston is very unlucky, while Jonny Gray and Dave Cherry are both incredibly fortunate. Maybe says more about the attritional nature of the Six Nations, with Gray picked for his bulk for the games against England and France.

    Russell: Disappointed, where is the forward thinking here? Cherry and Gray have been great servants, but going by form Hiddleston and Seb Stephen should have been involved. Same applies to Duhan van der Merwe, not been the same player for almost the past year and lucky to be in the squad. In fact all Scottish players from Glasgow should be in the squad based on form.

    Jim: I'm sorry but this is a classic Townsend selection - favourites over form. No Hiddleston, Stephen, Euan Ferrie or Alex Samuel who are all playing out of their socks for Glasgow. Gray and Cherry get in who aren't playing consistently? Bonkers. Hooker is still a major concern now with the young guns not considered, while second row is missing out on some players in the form of their lives and we'll still have Grant Gilchrist starting.

    Scott: An opportunity missed for Townsend to win back some favour with the fans. Complete leftfield calls for two ageing locks, one of whom had removed himself from Scotland availability a year ago, and a hooker playing second-division rugby in France. Another Six Nations to watch from behind the sofa. Surely we need as many of the potential Rugby World Cup squad to get test minutes before next year?

    Chris: As expected Warriors rightly make up half the squad - some club confidence and cohesion alongside experienced, established Test players. Do feel for Hiddleston, I suspect he and the other A players won't be far from the squad during the tournament. His chance will come.

    Jimmy: Considering the competition, and the current form of the competition, the selections of Cherry, George Turner and Van der Merwe look like someone trying to get back to the good old days, which were not really that good.

  6. Listen: Townsend explains his Six Nations choicespublished at 12:36 GMT 21 January

    Media caption,

    Gregor Townsend joins Tom and Andy on their latest podcast

    On this week's BBC Scotland Rugby podcast, Tom English and Andy Burke catch up with Scotland head coach Gregor Townsend as he explains his Six Nations squad selection.

    Listen and subscribe on BBC Sounds

  7. Only continuity at Edinburgh under Everitt is mediocritypublished at 12:28 GMT 21 January

    Sandy Smith
    Fan writer

    Edinburgh fan's voice

    Thank you Toulouse, thank you for hitting Sale Sharks for 77 points and making Edinburgh's 63-10 loss to Bath look almost respectable.

    Taking a second-string team to an away game in European competition is not unusual these days. The French clubs with a hugely demanding domestic league complete with actual relegation are notorious for it.

    It is understandable there can be a trade-off when progress in the competition is impossible. But making that decision when a lucrative and winnable home tie in the next round is achievable, is unacceptable.

    The planning of this particular campaign now looks even more slipshod as results in our pool have made it clear a win at Castres could have delivered a second-place finish and money-raising home draw.

    Even a losing bonus point or try bonus point would have meant third place and although that would still be away, it would have been a more favourable draw.

    Instead we have recorded our third worst ever result in European competition and the assertions about Sean Everitt's contract extension demonstrating continuity look increasingly ridiculous.

    The only thing that is continuing under his stewardship is mediocrity.

    I don't blame the players for the humiliation against Bath. They made mistakes but they were errors that have their origins in the coaching platform.

    I blame that coaching for the lack of a cohesive attack and for their inability to manage their resources better and I blame the SRU for rewarding that mediocrity and for an inflexible player rest protocol that demonstrates there is little interest in making Edinburgh successful.

    If Edinburgh are bang average then how is that preparing these young players for the international stage? Equally I can't imagine you learn too much at the painful end of a shoeing.

    The upshot is we are away to Leinster and another potentially humiliating defeat awaits that will see us taken less seriously than we already are.

    Meantime there will be soundbites about putting things right and a combative display against Bulls to disguise our bigger problems.

    Sandy Smith can be found at the Burgh Watch, external

  8. Transformed Warriors have the fans believingpublished at 12:18 GMT 21 January

    Grant Young
    Fan writer

    Glasgow Warriors fan's voice

    A Franco Smith fist pump and smile signalled the end to a historic undefeated group stage to the Champions Cup for the Warriors.

    Confirmed as second seeds, a meeting with old foes the Bulls awaits.

    Glasgow showed they are a team with a point to prove in the 28-3 dismantling of English powerhouse Saracens, a side filled with British and Irish Lions and England frontliners.

    In past seasons Glasgow have faltered in big moments - defeat on the road to Leinster stand out - but this squad this season all speak about their confidence as individuals and a collective.

