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For the better part of two decades, Scotland have been the perennial emerging force among the home nations. They are repeatedly talked about as a team building toward something great, yet they have never arrived as genuine heavyweights capable of finally capturing Six Nations glory.

For the better part of two decades, Scotland have been the perennial emerging force among the home nations. They are repeatedly talked about as a team building toward something great, yet they have never arrived as genuine heavyweights capable of finally capturing Six Nations glory.
Scotland have assembled a squad that should be capable of beating the best sides in the world, with the arrival of once in a generation talent like Finn Russell, an incredible crop of home-grown players from club, add to that shrewd recruitment of southern hemisphere players who qualify through residency or a Scottish grandma.
Scotland remain a good team on their day, but they are still yet to claim major silverware. Their 2025 Autumn Nations Series underlined both why fans have hope and why scepticism still lingers about whether this squad can reach new heights and establish themselves as true contenders. On paper, this squad has enough quality to challenge anyone. Yet the results continue to sit in that uncomfortable space between promise and underachievement.
Their match against the All Blacks was their best opportunity in years to break their drought. They showed grit and threw punches all afternoon, but they never delivered the decisive blow needed to topple a heavyweight.
The defeat to Argentina will be even more disappointing. Coming off their performance against New Zealand, where they were praised for staying in the fight until the final whistle, Scotland then led Argentina 21-0 before collapsing to a 33-24 loss in the second half.
There is genuine belief that the foundations of this team are improving. Scotland have attacking flair, growing depth and flashes of talent across the squad. But the recurring issues remain impossible to ignore. When pressure comes on, Scotland too often fade instead of finishing games with authority. No one encapsulates this more than the mercurial Russell.
The Autumn Nations Series demonstrated exactly where Scotland sit in the rugby world order, a side that can beat everyone below them. It remains to be seen whether Scotland have the composure, physicality and consistency to turn promise into results.
Scrutiny on head coach Gregor Townsend is growing. The collapse against Argentina, combined with another near miss against New Zealand, has fuelled fresh questions about whether he is the right figure to guide Scotland to their potential.
Scotland’s championship window is starting to close. Key players are ageing, eligibility loopholes are tightening and this generation will not last forever. If Scotland cannot turn potential into trophies soon, they risk this golden generation becoming yet another chapter in the long history of Scottish rugby teams remembered for what they nearly achieved rather than what they actually won.