Gregor Townsend has named a 36-player Scotland squad for the inaugural Nations Championship that is notable as much for who has been left out as for who has been included. Blair Kinghorn, Huw Jones, Jamie Ritchie, Grant Gilchrist and George Turner — five players with a combined 225 caps — are all absent as Scotland prepare for a daunting summer schedule that takes them to Argentina on 4 July, South Africa on 11 July and back to Scottish Gas Murrayfield to host Fiji on 18 July.
Key team news:
- Blair Kinghorn, Huw Jones, Jamie Ritchie, Grant Gilchrist and George Turner all absent from 36-man squad
- Uncapped Glasgow Warriors hookers Gregor Hiddleston and Seb Stephen earn maiden call-ups
- Scott Cummings and Pierre Schoeman sit one cap away from their 50th appearances
- Jack Dempsey included despite imminent move to Japanese club Toshiba Brave Lupus Tokyo
- Duhan van der Merwe returns to the fold after being dropped during the Six Nations
- Sione Tuipulotu continues as captain for fixtures against Argentina, South Africa and Fiji
The headline selection call sees Townsend rest Kinghorn, whose Toulouse side remain involved in the Top 14 semi-finals. The full-back has played a relentless year without a meaningful break and was also on duty with the British and Irish Lions last summer. “We wanted him to have a bigger break this season, he didn’t get that after the Lions tour last year,” Townsend explained, with Ollie Smith and Tom Jordan set to compete for the number 15 jersey in his absence.
Jones misses out through injury. The British and Irish Lions centre is returning from a foot problem but will not be match fit in time for the opening fixture against the Pumas. Ritchie’s ankle injury, which first surfaced against England in February’s Six Nations, has ended his tour hopes, while hooker Turner has been ruled out with an Achilles problem. Hooker Dave Cherry also misses out with a back issue.
The decision to rest Gilchrist is a long-term strategic one. At 35, the veteran Edinburgh lock has been a near ever-present for Scotland over the past two seasons and Townsend is thinking ahead to the 2027 Rugby World Cup. “We really want him to be playing his best rugby next year and get to a World Cup, that’s the goal for him,” the head coach said. “We feel having a longer break this summer will help that.”
In their absence, two uncapped Glasgow Warriors hookers provide the freshest faces in the squad. Gregor Hiddleston, 24, has two Scotland A caps and Under-20 experience, while Seb Stephen, still only 20, featured for Emerging Scotland last year and signed his first professional contract with the Warriors in April. Both join Ewan Ashman, Scotland’s all-time highest scoring men’s forward, as the three hooker options — a young trio that highlights the squad’s forward-looking nature.
Townsend made no attempt to downplay the scale of the challenge awaiting his side. “It is a much tougher tour than ever before, certainly in the time I’ve been coach,” he said. “Not only with the travel, but the opposition. Three teams in the top eight in the world and one being the number one team in the world.” The match against South Africa at Loftus Versfeld in Pretoria represents a particularly stern examination, with the Springboks currently the top-ranked side in the world. “We feel as strong a team as possible will give us the best chance of winning. But also we’re going to get a lot of learning from these games to take into next season.”
Scotland finished third in this year’s Six Nations with three wins from five and will be looking to build on that momentum. Sione Tuipulotu continues as captain and is one of a strong Glasgow Warriors contingent that dominates the squad. The Warriors provide the majority of the selections, with Edinburgh Rugby, and a smattering of players based in England and France, making up the balance.
The return of Duhan van der Merwe is significant. The Edinburgh wing was dropped during the Six Nations after an inconsistent start to the campaign but comes back into the fold alongside fellow back-three operators Darcy Graham — who joins fresh from a stint with GB Sevens — Kyle Rowe and Kyle Steyn. Van der Merwe will be involved with the Barbarians before linking up with the Scotland camp, featuring in matches against South Africa in Gqeberha on 20 June and Wales in Cardiff on 27 June. D’arcy Rae and Liam McConnell will also be on Barbarians duty before joining up.
There are enticing milestone opportunities within the squad. Scott Cummings and Pierre Schoeman both sit on 49 caps and could reach their half-centuries in the opener against Argentina. Rory Sutherland is two appearances away from 50 and could achieve the landmark during the tour. Finn Russell, at 94 caps, continues to lead the way among the backs and is selected alongside Fergus Burke and Bristol Bears’ Tom Jordan as the three fly-half options.
