Under the Radar: Can Scotland’s Unfancied Side Shock the Six Nations?
The narrative for the 2025 Guinness Six Nations is already being written in bold, familiar ink. France, defending champions, seek to solidify their dynasty on home soil. Ireland, wounded after relinquishing the crown they held for two glorious years, are hell-bent on reclaiming it. England, riding an 11-match winning streak, arrive with a swagger not seen in years. And then, there’s Scotland. Not the plucky underdogs, not the fashionable dark horses, but a team flying so firmly under the radar they are almost invisible in the pre-championship chatter. In the shadow of titans, a critical question simmers: is this the perfect ambush waiting to happen?
The Case for the Prosecution: A History of Near Misses
To understand why Scotland are being dismissed, one must first confront their recent history. The tag of ‘nearly men’ has become a uncomfortable fit. They have finished fourth in the past two Six Nations campaigns, a position that flatters only in its consistency of falling just short. The autumn series was a psychological blow, a masterclass in snatched defeat from the jaws of victory. A golden, historic chance to beat the All Blacks evaporated. A 21-0 lead against Argentina turned into a dispiriting collapse. These are not the hallmarks of champions.
Captain Sione Tuipulotu, the orchestrator of their midfield who missed the entire 2024 championship through injury, has tellingly refused to set public targets. It is a move born of painful experience, a conscious effort to avoid providing soundbites that can be weaponized against them should they stumble. This defensive posture speaks volumes. The squad, arguably the strongest and deepest in the professional era, carries the weight of unfulfilled potential. In a tournament where momentum and belief are currency, Scotland’s wallet has felt light.
The Case for the Defence: The Ingredients of an Upset
Yet, to write off Gregor Townsend’s side completely is to ignore a potent cocktail of talent, motivation, and opportunity. Their under-the-radar status is not a weakness but a potential strategic advantage. The pressure is squarely on others. Within Murrayfield’s walls, the tools for an uprising are present.
- The Return of Sione Tuipulotu: His absence last year was catastrophic for Scotland’s attacking structure. His partnership with Huw Jones is the most creative midfield in the tournament. His return provides tactical clarity, defensive grit, and a priceless leadership voice.
- Forward Foundation: The pack is no longer just competitive; it is a point of difference. A world-class back row of Ritchie, Darge, and Dempsey can disrupt any team. The front row, with Schoeman and Fagerson, provides a scrummaging platform that can dominate.
- Point-of-Difference Players: In Finn Russell, they possess a generational talent who can win games single-handedly. Duhan van der Merwe is the championship’s all-time leading try-scorer for a reason. These are game-breakers who thrive in chaotic, high-stakes environments.
Furthermore, their schedule presents a glimmer of a path. While daunting, starting with a home fixture against a transitioning Wales offers a chance to build early momentum. The ultimate test comes in the middle rounds: hosting England and travelling to Ireland. To be contenders, they must finally win one of these monumental fixtures. The dispelling of mental barriers is their single biggest task.
The Verdict: Contenders or Pretenders?
So, can they truly contend? The answer is a qualified yes, but with a crucial distinction. Scotland are not favourites, and rightly so. The consistency required to win a Six Nations—beating all comers over five brutal weekends—has eluded them for 26 years. However, they are the championship’s ultimate spoiler candidate and potential table-toppers if the stars align.
Their title challenge is less about a Grand Slam march and more about a specific, brutal sequence: win their three home games (Wales, England, Italy) and steal one monumental away victory, most likely in Paris on the final day or in Dublin. It is a narrow, treacherous path, but it exists. Their success hinges on two transformative shifts: converting 50/50 moments in big games (which they failed to do in November) and finding an 80-minute performance discipline to complement their explosive attacking prowess.
The presence of Tuipulotu is the key that unlocks this. He is the steadying influence, the defensive rock, and the creative foil that allows Russell to operate at his mercurial best. With him, Scotland are not just a team of moments; they are a structured, dangerous side.
Prediction: The Pivotal Campaign
Expect this to be Scotland’s most pivotal Six Nations in a decade. It will define an era of this team. The prediction here is not for a title, but for a fundamental breakthrough that reshapes the championship landscape.
- They will finally defeat a top-tier rival at home, most likely a stuttering England, in a seismic Murrayfield occasion.
- They will be in the championship conversation heading into the final weekend, making their trip to France a potential title decider—for France.
- They will finish either a clear second or a heart-breaking third on points difference, their best result since 2018.
This represents tangible progress. It moves them from dark horses to genuine, acknowledged threats. It would be a campaign that sheds the ‘nearly men’ skin and forges a new identity as relentless challengers.
Conclusion: The Power of Anonymity
In the glitzy, hype-driven circus of the modern Six Nations, Scotland’s anonymity is their secret weapon. While others grapple with the burden of expectation, Townsend’s squad can hone their craft in the shadows. They possess the personnel, the experience, and now, the burning humiliation from November, to launch a serious assault. The return of Sione Tuipulotu is the catalyst, providing the leadership and stability their flashes of brilliance have often lacked.
Will they win the Six Nations? Probably not. The mountain is simply too steep. But to dismiss them as also-rans is a grave mistake. This Scotland side is built to ruin the party for others and, if they can conquer the mental ghosts of collapses past, they are capable of staging a stunning coup. The 2025 championship may be framed as a battle between France, Ireland, and England, but history has often been written by the unfancied side with nothing to lose and a point to prove. Beware the quiet Scot. This year, they are not just participating; they are lying in wait.
Source: Based on news from BBC Sport.
