
Celtic Challenge Cup: Glasgow Warriors 36-17 Edinburgh
Glasgow Warriors (19) 36Tries: Bell, McDonald, Yeomans, Evans, Norval, McNamara Cons: McNamara 3Edinburgh (12) 17Tries: MacRae, Ronald, Gunderson Cons: MacRae
Glasgow Warriors secured their first ever win in the Celtic Challenge Cup as they defeated rivals Edinburgh 36-17 at Scotstoun.First-half tries from Gemma Bell, Scotland international Mairi McDonald and Kate Yeomans had the hosts in front at the break, despite efforts from Lucy MacRae and Aila Ronald.With a 19-12 half-time lead, Glasgow enjoyed the better of the second half too with Abi Evans, debutant Emily Norval, and player of the match Briar McNamara dotting down.Merryn Gunderson did score late for the visitors, but it was not enough to save them from a fifth defeat in succession.

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BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Scotland players fear losing contracts after World Cup
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Press and Journal
4 hours ago
- Press and Journal
Highland League digest: Hamish Ritchie joins Formartine United; Rothes boss Ronnie Sharp on his two new recruits
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Wiseman featured for Vale's first-team, under-21s and under-18s last term and manager Garry Wood said: 'Joel has shown great promise, and we look forward to supporting his development over the coming years. 'Our aim is to help him establish himself as a regular member of the squad. 'Last season he demonstrated his goal-scoring ability at all levels and he possesses a number of strong attributes that we're excited to build on as he continues his progression.' Rothes manager Ronnie Sharp believes new signings Rory Williamson and Robbie Lean will prove to be quality additions. The Speysiders have swooped to sign the midfield duo from junior side Nairn St Ninian. Former Inverness Caledonian Thistle youth player Williamson, 21, previously played for Nairn County in the Breedon Highland League between 2021 and 2023 and also had a loan stint at Strathspey Thistle before joining Nairn St Ninian. Elgin City youth product Lean, 20, was also at Nairn County before joining St Ninian last summer. 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Nairn have also promoted left-back Ross Murphy, 18, midfielder Chevy Thomson, 18, and 16-year-old midfielder Charlie McKenzie to their first-team squad. The trio have all been part of the Wee County's under-18s set-up.


Scotsman
6 hours ago
- Scotsman
What TV channel is Leinster v Bulls on? How to watch URC final
New name on trophy as rival coaches feel the pressure Sign up to our Rugby Union newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... The short history of the BKT United Rugby Championship has produced three different winners and a fourth name will be added to the roll of honour in Dublin on Saturday evening as Leinster and the Bulls contest the final. The South African side are hoping it will be a case of third time lucky after they fell at the final hurdle in 2022 - losing to the Stormers - and last season, when Glasgow Warriors defeated them in their own backyard. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Leinster are through to the final for the first time after losing in the semis three years in a row and are most people's favourites to lift the hulking silverware at Croke Park and end a trophy drought which has lasted since 2021 when they won the Guinness Pro14. Leinster captain Jack Conan and Vodacom Bulls skipper Ruan Nortjé with the BKT URC Trophy at Croke Park. | ©INPHO/Ben Brady A 40,000-plus attendance is expected at the GAA citadel in Dublin, a decent enough crowd given supporters have only had a week's notice and the obvious limitations on travelling fans. Jake White, the Bulls' World Cup-winning coach, is under pressure to deliver after last season's shock home loss to Glasgow but was diplomacy personified as he talked up Leinster at the pre-match press conference at Croke Park. 'Leinster are the benchmark, not just in the URC but in club rugby all over the world,' White said. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Leinster, who dethroned Glasgow in last weekend's semi-final, also have to deal with the weight of expectation and Leo Cullen bit back at reporters. 'I think the way some of the questions are leading me it's like whoever loses is a failure in this game,' Cullen said. 'So they are two good teams going at it. If you lose in a final, are you classified as a failure?' What TV channel is the URC final? The match will be broadcast live on Premier Sports, with the subscription TV station offering two different options to viewers.