    Jack Demsey played like a man possessed. He tackled hard, ran even harder and got in the face of every single Saracens player. He is frighteningly good when he has this look about him.

    There is a calmness and steadiness to how Kyle Rowe goes about his play. Whether defensively or with ball in hand he oozes class.

    And with Warriors in fine form, it was great to see 19 of the club's players selected in Scotland's Six Nations squad.

    Franco has transformed this Glasgow side and has the fans believing a glory run is possible. Have I looked at ways to get to Bilbao for the final in May? Of course I have.

    It is back to URC action this weekend with a trip to Italy to face Zebre, where a much-changed line up with first-choice players rested is likely.

  9. Townsend on pressure, Scotland squad selection & eyeing progresspublished at 17:43 GMT 20 January

    Gregor TownsendImage source, SNS

    Gregor Townsend has been speaking to the media after naming his Scotland squad for the Six Nations.

    Here are the key lines:

    • Townsend insists he does not feel under extra pressure after Scotland's poor autumn campaign: "No, I don't really think in those terms. I think I'm so privileged to be going into another Six Nations. I can't wait to be working with the players again. When I see the team, I see the players in really good form, it excites me what's coming up ahead."

    • Explaining his decision to recall Dave Cherry, Townsend says "his experience is really important" and the Vannes hooker "probably should have been in the November squad".

    • On the inclusion of Jonny Gray despite a lack of game-time at Bordeaux: "He's actually in really good form. He's playing with one of the best clubs in Europe. He's looking fit and sharp, his workrate is outstanding. Again, someone who played really well last year's Six Nations. He's someone that has played well for us and we can rely on him if required during this championship."

    • With Cherry selected, fellow hooker Gregor Hiddleston misses out despite being first choice for Glasgow. Townsend said: "Gregor's not really been involved with us so far so he's going to get an opportunity in the A game against Italy. We've got a lot of competition there but for now he's going to get that chance in the A team."

    • The Scotland head coach is not worried about Duhan van der Merwe's patchy form: "Probably more concerning is that he's had a few injuries. He's not really had a run of games. I thought his last game was really good against Gloucester. He's finding his form and he just needs to get some more games."

    • Townsend is seeking improvement from the Autumn Tests and says "progress" for Scotland would be "playing close to our potential, being consistent, delivering that performance in five games. It's tough to do that, but that would be progress if we can play well for five games."

    • He says Glasgow Warriors' momentum and confidence "should count for a lot" in his Scotland squad, adding: "A lot of the players are playing alongside their team-mates, whether that's in the forward pack or the midfield or back three. You know that they've got a language that they've been using in training that they can carry on."

    • Townsend expects a "very difficult" challenge in the opening match away to Italy: "We obviously lost there last time, so that's just the reality. Italy have been improving every year now."

  10. Analysis: Hiddleston omission 'unfathomable'published at 15:40 GMT 20 January

    Tom English
    BBC Scotland's chief sports writer

    Gregor HiddlestonImage source, SNS

    When the Scotland squad was announced the temptation was to re-read it on the assumption that Gregor Hiddleston, the outstanding Glasgow hooker, was in it but was just missed at first reading.

    But he's not. And it's unfathomable. Dave Cherry, aged 35 and playing second division rugby in France, is in. So is George Turner, 33 and a bit-part player for a Harlequins side that's been playing poorly. Neither have played Test rugby since the last Six Nations.

    Hiddleston's omission is a total puzzler. Astonishing. Cam Henderson, the Leicester giant, also misses out. Another head-scratcher, particularly when Jonny Gray has dropped out of the sky and been included despite largely playing a bench role for Bordeaux and not playing for Scotland at all in close to a year.

    Henderson and Alex Samuel are not included, which is to ignore two form locks.

    Elsewhere, the squad looks strong with some youth in Liam McConnell and Freddy Douglas and plenty of X factor. The exclusions are eye-catching, but there's still plenty to like.

  11. Townsend names Scotland squad - share your viewspublished at 13:45 GMT 20 January

    Have your say

    Gregor Townsend has named a 40-man Scotland squad for the Six Nations.

    There are recalls for experienced pair Jonny Gray and Dave Cherry, while young Edinburgh duo Liam McConnell and Freddy Douglas are also included.

    What do you make of the squad? Has head coach Townsend got the big selection calls right, or are any glaring omissions?

    Tell us your thoughts here.

