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Wales player ratings vs Scotland | 2025 Six Nations

Wales hooker Elliot Dee passes the ball during the Guinness Six Nations match against Scotland at Murrayfield on March 8, 2025 (Credit: PA).

Wales player ratings: Perhaps unsurprisingly, the vibes that almost carried Wales to victory against Ireland in round three of the Guinness Six Nations were not enough at Murrayfield.

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Scotland ran them ragged for more than 40 minutes as tries from Player of the Match Blair Kinghorn (two), Tom Jordan (two) and Darcy Graham helped the hosts build a deserved 35-8 lead early in the second half.

Matt Sherratt’s side, to their credit, refused to lay down however, and recovered well in the final quarter to secure two bonus points and threaten a comeback.

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    Indeed, had Blair Murray not been penalised for hurdling an attempted tackle in the build-up to Taulupe Faletau’s non-try, maybe the impossible would have happened.

    As it was, Wales slipped to their fourth defeat of the Six Nations and welcome England to Cardiff next weekend having lost 16 Tests in a row.

    Here is how the Wales players rated in Edinburgh.

    15. Blair Murray – 5/10
    Scorer of Wales’ first try but this was not the full-back’s finest match in his short Test career to date. Industrious as ever but struggled to make an impact on either side of the ball, while his usual aerial prowess deserted him.

    Found wanting in defence more than once in the early exchanges as Scotland built their lead, but was not helped by teammates and showed his attacking threat again. Took his try well and provided the spark for Faletau’s late disallowed score, albeit it was his infringement that brought play back.

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    14. Tom Rogers – 5
    Lasted fewer than nine minutes before injury forced him off, by which point Scotland were in front and in control.

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    13. Max Llewellyn – 5
    Another all-energy performance from the Gloucester centre, whose omission from the original Six Nations squad looks stranger every time he appears in a red shirt. A willing runner with ball in hand, beating three defenders as he made more than 30 metres.

    His endeavour was rewarded with the try, his first in Test rugby, in the final play and that helped ensure that Wales came away with two bonus points.

    12. Ben Thomas – 5
    Something of a mixed evening for the Cardiff centre, who missed four tackles, the joint most in the match alongside midfield colleague Llewellyn and Joe Roberts. Albeit he completed 21, which is evidence of the amount of Scottish attacks that came his way.

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    Had little answer to Scotland’s brilliance in the first half and could have been in trouble when the TMO asked referee Andrea Piardi to look at the big screen. However, Thomas is central to everything that his team does in attack and supplied a fine finish to ignite Wales’ attempted fight back.

    11. Ellis Mee – 4
    Found things much tougher going than on his debut. Missed two tackles, including one that led to a Scotland try, and was unable to get his side on the front foot as he had done in Cardiff a fortnight ago.

    Is obviously new to Test rugby, though and will learn from this experience.

    10. Gareth Anscombe – 4
    Gave Wales a brief early lead from the tee but struggled to give his side the platform they needed during a chastening opening half. Bit too eagerly in one passage of play and left his side badly exposed, resulting in a try.

    Wales improved after he was replaced by Jarrod Evans early in the second half.

    9. Tomos Williams – 6
    Gave everything on both sides of the ball once again and his work rate cannot be questioned. Not his best game in a Wales shirt by any stretch but kept the team playing at tempo in the second half, which helped them gain a foothold in the match as Scottish legs tired.

    1. Nicky Smith – 6
    A key component of Wales’ scrum yet again and a willing carrier in the loose, Smith can be happy with his performance on a difficult evening for his side.

    2. Elliot Dee – 6
    Had the pressure of playing while Dewi Lake watched on from the sidelines, but was perfect at the lineout and put in a shift around the park for the 45 minutes he was on.

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    3. WillGriff John – 5
    The Sale prop’s effort cannot be faulted, having completed 13 tackles in less than 40 minutes’ worth of action, but like a number of his teammates this was a reversion to the mean following his exploits in round three.

    Was shown a yellow card with 10 minutes to go of the first half and was replaced early in the second.

    4. Dafydd Jenkins – 7
    Stole a Scottish lineout as Wales came under huge pressure in the first half and finished the match having completed 28 tackles according to the live stats.

    Jenkins also came up with two turnovers and alongside his captain, Jac Morgan, was probably Wales’ best performer at Murrayfield.

    5. Will Rowlands – 5
    Got through a lot of work as ever in his hour or so on the pitch, making 12 tackles. But was unable to find an answer to Scotland’s dominance in the first half.

    6. Jac Morgan – 7
    Another captain’s knock from the indefatigable Wales skipper. Completed 25 tackles and won two turnovers while also contributing nine carries to the attack – the third most of any Wales player.

    Continues to put his hand up for British and Irish Lions selection in a failing team.

    7. Tommy Reffell – 4
    Was unable to have the same impact in Edinburgh as he had at the Principality Stadium a fortnight ago. Not alone in that among those in red, but was the player sacrificed for Keiron Assiratti at the end of the first half and was then replaced permanently early in the second.

    8. Taulupe Faletau – 6.5
    Continues to be one of Wales’ most important players on both sides of the ball, and that was no different at Murrayfield where he made 111 metres from 15 carries while also completing 19 tackles.

    It is also fair to say that most of his best work with ball in hand was done in the final 20 minutes, by which time the match had already been lost.

