Dobie signs new long-term deal with Glasgowpublished at 12:35 BST
12:35 BST
Andy Burke BBC Sport Scotland Senior Reporter
Image source, SNS
Scotland international Jamie Dobie has committed his future to Glasgow Warriors by signing a new long-term contract at Scotstoun.
The versatile back was already under contract until 2028, but Warriors have moved to reward a player who was enjoying an outstanding season before injury struck.
The 24-year-old initially established himself at Warriors as a scrum-half, but his performances on the wing led to him starting in the back three for Scotland's first two Six Nations matches against Italy and England this year.
Dobie sustained a shoulder injury in the Calcutta Cup victory and has been out of action since.
It is hoped he will return to play some part for Glasgow in the URC play-offs and be available for Scotland's Nations Championship matches this summer against Argentina, South Africa and Fiji.
Meanwhile, 21-year-old winger Kerr Johnston has become the eighth Warriors academy player to sign a first professional contract prior to the new season.
Scotland prop Hepburn agrees Edinburgh movepublished at 12:14 BST
12:14 BST
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Scotland prop Alec Hepburn brings "invaluable" experience to Edinburgh after agreeing to join on a two-year contract, says head coach Sean Everitt.
Hepburn, 33, will arrive in the summer from fellow URC side Scarlets.
The Australia-born loosehead spent a decade with Exeter Chiefs, winning the Premiership and Champions Cup double in 2020, before a two-year stint with Scarlets.
Former England international Hepburn made his Scotland debut in 2024 and has six caps for the country of his father's birth.
"We're really pleased to be adding a player of Alec's calibre to our squad," said Everitt.
"He's a seasoned international loosehead who has operated at the highest level throughout his career - Champions Cup finals, Premiership titles, Six Nations. That kind of experience and knowledge is invaluable in any group.
"Alec strengthens the depth we have in an important position and adds genuine competition for places, which can only drive standards higher.
"Having someone of his background in our changing room will also be hugely beneficial for the younger props coming through. That blend of quality and leadership is exactly what we're looking for as we continue to build."
Hepburn is the fourth new signing confirmed amid Edinburgh's rebuild, with backs Louie Chapman, Riley Higgins and Geordie Gwynn all on board for next season.
"I'm very excited to be joining Edinburgh. It's a club with great depth and talent within the squad to push very high in all competitions," Hepburn said.
"It's nice to know a few of the guys already. Getting the chance to work week in and week out with them will hopefully bring the best out of me and prove myself in a different environment."
Why 'hope is back on menu' for Edinburghpublished at 16:26 BST 29 April
16:26 BST 29 April
Sandy Smith Fan writer
Edinburgh's youth were less Young Ones and more Young Guns on Friday night against the Sharks.
It did start a little slowly. We were a try down by six minutes, had already conceded three penalties and hadn't really been out of our own half.
It picked up, though. Our first entry into the Sharks 22 resulted in a try by Ewan Ashman, which was born from the lovely move at the lineout that preceded it.
Our matches against Sharks have been mostly close affairs and they went ahead only a few minutes after the restart with our struggles at scrum time being a contributory factor.
Then Grant Gilchrist celebrated his contract extension by dummying a pass to Pierre Schoeman, which allowed him to break and give Glen Young an easy score to keep the game tightly balanced.
Another fumble straight from the restart led to another scrum and I'd have to applaud Sean Everitt's decision at that early juncture to bring on Paul Hill to try to bring some parity in that area.
It swung back in Sharks' favour with a short drive from Vincent Koch, but a quick restart by Edinburgh straight from the Finn Russell playbook gave Edinburgh possession and territory, and only four minutes later Mosese Tuipulotu went over in the corner for his first try of the season.
Ewan Ashman cemented a deserved player of the match award with the charge down that came shortly after that and gave Hector Patterson a run in for his second try in two appearances.
Sharks at this point were starting to look a little deflated and Edinburgh capitalised on that with the Chief Brody coup de grace moment and pick of the tries on the night from Darcy Graham.
Sharks did manage to mirror our last contest with a last-play score in the same corner, but this time it was too little too late.
