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POST MATCH REACTIONS | Scotland v France | Scotland secured an historic 50–40 bonus-point victory
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In a match that will be remembered for years to come, Scotland secured an historic 50–40 bonus-point victory over France in Edinburgh.
In a breathtaking display of attacking ambition and clinical opportunism, Scotland dismantled the Championship leaders, blowing the title race wide open ahead of the final weekend.
A game of momentum swings
The atmosphere in Edinburgh was electric, and the opening 40 minutes delivered on the intensity of a match that had been billed in some quarters as a de facto final. Scotland, prioritising a fast start, took the lead in the 10th minute when Darcy Graham darted over following a sharp surge from Sione Tuipulotu.
France, clinical as ever, hit back through Louis Bielle-Biarrey - scoring his 13th try in nine Championship games - who crossed in the corner after an Antoine Dupont steal at a scrum. Moments later, the visitors seized the lead through Théo Attissogbe, who capitalised on a delicate Bielle-Biarrey grubber kick.
Scotland’s resilience shone through before the break. Influential winger Kyle Steyn finished a perfectly executed training-ground move to narrow the gap, and just before the interval, prop Pierre Schoeman bundled over from close range to restore the Scottish lead. France’s difficulties were compounded when fly-half Matthieu Jalibert was sent to the sin-bin, leaving the hosts 19–14 up at half-time.
The great Scottish surge
Scotland began the second half with ruthless intent. Scrum-half Ben White, who plies his trade with Toulon in the Top 14, ignited the charge in the 47th minute, spotting a gap from the base of a ruck to sneak over for the bonus-point score. The euphoria reached fever pitch when Antoine Dupont threw an uncharacteristic intercept pass on halfway; Kyle Steyn pounced, racing clear to touch down and extend the lead to 19 points.
France, appearing shell-shocked, began to unravel. Discipline - the pillar of their campaign until now - crumbled as Lenni Nouchi saw yellow. Scotland ruthlessly exploited the advantage, with Darcy Graham dancing through a fragmented French defence for his second, followed by a powerful surge from replacement Tom Jordan. At 47–14, Murrayfield was witnessing a French capitulation that defied all pre-match narratives.
Late drama and a Championship reborn
France refused to leave empty-handed, staging a frantic late rally to hunt for a four-try bonus point. They crossed through Antoine Dupont, Thomas Ramos (twice), and Pierre-Louis Barassi. Scotland answered with a Finn Russell penalty, taking them to a half-century of points for the first time in this fixture's history.
Though the final ten minutes became a high-scoring shootout, the damage was irrecoverable for the visitors.
Full-time reflection
This was a day where Scotland proved they could not only live with the world’s best but overwhelm them. For head coach Gregor Townsend, the 80-minute performance his captain, centre Sione Tuipulotu, had called for was delivered in spades, characterised by a dominant scrum and a backline that punished every French error.
France depart Edinburgh with two vital bonus points, but their aura of invincibility has been shattered. For Scotland, the dream of a first Six Nations title is very much alive, setting up a monumental final-round showdown in Dublin.
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11 minutes.