Summary

  • Furbank bursts over to give England early lead but Van der Merwe goes over twice to put Scots in front

  • Scotland wing crosses again after break to complete hat trick

  • Feyi-Waboso goes over to cut gap

  • Scotland win four in a row against England for first time since 1896

  1. Postpublished at 16:59 Greenwich Mean Time 24 February

    Scotland 0-7 England

    Andy Nicol
    Former Scotland scrum-half on Sportsound

    Scotland look surprised by this rushed defence. They've been talking all week about a blitz defence and there's no evidence of them coping with it. Poor start for Scotland.

  2. Postpublished at 16:59 Greenwich Mean Time 24 February

    Scotland 0-7 England

    Chris Jones
    BBC rugby union correspondent on BBC Radio 5 Live

    Scotland need to give this crowd something to get them back to the level they were at before kick-off.

  3. Postpublished at 11 mins

    Scotland 0-7 England

    Scotland have been all over the place so far.

    Ben White throws a pass to no-one in particular, which England pounce upon.

    Thankfully for the hosts, Ollie Lawrence knocks-on with Scotland's defence stretched.

  4. Postpublished at 16:56 Greenwich Mean Time 24 February

    Scotland 0-7 England

    Andy Nicol
    Former Scotland scrum-half on Sportsound

    This might be the most important HIA Scotland have ever had. If Zander Fagerson fails this then that's going to be massive.

  5. Postpublished at 8 mins

    Scotland 0-7 England

    Scotland prop Zander Fagerson is off for an HIA, with Elliot Millar-Mills on in his place.

  6. Postpublished at 16:56 Greenwich Mean Time 24 February

    Scotland 0-7 England

    Chris Paterson
    Former Scotland international on BBC One

    There's been loads of talk about England's firepower in the middle but they have used Lawrence there perfectly as the decoy.

    He has sucked in a couple of defenders to create space elsewhere.

    England celebrateImage source, PA Media
  7. Postpublished at 16:54 Greenwich Mean Time 24 February

    Scotland 0-7 England

    Chris Ashton
    Former England winger on BBC Radio 5 Live

    You cannot just leave the blindside open. That was all about Elliot Daly.

  8. converted try

    Converted try Scotland 0-7 Englandpublished at 6 mins

    George Furbank

    Media caption,

    England's Furbank scores the opening try against Scotland in the Six Nations

    Like a hot knife through butter.

    A perfectly executed backs move unpicks the Scotland defence, and George Furbank goes over for his first England try.

    George Ford delays his pass perfectly to put Elliot Daly through a hole.

    Furbank is there in support and has a huge grin on his face as he dots down.

    George Ford adds the extras.

  9. Postpublished at 5 mins

    Scotland 0-0 England

    After a couple of resets, England win a free-kick and opt to scrum again, with the ball on their side this time.

  10. Postpublished at 3 mins

    Scotland 0-0 England

    England have started fairly brightly here, and make their way into Scotland's 22 before Henry Slade throws a forward pass.

    We'll have the game's first scrum and a chance to take a breath.

  11. Postpublished at 16:47 Greenwich Mean Time 24 February

    Scotland 0-0 England

    Chris Ashton
    Former England winger on BBC Radio 5 Live

    It is intense down here. The pressure is building, and it's a good atmosphere.

    What an occasion.

  12. Postpublished at 16:46 Greenwich Mean Time 24 February

    Scotland 0-0 England

    Andy Nicol
    Former Scotland scrum-half on Sportsound

    England have the edge on the bench in terms of forwards.

    They've got serious ball carriers and if it's a tight game which we all think it will be, they could be the difference.

    Cameron Redpath needs to come off the bench a lot sooner than he has done in previous games to have a bigger impact.

  13. Kick-offpublished at 1 min

    Scotland 0-0 England

    Andrew Brace peeps his whistle, George Ford kicks high into the Edinburgh sky, and away we go...

  14. Anthem timepublished at 16:44 Greenwich Mean Time 24 February

    Scotland v England (16:45 GMT)

    Flower of Scotland follows God Save the King, and kick-off is just around the corner now.

    Media caption,

    Passion in the Murrayfield Stadium as Scotland and their fans sing the national anthem

  15. Postpublished at 16:43 Greenwich Mean Time 24 February

    Scotland v England (16:45 GMT)

    Matt Dawson
    2003 World Cup winner on BBC Radio 5 Live

    It's going to be an incredibly emotional game here for Jamie George, and we want to make sure we look after him today and after the game.

    He is a fantastic leader and a great person. I would expect the sad news will have brought the team together this week.

  16. 'I want to continue making Mum proud' - Georgepublished at 16:41 Greenwich Mean Time 24 February

    Scotland v England (16:45 GMT)

    This game will be a "special one" for England captain Jamie George following the death of his mother.

    The hooker's mother, Jane, died last week but George has decided to play because she "would have wanted me to".

    "I am so lucky that we have a great group of people here," he told Rugby Union Daily.

    "It is going to be special with the rest of my family in the stands. My parents never missed a game."

    George was named England captain before the Six Nations following Owen Farrell's decision to step away.

    "Sadly she never saw me captain England because she was too ill to be there but every other game she was there," he added.

    "Many of the highlights of her life were watching me play rugby for England and it will be amazing to do that again on Saturday.

    "Mum was probably the biggest England rugby fan there could ever be and I take great joy that she had a lot of happiness following me around the world.

    "She loved the boys, she loved watching me play and I want to continue making her proud."

    Jamie George warms upImage source, Getty Images
  17. Postpublished at 16:40 Greenwich Mean Time 24 February

    Scotland v England (16:45 GMT)

    The two sets of players emerge at a packed-out Murrayfield.

    How are the nerves?

  18. Postpublished at 16:39 Greenwich Mean Time 24 February

    Scotland v England (16:45 GMT)

    Peter Wright
    Former Scotland prop on Sportsound

    Scotland have to make sure they get referee Andrew Brace on side, and be on the right side of the penalties.

    Do that and Townsend's side will have a proper chance.

  19. 'The biggest fixture we have' - Townsendpublished at 16:35 Greenwich Mean Time 24 February

    Scotland v England (16:45 GMT)

    Scotland coach Gregor Townsend tells BBC One:

    "I think I am much more relaxed now than when I was a player.

    "I love days like this, when the crowd are passionate. We get to play for a trophy, it is the biggest fixture we have and it is great to see so many fans here two hours before kick off.

    "It is about bouncing back from a defeat, playing a one-off game against a very good opponent, playing for a trophy, that is all we are thinking about.

    "We know there is a lot of negativity if we don't win in terms of the championship. It is about how we learn from the last game and learn how to win."

    On England's blitz defence:

    "They have only played two games so I am sure they have lots of time to work on it.

    "We are expecting an aggressive defence, one that will probably be more connected that the first two games. For us it is about working out solutions of how to put that defence under pressure."

    Scotland head coach Gregor TownsendImage source, SNS
  20. BBC coveragepublished at 16:32 Greenwich Mean Time 24 February

    Scotland v England (16:45 GMT)

    BBC Sounds

    As well as the tele coverage on BBC One, and the live text updates from yours truly, you can also listen to all the action from Murrayfield on the radio.

    Either click the links at the top of this page, or tune in via BBC Sounds, it's entirely up to you.

    Rugby correspondent Chris Jones is on air on Radio 5 Sports Extra right now with Matt Dawson, Chris Ashton and Johnnie Beattie. Commentary will start on 5 Live as soon as Manchester United v Fulham finishes.