It was a pleasure to watch this game. There were lots of good performances. Tom Currie was impressive, as was Jack Brown in his two stints. Hector Patterson has been a revelation.
Our discipline also improved as the game progressed and we bagged three second-half tries while only conceding three penalties in that half.
There are caveats, but back-to-back bonus-point league wins are rare for this team, so hope is back on the menu.
Glasgow agree deal for versatile back Kuenzlepublished at 14:55 BST 29 April
14:55 BST 29 April
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Glasgow Warriors have bolstered their back-line options for next season with the signing of Bayley Kuenzle on a two-year deal.
The 27-year-old Australian will arrive as a free agent from Western Force.
Kuenzle has made 44 appearances for the Perth club, including starts on the wing and at centre as well as covering full-back and fly-half.
He was called into the senior Australia squad for the summer Tests in 2024 but did not feature, having previously represented the country at A and under-20 level.
"I'm hugely excited," Kuenzle told club media.
"It's a massive opportunity for me, and Glasgow is a club that's been successful which speak volumes on the culture. I'm really looking forward to getting over there, meeting the group, and getting stuck in.
"A big part of the move was the style of rugby that Glasgow play and the culture around the club. They play an exciting brand of rugby, and you can see how tight the group is. It feels like a place where you can grow as a player and be part of something special."
Kuenzle, who spent two years with the Brumbies in Canberra before moving to Perth, played in Western Force's 54-7 defeat to the British and Irish Lions last June.
Head coach Smith added: "Bayley is a player that we believe will add to our environment, both on and off the field.
"His versatility will be a real asset to our squad, and he has shown his quality with and without the ball irrespective of the number on his jersey."
How do Glasgow avoid season 'fizzling out in disappointment'?published at 12:04 BST 29 April
12:04 BST 29 April
Grant Young Fan writer
So Glasgow return from South Africa with their tail firmly between their legs.
Two blow-out defeats after European disappointment mean Glasgow have lost three on the bounce, just like they did to end the regular season last year.
For all the hype and expectation, the fixture run to end the season has definitely been against the Warriors. Rugby is certainly a squad game and Glasgow have had to dive deep down the reserve list in recent games to search players.
It is great to see so many young players getting opportunities and it does future-proof the side down the road. However, Glasgow now see themselves dropping down the table and are vulnerable in second place.
Only a matter of weeks ago, it looked like Glasgow would be top seed. Now the question is if Glasgow can finish even with a home quarter-final.
A break week this week could be the gap in schedule the squad needs. The front line injuries are well documented, but with recent results it really highlights the value that George Horne has.
The tempo he delivers from the ruck, but also his heart and passion, is really difficult to replace.
Add in Jamie Dobie being absent since the Six Nations and Glasgow have had a vulnerability through the nine position that seriously weakens their game plan.
Jack Oliver and Ben Afshar are young and rough around the edges and I'm sure their time will come, but Glasgow could really do with the return of Horne to the team.
It's not an easy finish to the season in any shape or form - Cardiff at home up next where Scotstoun will expect a result.
Five points in that one could go a long way to securing a good finish, but it's the final game on the road to Ulster that could prove pivotal.
There are now a lot of questions and pressure on the squad and the coaches. A season that promised so much only a fortnight or so ago could be about to fizzle out in disappointment.
Next season will see a lot of changes with so many front line guys leaving and we have yet to hear who could be the replacements. Glasgow's destiny is in their hands, finding momentum and positivity is what is required.
Edinburgh hand breakthrough talent Brown first pro dealpublished at 17:23 BST 28 April
17:23 BST 28 April
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Edinburgh back-three specialist Jack Brown has signed his first professional contract with the club.
The 20-year-old Scotland A international has been rewarded after a breakthrough campaign in which he has made 10 appearances.
"This means everything to me," Brown said. "I was born and raised in Edinburgh – this is my city, this is my club, and pulling on the castle and representing the capital of Scotland is something I never take for granted.
"Running out at Hive Stadium gives me a buzz like nothing else. I love playing for this team and I really enjoy working with Sean [Everitt] and the rest of the coaching staff – they've pushed me to become a better player every single day.