    Scotland squad

    Forwards: Ewan Ashman, Josh Bayliss, Magnus Bradbury, Gregor Brown, Dave Cherry, Scott Cummings, Alex Craig, Rory Darge, Jack Dempsey, Freddy Douglas, Matt Fagerson, Zander Fagerson, Grant Gilchrist, Jonny Gray, Nathan McBeth, Liam McConnell, Elliot Millar Mills, D'arcy Rae, Jamie Ritchie, Pierre Schoeman, Rory Sutherland, George Turner, Max Williamson.

    Backs: Fergus Burke, Jamie Dobie, Darcy Graham, Adam Hastings, George Horne, Rory Hutchinson, Huw Jones, Tom Jordan, Blair Kinghorn, Stafford McDowall, Finn Russell, Kyle Rowe, Ollie Smith, Kyle Steyn, Sione Tuipulotu, Duhan van der Merwe, Ben White.

  12. 'Time for Townsend to go with form & youth at Six Nations'published at 14:26 GMT 19 January

    Tom English
    BBC Scotland's chief sports writer

    Behind the mic

    Gregor Townsend names his Six Nations squad on Tuesday - his ninth. It should - or at least, could - look pretty different this time.

    Twelve months ago, Dave Cherry was the starting hooker, Jamie Bhatti was one of three looseheads, Jonny Gray was in the second-row, Luke Crosbie and Jack Mann were among the back-rows, Matt Currie was one of five centres selected.

    Some of those guys are injured and some have faded away, but others have thundered across Townsend's landscape.

    Gregor Hiddleston and Seb Stephen, the Glasgow hookers; Ollie Blyth-Lafferty, the Edinburgh tighthead; Max Williamson (injured a year ago), his Glasgow mate Alex Samuel and Leicester's Cam Henderson are the new wave of locks; Liam McConnell, Freddy Douglas and the excellent Euan Ferrie must be in the picture in the back-row.

    In 2025 Townsend went for a wider squad of 37. With the championship only having one fallow week this time he might want to go larger than that.

    He starts with Italy in Rome, England in Edinburgh and Wales in Cardiff - three Saturdays back-to-back. He must win all of them if title contention is the ambition.

    We're sticking with 37 players. This is not an attempt to second-guess Townsend. People have gone dizzy in the past trying to play that game.

    It's a reflection of changing times and an acknowledgement that hungry, aggressive players free of baggage must be swept into this squad right now.

    Back three - Duhan doesn't make cut

    Joint-record try-scorer, Duhan van der Merwe, is not among the four wings (or five when you count Blair Kinghorn).

    Kyle Steyn and Jamie Dobie are the top wingers around. Darcy Graham and Kyle Rowe complete the four.

    Townsend dropped Van der Merwe from his 23 in the autumn and his case for inclusion has only weakened since then.

    Some fitness issues, a lack of confidence, Edinburgh's inability to give him much ball - it's all bringing him down.

    Midfield & half-backs - options, options

    Sione Tuipulotu and Huw Jones; Tom Jordan (who should be considered a serious contender for the 15 jersey) and Rory Hutchinson; Stafford McDowall and Ollie Smith.

    Cam Redpath might feel robbed again but those six are the best set of centres Scotland has ever had. Jones is back after six months out injured and is already flying.

    Finn Russell and Adam Hastings should be the 10s, Hastings shading it ahead of Fergus Burke. Townsend already has Jordan so Burke misses out, maybe.

    Ben White and George Horne are the shoo-ins at scrum-half with one of the form Scots of them all, Dobie, available to cover.

    Gregor TownsendImage source, SNS
    Image caption,

    Gregor Townsend's 2026 Six Nations squad will be revealed on Tuesday

    Front-row - rookie Stephen or old head Turner?

    Loosehead is not a land of plenty - more a wasteland where nothing grows - so Pierre Schoeman, Rory Sutherland and Nathan McBeth - with starts in Glasgow's wins over Sale and Toulouse - are in.

    At hooker, Ewan Ashman and Hiddleston are the first picks. Easy. The 20-year-old Stephen is the third hooker, ahead of the vastly experienced but bit-part Harlequin, George Turner and the rest. His intensity is just terrific.

    All hail King Zander at tighthead. Wrap him in cotton wool, feed him grapes, sing him lullabies from now until Rome.

    Sean Everitt says D'Arcy Rae should be fit. Rae stood up really well in the autumn when many people were having palpitations about him. That's two.

    Elliot Millar Mills, Will Hurd, the teenager Blyth-Lafferty? The tighthead of a scrum is a dark place full of monsters that make those creatures in Stranger Things look like something off Sesame Street.