    Replacements

    16. Dewi Lake – 6
    Came on and almost immediately showed Wales what they have missed during his time on the sidelines. Gave his side a lift with his energy on both sides of the ball.

    17. Gareth Thomas – 6
    Was only on the pitch for 25 minutes but completed 15 tackles and didn’t weaken his side at the set piece.

    18. Keiron Assiratti – 5
    Did nothing wrong during his time on the pitch, which once on permanently coincided with their best spell in the match.

    19. Teddy Williams – 6
    Came on for the final 20 minutes and scored a try as a result of an impressive carry close to the line.

    20. Aaron Wainwright – 6
    A promising 35 minutes off the bench. Completed 10 tackles and provided some much-needed thrust in attack.

    21. Rhodri Williams – 5
    Introduced for the final 10 minutes. Kept Wales on the front foot as they threatened a memorable comeback.

    22. Jarrod Evans – 6.5
    Provided a glimpse of what he can offer in attack, admittedly against tiring bodies. Produced a sumptuous pass to help unlock the Scottish defence for Ben Thomas’ try and can be happy with his cameo.

    23. Joe Roberts – 5.5
    Thrown into the action much earlier than anyone would have anticipated and was culpable defensively on a couple of occasions in the first half. Grew into the contest as it progressed and ended the match having made more metres (116) than any other player on the pitch.

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    Comments

    2 Comments
    S
    SL 45 days ago

    Watched a different game again because those ratings are biased in favour of some players and one has to question whether the reporter has the same agent as the aforementioned players?

    J
    Juliatriff896 46 days ago

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    Tom 47 days ago

    13. Max Llewellyn – 5

    “Another all-energy performance from the Gloucester centre, whose omission from the original Six Nations squad looks stranger every time he appears in a red shirt. A willing runner with ball in hand, beating three defenders as he made more than 30 metres.


    His endeavour was rewarded with the try, his first in Test rugby, in the final play and that helped ensure that Wales came away with two bonus points.”


    How does that add up to 5/10?

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    Comments on RugbyPass

    N
    NB 15 minutes ago
    How 'misunderstood' Rassie Erasmus is rolling back the clock

    Oh you mean this https://www.rugbypass.com/news/the-raw-data-that-proves-super-rugby-pacific-is-currently-a-cut-above/ . We know you like it because it finds a way to claim that SRP is the highest standard of club/provinicial comp in the world! So there is an agenda.


    “Data analysts ask us to produce reports from tables with millions of records, with live dashboards that constantly get updated. So unless there's a really good reason to use a median instead of a mean, we'll go with the mean.”


    That’s from the mouth of a guy who uses data analysis every day. Median is a useful tool, but much less wieldy than Mean for big datasets.


    Your suppositions about French forwards are completely wrong. The lightest member of any pack is typically the #7. Top 14 clubs all play without dedicated open-sides, they play hybrids instead. Thus Francois Cros in the national side is 110 kilos, Boudenhent at #6 is 112 kilos, and Alldritt is 115 k’s at #8. They are all similar in build.


    The topic of all sizes and shapes is not for the 75’s and the 140’s to get representation, it is that 90 to 110 range where everyone should probably be for the best rugby.

    This is where we disagree and where you are clouded by your preference for the SR model. I like the fact that rugby can include 140k and 75k guys in the same team, and that’s what France and SA are doing.


    It’s inclusive and democratic, not authoritarian and bureaucratic like your notion of narrowing the weight range between 90-110k’s.

    105 Go to comments
    J
    JW 1 hour ago
    How 'misunderstood' Rassie Erasmus is rolling back the clock

    One of the real-world spin-offs of Rassie’s selection policy was glossed over in the statement ‘it discriminates against backs; our game is for all shapes and sizes’. The truth is exactly the opposite.

    I think you misconstrue his point for this story.

    The biggest differential between the size of the forwards and the size of the backs is France at +29kg per man in favour of the forwards.

    This is exactly his point that you’re agreeing with, ALL the fowards are big (hence the discrepancy).


    You didn’t really make a good point yourself. A Data Analysts recently came in with an article about Super Rugby and was the first to correctly use Median instead of Mean as the basis of his prognosis. That’s what this article is missing. French forwards in their own would also have the widest margin of variance, with big and small forwards. French rugby, and their packs are frequently misidentified as large (again in just a recent article last week), when they actually have quite the tradition for athletic forwards as well.


    Back back to the real issue you have tried to highlight, much like League went, the game now is moving all forwards towards the same size and shape. The topic of all sizes and shapes is not for the 75’s and the 140’s to get representation, it is that 90 to 110 range where everyone should probably be for the best rugby. Hell the most popular form of rugby now in NZ is the u85’s I think, and you have everyone in it, short f/r, bean pole locks, explosive 2nd5’s. I think there’s some allowance but everyone else would be between that 80 to 85 range I reckon.


    I think it goes back to Grant Batty. Really enjoyed the explosion of all the little guys in Super Rugby this year as well, some of the best to watch. I’m not enjoying the discussion that stand out fowards in the competition like Du’Plessis Kirifi or Ioane Moananu are too small (read short) for International rugby forwards, so thank you very much Nick but you can kindly decease (FRO) with suggesting you can only be a forward if you’re 120kgs.

    105 Go to comments
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