"I can't wait to see what the future holds. I want to keep improving, keep earning my place and give everything I have for this club."
Edinburgh head coach Sean Everitt believes Brown is making encouraging strides and can be a real asset for the club in the future.
He said: "Jack has all the attributes to succeed at this level. He's tall, athletic, has a big boot, he's courageous and he's calm under the high ball – that combination is exciting in a back-three player.
"He now has the opportunity to earn his place in the senior squad and really kick on. We're looking forward to watching him do that."
Edinburgh sign Scottish-qualified scrum-half Chapmanpublished at 09:10 BST 28 April
09:10 BST 28 April
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Scottish-qualified scrum-half Louie Chapman can "push for the highest level" after the Crusaders man became Edinburgh's latest recruit.
The 25-year-old is Edinburgh's third signing in the past week, following Hurricanes centre Riley Higgins and Scotland U20 back Geordie Gwynn from Ealing Trailfinders.
Chapman qualifies for Scotland through his grandmother and has played five times for Crusaders in Super Rugby this season.
He is expected to move to Edinburgh in the autumn, after Canterbury's Bunnings NPC campaign comes to a close.
"I'm so excited to be joining Edinburgh – a club with such a rich history and a real identity," Chapman said.
"I've been doing my research and the more I've learned about the place, the culture and what the club means to this city, the more I can't wait to get there and be a part of it.
"I'm looking forward to meeting the boys, getting to know the fans and really throwing myself into everything that comes with playing in Scotland. It's going to be a brilliant experience and I just want to get stuck in and contribute as quickly as I can."
Edinburgh Rugby head coach, Sean Everitt, added: "We're really excited to welcome Louie to Edinburgh. He has a huge amount of potential, but what stands out when you watch him is the maturity he brings - the control, the decision-making, the way he manages the game with tempo.
"Those aren't attributes that come by accident, and for a player still on the right side of 26 who has developed in that Crusaders environment, they tell you a great deal about his ceiling.
"He's Scottish-qualified, which adds another layer to this signing. We want players who see Edinburgh as a place where they can grow and push for the highest level. Louie is someone who fits that profile.
"He will come in and challenge our existing scrum-halves, and that competition will make everyone better. He's another high-quality addition to a squad we are building with real intent."
Stormers 48-12 Glasgow: Three things we learnedpublished at 10:16 BST 27 April
10:16 BST 27 April
Andy Burke BBC Sport Scotland Senior Reporter
Image source, Getty Images
Warriors late season wobble
Glasgow are still very much alive in this season's URC title race, but this late-season wobble is now concerning.
Having built a brilliant platform in both the URC and Champions Cup, the European defeat by Toulon seems to have sparked a mini crisis of confidence.
Injuries are undoubtedly biting hard, but the double-header in South Africa has been really poor. Zero match points claimed, 14 tries and 102 points conceded across the two games and their long-held lead at the top of the table gone. It could not have gone any worse.
They have been here before, bouncing back from disappointment in South Africa to return and claim the URC title in 2024. They did it the hard way then and it's looking like the may have to travel the tough road to do it again.
Tuipulotu goes down fighting
It will hardly go down as one of his great individual performances, but Sione Tuipulotu was one of the few bright spots in an otherwise dismal day for Glasgow.
The Scotland captain was always looking for ball, carrying hard into a defence that was giving little change.
His brilliant break was the spark for Ollie Smith's first-half try, and although gaps were hard to come by as the game wore on, Tuipulotu never stopped trying to find them.
Glasgow will need him at his best in the coming weeks.
Glasgow missing spark at nine
Any team would miss players of the quality of George Horne and Jamie Dobie, and Glasgow's scrum-half injuries are threatening to derail their season.
The tempo which Horne in particular brings is so crucial to the way Warriors play and his influence has been sorely missed in the past few matches.
Ben Afshar is a decent player and will get better with experience, but can be a little laboured at the base of the ruck and that split-second delay is enough to take the edge off the Glasgow attack.