    Blyth-Lafferty is a brilliant prospect, but Six Nations rugby looks too soon. Hurd has been going well off the bench for Leicester, Millar-Mills played against New Zealand and Argentina in the autumn. Millar-Mills for thrills.

    Locks - let the young dogs eat

    Now. Lock forwards. Five of them.

    Scott Cummings and Gregor Brown (let his aggression and his carrying flourish in the second-row). Max Williamson and Alex Samuel. Two Glasgow behemoths. They're massive men and bursting with edge and confidence. One more.

    Grant Gilchrist is still well capable of playing wonderfully at Test level, but it's time a younger man got a chance.

    Cam Henderson is tearing it up for Leicester and it would be criminal to leave him out any longer.

    Back-row - is Freddy ready?

    Yes. Yes, he is.

    Douglas is a turnover machine with a struggling club, belligerent as hell and everybody wants to see him get some game-time in the Six Nations. A kid with the mentality of a 50-capper.

    Townsend went with eight back-rows last year, so we're going the same again. Some good ones are missing out here.

    In: Matt Fagerson, Rory Darge and Jack Dempsey. Also in: Jamie Ritchie, winning and inspiring at Perpignan; Andy Onyeama-Christie, versatile and dogged; Liam McConnell, loose cannon and exhilarating wildcard; Douglas, freak.

    Another needed: If in doubt, go Glasgow. Ferrie is a fantastic footballer and a warrior in name and deed. Done.

  13. Glasgow fans revel in statement win over Saracenspublished at 12:19 GMT 19 January

    your views graphic

    We asked for your views on Glasgow Warriors 28-3 win against Saracens in the Champions Cup.

    Here's what some of you said:

    Gordon: There's the Scotland team right there. Good in attack, dominant in defence. To keep a fully loaded Saracens team virtually scoreless is a fabulous effort. Gregor Hiddleston, for me, starts against Italy.

    Chris: Glasgow are just a joy to watch and should make the majority of the Six Nations squad on form. If Hiddleston doesn't make the squad, I'd be asking serious questions why not.

    George: What a set of results for Glasgow. Showing what they can produce. I hope this translates to Scotland. The physicality and defence. Definitely playing for the coach!

    Tom: Unbelievable European campaign for Glasgow, capped off with a dominant win! Saracens aren't the same team as they were, but they still have a team built with internationals and Lions. We barely gave them a sniff and our defence looked so comfortable. Hiddleston needs to be given a chance for Scotland in the Six Nations. He has been outstanding all season!

    Kenny: A classic match in two distinct aspects. First half, ruthless attacking yielding three classic tries. Second half, brilliant defence, stifling all of Saracens attempts at turning things around. Then the classic sucker-punch delivering last minute the bonus-point try!

    Doug: Good win, defence was excellent throughout! We were wasteful in the first half converting lineout pressure and in the second half we struggled to get out of our half and seemed determined to cough up possession. Jack Dempsey and Zander Fagerson were superb, Alex Craig with some big carries too. Hopefully Adam Hastings will be back soon, he helps with attacking fluency and is stronger in defence than Dan Lancaster who got bounced off tackles a couple of times.

  14. Glasgow 28-3 Saracens: Three things we learnedpublished at 11:26 GMT 19 January

    Andy Burke
    BBC Sport Scotland Senior Reporter

    Glasgow Warriors celebrateImage source, SNS

    Flawless Warriors hit new heights

    If you want some context on how good Glasgow's Champions Cup pool stage performances have been, consider this - only Bordeaux, the reigning European champions, matched their points total of a perfect 20.

    Four bonus-point wins from four is an astonishing return and unprecedented for a Scottish side in Europe.

    Saracens may not be the force of old, but they were fresh from an impressive win over Toulouse and travelled to Scotstoun with a starting 15 boasting five British and Irish Lions.

    Pushovers they were not, but Glasgow completely outclassed the English giants.

    150 not out for electric Horne

    George Horne marked his 150th Glasgow Warriors appearance in fine style.

    There was a moment in the first half that summed up the wee scrum-half. With little room to work with next to the touchline, Horne dinked a cute little kick over the defender and gathered, all at full tilt.

    It was an extraordinary piece of skill that led to Juan Martin Gonzalez's yellow card.

    A signature support line brought Horne his try, and he was a whirlwind of energy and tempo all night.