Edinburgh’s young back-row contingent provides further evidence of the development pathway Townsend is nurturing. Freddy Douglas, with two caps, and Liam McConnell, with one, are included alongside their club captain Magnus Bradbury. They join an experienced loose forward group featuring Rory Darge, Matt Fagerson, Jack Dempsey and Josh Bayliss of Bath.
Dempsey’s inclusion is noteworthy given his confirmed move to Toshiba Brave Lupus Tokyo ahead of next season. The Australia-born number eight will leave Glasgow Warriors after the tour, making these potentially his final appearances in a Scotland jersey for the foreseeable future. Adam Hastings is among the other notable omissions, with no place in the squad for the fly-half.
The second-row stocks look strong despite Gilchrist’s absence. Jonny Gray, now plying his trade at Perpignan, provides 81 caps’ worth of experience alongside Cummings, while Max Williamson, Gregor Brown and Alex Samuel — all Glasgow Warriors — offer younger options. Both Williamson and Brown missed the end of the URC season through injury but are fit enough for selection.
The scrum-half berths go to Glasgow pair Jamie Dobie and George Horne alongside Ben White, who has been playing his club rugby at Toulon. In midfield, Tuipulotu is joined by Stafford McDowall and Rory Hutchinson of Northampton Saints.
Scotland’s challenge this summer is one of balance — maintaining the momentum of a strong Six Nations while blooding younger talent against three of the world’s top-eight ranked sides. The inclusion of Hiddleston and Stephen signals an investment in the future hooking stocks, while the resting of Kinghorn and Gilchrist shows a coach with one eye firmly on the World Cup cycle.
The autumn portion of the Nations Championship awaits later in the year, and how Scotland emerge from this summer’s fixtures could shape the tone of the entire campaign.
Scotland squad for Nations Championship
Forwards (22): Ewan Ashman (Edinburgh Rugby, 35 caps), Josh Bayliss (Bath Rugby, 16), Magnus Bradbury (Edinburgh Rugby, 22), Gregor Brown (Glasgow Warriors, 16), Scott Cummings (Glasgow Warriors, 49), Rory Darge (Glasgow Warriors, 39), Jack Dempsey (Glasgow Warriors, 33), Freddy Douglas (Edinburgh Rugby, 2), Matt Fagerson (Glasgow Warriors, 64), Zander Fagerson (Glasgow Warriors, 81), Jonny Gray (Perpignan, 81), Gregor Hiddleston (Glasgow Warriors, uncapped), Will Hurd (Leicester Tigers, 10), Nathan McBeth (Glasgow Warriors, 8), Liam McConnell (Edinburgh Rugby, 1), Elliot Millar Mills (Northampton Saints, 14), D’arcy Rae (Edinburgh Rugby, 7), Alex Samuel (Glasgow Warriors, 3), Pierre Schoeman (Edinburgh Rugby, 49), Seb Stephen (Glasgow Warriors, uncapped), Rory Sutherland (Glasgow Warriors, 48), Max Williamson (Glasgow Warriors, 13).
Backs (14): Fergus Burke (Saracens, 3), Jamie Dobie (Glasgow Warriors, 19), Darcy Graham (Edinburgh Rugby, 55), George Horne (Glasgow Warriors, 45), Rory Hutchinson (Northampton Saints, 11), Tom Jordan (Bristol Bears, 17), Stafford McDowall (Glasgow Warriors, 16), Kyle Rowe (Glasgow Warriors, 17), Finn Russell (Bath Rugby, 94), Ollie Smith (Glasgow Warriors, 12), Kyle Steyn (Glasgow Warriors, 33), Sione Tuipulotu (captain, Glasgow Warriors, 38), Duhan van der Merwe (Edinburgh Rugby, 53), Ben White (Toulon, 36).
Nations Championship fixtures: Argentina v Scotland, Cordoba, Saturday 4 July. South Africa v Scotland, Loftus Versfeld, Pretoria, Saturday 11 July. Scotland v Fiji, Scottish Gas Murrayfield, Edinburgh, Saturday 18 July.