Horne is thought to be not too far away from a return and how Glasgow could be doing with him for the run-in.
'Desperately poor' Scotland, Glasgow suffering from Six Nations & 'too little too late' for Edinburghpublished at 17:47 BST 26 April
17:47 BST 26 April
Rugby fans, you had three games to watch over the weekend. Here are your views on Edinburgh's win over Sharks, Glasgow's defeat to Stormers and Scotland's loss in Italy in the Women's Six Nations.
SCOTLAND WOMEN
Simon: Was always going to be a tough tournament for Scotland. A new coach, a lot of experience and leadership retired. The injuries to key players is unfortunate. Some of the younger players are now involved way more than was probably intended so some of the players are now playing for Scotland with just 10-12 professional games under their belt. Bit of hurt now but can only help us going forward.
Bruce: Scotland were never in with a shout of third. Always in a dog fight with Wales and Italy to avoid wooden spoon. If we played Wales now we would lose and finish last. Desperately poor.
Rosco: Need to be honest to move forward, Scotland women are miles off it. The players are simply not good enough or fit enough. They need to take a good look at themselves and accept things need to change.
GLASGOW WARRIORS
Dave: Tough game. Stormers really came at Glasgow and the forward battle was ferocious. Glasgow stuck at it and battled hard. There were a few uncharacteristic mistakes, but given the number of players out and the experience of the starters I was not that surprised by the scoreline. Glasgow will need to play better, and probably will, but they have also give some experience to a number of academy players in this mini tour. Tough but they are still in the hunt for top two and I think Franco Smith would have known that. Glasgow will need their top forwards back from injury for the season ending games.
Gus: Poor show by Glasgow, looked like they were on holiday. Always next week.
Bruce: Glasgow have run out of steam. Squad is good but lacks a bit of depth.
EDINBURGH
David M: Too little too late from Edinburgh again. Their season is to all intents and purposes over. It does not matter what they do now; they failed when it really mattered. And will do so again next season because that is what Edinburgh do.
David: A bad day at the office for Scottish rugby. Isn't it just as well we have Edinburgh.
'We've got to learn' - Fukofuka rues Scots' errorspublished at 20:22 BST 25 April
20:22 BST 25 April
Andy Burke BBC Sport Scotland Senior Reporter
Image source, Getty
Captain Rachel Malcolm warned before the Women's Six Nations that Scotland, with a new coaching team and a raft of inexperienced players, may have to take a step back in order to take a few forward.
If last weekend's humbling by world champions England at Murrayfield was entirely predictable - though the 84-7 scoreline was heavier than hoped - a 41-14 thrashing in Italy felt like the kind of setback Malcolm had forewarned.
The skipper was not part of it, having been ruled out prior to kick-off through injury. How the Scots could have done with Malcolm's experience as the Italians ran amok in Parma.
Five unanswered first-half tries scarcely did the Azzurri's dominance justice. While Lana Skeldon's try and a splendid score from Molly Poolman took a little of the ugliness off the final scoreline, Giordana Duca's seventh try, scored while Italy had two players in the sin-bin, was a stark indication of how far off it Scotland were.
There is context, of course. A whole new coaching team, that host of new, inexperienced players and injuries to key players such as Malcolm, Emma Orr, Rhona Lloyd and others made this a tough assignment in Parma.
Even allowing for those factors this was, aside from a bit of resistance shown in the final quarter, a desperately poor Scotland performance.
"I think Italy brought a whole lot of energy in defence, put us under pressure on our attack systems, and obviously forced a few errors, got a few turnovers early, which we were pretty disappointed about," said Scotland head coach Sione Fukofuka.
"It's an area we identified that there would be a threat, and we just weren't as accurate as we wanted to be.
"We didn't get purchase early, we did some really positive things, turned it over, and momentum swung really quickly, so we've got to learn as a team that when momentum swings, we reset, and we go again and stick to the areas that we really wanted to target."
Fukofuka dismissed the idea his players were suffering an emotional hangover after the experience of playing at Murrayfield in front of a record crowd, only to fall to a huge defeat.