    His form surely will give Gregor Townsend food for thought regarding his Scotland number nine pecking order for the Six Nations.

    Dynamite Dempsey in form of his life

    Horne claimed the player of the match award, but Dempsey was every bit as influential in a marvellous team performance.

    I wrote in these pages last week about the big number eight's outstanding performance against Clermont. He kicked on to yet another level against Saracens.

    Dempsey was utterly devastating with ball in hand, blasting through defenders like a rampaging bull.

    Whenever a loose ball hit the deck it seemed Dempsey was first on the scene to throw himself on it and win back possession for his side.

    There was also composure to go with the power when he blasted through two tackles and picked the right option to put Horne away for his try.

    It was a sublime display and if Dempsey carries this form into the Six Nations then he could be set for a big tournament.

  15. 'Now we believe' - Horne relishing Glasgow Euro journeypublished at 11:25 GMT 19 January

    Andy Burke
    BBC Sport Scotland Senior Reporter

    George HorneImage source, SNS

    George Horne says the difference between Glasgow's Champions Cup campaign this season to previous years is the squad's true belief they can mix it with the very best sides in Europe.

    Warriors made it four bonus-point wins from four pool matches - and the maximum 20 points - with another sterling victory over Saracens to add to earlier victories over Sale, Toulouse and Clermont.

    It sets Franco Smith's side up for a home tie against Vodacom Bulls in the last 16.

    "You dream and you hope you're going to get four wins from four and I think that's the difference this year - we actually believe that," said Horne, who marked his 150th Glasgow appearance with a try and a player of the match performance.

    "We've played two of the most successful teams in Europe over the past few years, and we've shown that if we play our best, we can match them.

    "We've done our job over the first four games to put ourselves in the best place, but you can't look too far ahead or you'll come unstuck.

    "So now we've got to focus on the league for the next few weeks and then the Bulls coming here.

    "We've had a few tasty battles against them in the last couple of years, so we know that will be an absolute dogfight as well."

  16. Route to the final laid out for Glasgow and Edinburghpublished at 22:06 GMT 18 January

    George Horne and Duhan ver der MerweImage source, SNS

    Glasgow and Edinburgh have found out their opponents for the round of 16 in the Champions Cup, after both Scottish sides progressed in Europe's elite tournament.

    The Warriors, seeded second among the 16 teams after their four bonus points wins throughout the group stage, host the Bulls at Scotstoun.

    Win that, and it's a home quarter-final against the winner of Toulon v Bristol Bears.

    They could then meet Edinburgh in the semi-finals, although that would require the capital club to come past third sees Leinster in the round of 16, and then the winner of Harlequins v Sale Sharks.

    The round of 16 will be played on the weekend of 3/4/5 April, with Edinburgh playing Leinster over in Ireland.

    If the two Scottish sides were to meet, the semi-finals take place on the weekend of 1/2/3 May, and if Glasgow do make it that far, they would also have home advantage for that tie.

    The final of the tournament will be held on 24 May, and hosted in the San Mames Stadium in Bilbao.

  17. Glasgow Warriors 28-3 Saracens: What Smith saidpublished at 21:38 GMT 18 January

    Andy Burke
    BBC Sport Scotland Senior Reporter

    Franco SmithImage source, SNS

    Glasgow Warriors head coach Franco Smith: "All the people make it special here. We are really proud. We played for them.

    "It was part of our pre-match conversation. We want to make Scotstoun proud, and we heard them tonight. So a really, really good evening.

    "[Saracens] are a quality team, and they've got some excellent game-drivers with a lot of experience there. They've got good a pack of forwards.

    "Maro Itoje disrupted our set-piece by himself at some stages. So, a tough team. They did well to stay in the fight. You can see that they're a proud team, obviously, and a lot of character.

    "It was good for us to show that we can play an all-round game, both sides of the ball.

    "The defence in the second part of the game was fantastic. We worked really hard to apply ourselves physically, and to be fit enough and resilient enough to stay in the fight. It was a pleasure to watch.

    "[George Horne] knows I'm really proud of him. Everybody here is really proud to have him with us.

    "The way he goes about his business and how much he believes in the club is obviously seen by everybody out there. I'm really, really proud of him and I hope there's another 100 to come.

    "We've had tough teams. Nobody would have bet on us before the start of this campaign that we would end up where we did.

    "I'm happy with that, first of all. But we also know this is just the start. There's more than half the season still left and it's going to be important to keep everybody healthy and to keep the energy levels high so that we can continue to push hard in this competition."