Share and Follow
Finn Russell acknowledges the frustration surrounding Scotland’s Autumn Test series performances but remains confident in his team’s ability to clinch the Six Nations title.
Scotland’s head coach, Gregor Townsend, has faced significant criticism following the team’s defeat to Argentina, with some questioning whether Scottish fans have become too ‘entitled’ in their expectations.
In an exclusive conversation with Scotland Rugby News, Russell refrained from commenting on the future of the coach or Townsend’s remarks. Instead, he shared his personal disappointment with how the series unfolded.
“Frustration and definitely disappointment,” Russell expressed, reflecting on the losses to the All Blacks and Argentina. “I have never been in a changing room as quiet and devastated as I was after that Argentina game.”
“There are certainly positive aspects, but allowing games to slip away in the final moments is something we cannot afford to let happen in the future,” he added.
Gregor Townsend has come under severe pressure after the Autumn Test Series
Scotland head coach Townsend must now pick up his side for the Six Nations in early 2026
Finn Russell was brutally honest about how he felt following the defeat to Argentina
âAgainst New Zealand, we put in a great performance, but in the end, we lost. As much as people said how good a game it was and how good the performance was, itâs a defeat.
âIn Test match rugby, it is only the result that matters. Then, against Argentina, after being so far and comfortably ahead, to lose that one was gutting.
âAs a playing group, staff, coaches, everyone involved, we need to look at what happened in that last 25 minutes or so and how we move on from here.
âWe have to learn when we are in such a dominant position to keep our foot down and be ruthless.
âWe have to ask ourselves what we want to achieve as players and what we want to be as a team?
âWhatâs our DNA, almost, what do we want to be known as? That is all part of getting the mental side of the game right. At the very least, we have to hold our own standards. We didnât hold to our own standards against Argentina.
âWe know that and weâve had tough, honest conversations about how weâre going to move forward as a team and what we can change and how we can get better.
âIn the last few games, we havenât been as good as we could be in the last 20 minutes, so we need to change that. Thatâs something weâll address ahead of the next Six Nations, when we take on the top teams in the world again.
âIn the next Six Nations, when we get to these last 20 minutes, and itâs a draw or we are ahead, we have to kick on and get that ruthless edge back.
âFor that to happen, we need to keep our standards high, and our mindset correct and be constantly demanding more from each other. The players, the coaches, and everyone must be pushing each other in the right direction to grow the team.
âSometimes it can be hard to call out your team-mate if thereâs a mistake, as you donât want to be having a go at them, but sometimes we have to point things out to try and get improvement.
Russell also held up his hand over the intercepted pass that sparked the Argentina comeback from 21-0 down.
Russell believe the Scotland players can be inspired by their footballing counterparts
âI addressed that moment in front of the team and said it had to be better from me,â said Russell. âPlayers were owning up to mistakes they made or things they could have done better in that game, and we hold each other accountable.
âI made a decent pass that set up Jack Dempsey for a try in the first half when it was on to go for the try, but that second-half pass that was intercepted was very disappointing for me. We all have our own standards, and that was well below my personal standards, which is annoying.â
Of what comes next, he pointed to the recent success of the Scotlandâs men football team and golfer Bob MacIntyre as inspiration.
âI want to do well with Scotland in the Six Nations. My dream is to win something with Scotland. Whether I do or not, Iâm not sure, but that is definitely the dream. I donât know how many more Six Nations and World Cups Iâve got left in me, but we will see.
âThere is a buzz after the football (World Cup qualification) just now, which wasnât there when I was growing up.
âBob MacIntyre is doing amazing at golf, and heâs up to seventh in the world. Many good things are happening in Scottish sport. So for us, we need to make sure we get our job done right, hopefully continue where the boys are in other sports in doing well, and give Scotland something to cheer about in the next Six Nations.
âThe goal is to win it obviously, but we certainly have to improve on our results from last year and start well in our opening game against Italy and gather momentum from there.â