The head coach did, however, admit the injury toll will take some managing as the Scots look to bounce back against France at Hive Stadium on Saturday 9 May.
"Obviously it's a bit of a challenge when we don't have our top-line senior players, but the reality is a lot of teams are facing that," he said.
"For us now, it's about resetting, getting bodies right, looking forward towards France, and what we can do, having a bit of a break in the fallow week, before getting a really good week of prep, getting home to the Hive and playing in front of Scottish fans."
Italy 41-14 Scotland: Share your viewspublished at 20:22 BST 25 April
20:22 BST 25 April
Scotland's hopes of a top-three finish in the Women's Six Nations suffered a significant setback as they were blown away by an inspired Italy side who registered their first win of the tournament in Parma.
'No need to panic' - Steyn says Glasgow will bounce backpublished at 15:12 BST 25 April
15:12 BST 25 April
Andy Burke BBC Sport Scotland Senior Reporter
Image source, SNS
Glasgow Warriors captain Kyle Steyn says there will be no sense of panic among his team after their horror URC double-header in South Africa.
After an eight-try hammering at the hands of the Lions in Johannesburg last weekend, the Scots suffered another heavy defeat to the Stormers, a loss that saw them lose their grip on top spot in the table.
The two games saw Glasgow concede a combined 14 tries and 102 points, with Franco Smith's side having nothing to show for their efforts.
"We came here, we lost the key battles both weeks, we lost set-piece, we lost the kicking game and then we coupled that with just too many errors and an ill-discipline, particularly in the first 40 of both games and it's just tough to build any rhythm or any momentum," Steyn told Premier Sports.
"Credit to both teams, they were pretty good at putting us away.
"There's no need to panic.
"It's a long season and these things happen.
"We've got a week to regroup now, and then we've got two more games, so it's just about sharpening up for that."
Everitt 'excited' about Edinburgh direction after 18-month processpublished at 12:38 BST 25 April
12:38 BST 25 April
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Edinburgh head coach Sean Everitt is "excited about where the club is going" as he admitted he is already looking ahead to next season, with little to play for in their remaining fixtures.
The capital club have beaten Zebre and the Sharks in their past two games while fielding a very young side as 18 first-team players are currently injured within the squad.
Off the pitch, they have announced the arrival of two new coaches, Brad Davis and Tim Sampson, with two incomings already announced - centres Riley Higgins and Geordie Gwynn.
On top of that, they have also been linked to Crusaders scrum-half Louie Chapman, who is also Scottish-qualified.
"There will be a couple more," Everitt said of on-field signings. "We really are excited. We're actually excited about where the club is going.
"We started this process about 18 months ago - giving youngsters opportunities within the group so that they could grow into senior players.
"We've seen teams like the Lions being very successful in that process that we're going to follow.
"It's exciting times for Scottish rugby because we've been talking about 'who will be the next generation?' We've got several them on the field here."
In a dismal URC campaign, the rise of blindside Liam McConnell, 21, has undoubtedly been the bright point. Alongside him, tighthead Ollie Blyth-Lafferty and fellow flanker Freddy Douglas have become regulars.
Besides that trio, there have also been encouraging signs from scrum-half Hector Patterson, centre Findlay Thomson, and back-three players Jack Brown and Malelili Satala.
Speaking to Premier Sports, Everitt added: "The team came together and it was a question of 'what are we going to play for in the last four games?'
"They wanted to show fight, care for the jersey, and make the fans proud. We had a full house tonight and I'm sure they've done that."
The head coach also touched on the importance of Ewan Ashman, who had another storming performance in a strong individual season.
"He's a very important player to us," Everitt said. "He joined the leadership group several weeks ago and he's made a massive impact there as well. He's normally a quiet guy around the group.
"With that, his rugby has grown as well. He's improved his set-piece, but he's not getting uptight when he does lose one or two."
Scotland eager to 'right wrongs' against Italypublished at 18:18 BST 24 April
18:18 BST 24 April
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Forward Elliann Clarke wants Scotland to "right some wrongs" against Italy in the Women's Six Nations on Saturday after their hammering by England last week.
