Exiting Scotland star partially blamed for Edinburgh loss by 'angry' Everitt
Sean Everitt felt Edinburgh only had themselves to blame for losing to Benetton on Friday – but he refused to let Toulouse-bound Blair Kinghorn carry the can for his late victory-costing error.
The Scots looked on course to go top of the United Rugby Championship overnight when they led 12-0 early on and then 19-10 at half-time.
But they let Benetton back into the game in the second half and the Italians eked out a 24-22 victory.
“I’m disappointed and at the same time angry because the things that let us down are the same things we’ve spoken about,” said senior coach Everitt.
“We put ourselves into a position to lose the game – Benetton didn’t dominate and win it, we lost it.
“We lost our line-out five metres out when we could have put them to bed and they ended up scoring 100 yards down the field on the return play, so that’s really disappointing for the boys.
“You can’t knock the effort the team put in and, from a discipline point of view, we were OK at half-time having given away four penalties and four turnovers, but then at the start of the second half we gave away two penalties in a row which led to the try, then obviously the soft moment late in the game which we couldn’t get back from.”
The soft moment Everitt referred to was a terrible 68th-minute error from Kinghorn, who – under little obvious pressure – got himself in trouble and fumbled possession into the path of Marco Zanon, who dotted over for what proved to be the decisive score of the night.
The Scotland full-back, who will join Toulouse after next weekend’s trip to Ulster, had looked like signing off from the Hive Stadium on a high with two first-half tries.
Everitt added: “Blair did extremely well under the high ball and had a good game. We can’t fault him for one mistake because then we have to fault everyone.
“We’ll all take it on the chin as a team and coaching staff and move on.”
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The weather was dreadful but the playing surface was great so there is no real excuse for such another poor standard of play from both sides. Dragons just the better team. But, what a shocking decision by the TMO not to award the Fifita try. This pretty much sums up Welsh rugby with poor teams and poor officials. The WRU have a lot of work to do and it needs to be done quickly to avoid rugby being lost to our future generations.
Go to commentsNo chance of Borthwick selecting any young talent. He announced his selection policy from the outset with naming a poor OF as Captain, retaining an equally poor Youngs and Vunipola brothers when there were many better EQP in the Premiership. SB revival of Leicester was based on SA muscle and a terrific Welsh flanker he has generally ignored young English talent.
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