The Scots followed their opening win over Wales with an 84-7 home loss and are looking to bounce back in Parma.
"Coming off the back of last week, we really are conscious that we want to put in a really good performance this weekend and right some wrongs from England last week," said Bristol prop Clarke.
"But we're excited to play against Italy. They've got some really exciting backs and they play a really fun, exciting brand of rugby to watch so I think it'll be a challenge.
"It always is, it's always a close game and it's gone back and forward between us over the last few years. But in training we've been really excited to take some steps forward and really get into them up front and in set-piece and just prove ourselves a bit further from last week.
"Physicality will be our first thing we're looking for and then just a bit of skill execution.
"We really want to go out there, score some points, put on a performance that genuinely we can be proud of as players, as coaches and for the fans at home to really give them something to cheer."
Steyn back as Glasgow Warriors make 10 changes for Stormerspublished at 13:22 BST 24 April
13:22 BST 24 April
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Ryan Burke will make his first Glasgow Warriors start in the second row as captain Kyle Steyn returns for top of the URC table visit to Stormers.
Warriors lead the way by four points going into the contest in Cape Town and will need to improve on last weekend's 54-12 mauling from the Lions in Johannesburg.
There are 10 changes to the starting line-up, with Patrick Schickerling, Gregor Hiddleston and Zander Fagerson forming a new front row and Angus Fraser chosen at openside flanker.
Adam Hastings is back from injury at fly-half and is joined by scrum-half Ben Afshar.
Centre Sione Tuipulotu swaps places with Stafford McDowell after coming off the bench against the Lions.
Steyn and Ollie Smith are the wingers, with Kyle Rowe shifting to full-back.
The 6ft, 7in Burke, 21, who made his debut as a replacement in Johannesburg, will play alongside Alex Samuel.
Warriors, champions in 2024, and Stormers, the 2022 winners, share a record of 11 wins and four defeats.
"They are able to call upon some of the most exciting talents in the URC, blending physicality up front with an electrifying back-line," said Glasgow head coach Franco Smith of the hosts.
"It is a test that we know we must be at our best to match."
Edinburgh have 'lot more calls to make' & will Glasgow's Smith be backed?published at 09:44 BST 24 April
09:44 BST 24 April
BBC Scotland's chief sportswriter Tom English has been answering some of your Scottish rugby questions.
Brian asked: Regarding the ongoing coaching problems, why do the SRU/Edinburgh seem to be happy to sit and take all the flak without reply? If a player showed such lack of backbone, they would be gone.
Tom answered: The SRU might argue they're responding by appointing Brad Davis and Tim Sampson to the coaching ticket and signing Riley Higgins for next season. I'd imagine more names will be announced soonish.
Action speaks louder than words. I don't really care what the decision-makers at Edinburgh say, but I do care about what they do.
Their faith in Sean Everitt surprises me, but they've made that call now, however unpopular. They have a lot more calls to make. They need a top-class 10 and strong 15 for starters. And they need to get an awful lot more out of Duhan van der Merwe.
He's not going to be playing many Tests, I'd imagine, so he'd better get used to bringing his best stuff to Edinburgh instead. He's been an expensive luxury item the past two seasons - hampered by injury at times - and he needs a big club season next time around.
Alan asked: As Glasgow battle on while leading the URC table and after some good wins in Europe, the key question is will Franco Smith receive the backing to sign at least three high quality players at number eight, stand-off and centre?
Tom answered: They're losing a lot in the summer - Jack Dempsey, Huw Jones, Adam Hastings, Sione Vailanu, Johnny Matthews and Jamie Bhatti.
They're bringing in Ruwald van der Merwe, the 27-year-old South African back-row, and promoting a raft of talented players from the academy - Macenzzie Duncan, Matthew Urwin, Johnny Ventesei, Fergus Watson, Kerr Yule.
The outgoing players account for some pretty hefty salaries, so Smith needs to be given every latitude to recruit. The emphasis has to be on Scottish-qualified players but there is a little bit of give in that.
They need more at 10, they could do with another hooker, probably need a heavy-hitter in the back-row, too. Smith needs help. He's earned it.