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2016–17 Glasgow Warriors season

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Glasgow Warriors 2016 / 2017
Ground(s)Scotstoun Stadium (Capacity: 7,351)
Coach(es)Scotland Gregor Townsend
Captain(s)Scotland Jonny Gray
Scotland Henry Pyrgos
Most capsScotland Rob Harley (26)
Top scorerScotland Finn Russell (142)
Most triesScotland Tommy Seymour (9)
League(s)Pro 12
6th
1st kit
2nd kit

During the 2016–17 season, the Glasgow Warriors competed in the Guinness Pro12 and the European Champions Cup. It was the team's last season under head coach Gregor Townsend. Due to the flooding of its grass pitch, an artificial turf surface was installed at Scotstoun Stadium.

Overview

[edit]

Coaching changes and new pitch

[edit]

It was announced at the beginning of the season that it would be the last under head coach Gregor Townsend. Townsend was announced as taking over the Scotland head-coach role from Vern Cotter in the summer of 2017.[1] The SRU named Townsend's successor, Dave Rennie (New Zealand head coach of the Super Rugby Chiefs), two days later. The Chiefs had won the Super Rugby title twice under Rennie.[2]

Jason O'Halloran and Jonathan Humphreys were later also announced as joining the Warriors for the 2017–18 season.[3] To avoid the problems which plagued the 2015–16 season (when Scotstoun Stadium became unplayable due to flooding), a new artificial-grass pitch was installed at the stadium.[4]

Objectives

[edit]

Since this would be head coach Gregor Townsend's last season with the Warriors, a good European run was a key target; the Warriors had never qualified for the quarter-finals of the European Champions Cup.[5]

The Pro12 league began in 2011–12. Every year since then, the Warriors had made the play-offs during the final weeks; this was another target. The 1872 Cup had been held by Edinburgh Rugby for the previous two seasons, despite Glasgow finishing above Edinburgh in the Pro12 league in every year of Townsend's tenure,[6] and Glasgow wanted the cup back west.

Results

[edit]

A mixed season saw the team qualify for the European Champions Cup quarter-final for the first time, losing to the eventual champion Saracens. The Warriors missed a Pro12 play-off place for the first time, and the Autumn International and Six Nations Championship were particularly challenging.

With success came a problem. Glasgow were always a key supplier of players to the international team, but now they became a factory. It's hard to think of a side in world rugby that is as decimated by the international window as Glasgow. You pay a price for that eventually.

— BBC journalist Tom English[7]

Although the Warriors won the 1872 Cup, they lost their home match to Edinburgh for the first time.

Townsend era

[edit]

During Gregor Townsend's five-year tenure with the Warriors, he guided the team to the 2014-15 Pro12 title and a European Champions Cup quarter-final for the first time in 2016–17.[8] Except for this season, the team made the Pro12 play-offs every year he was head coach.

It's hard to put into words how much he's done for the club. He's taken us to another level. We went from having 1,000 people at Firhill if we're lucky to selling out Scotstoun every single week regardless of how we're playing. The brand of rugby we're playing means Gregor's getting tipped for all sorts of jobs and, for the last two or three years, every club's probably been after him at some point.

I think we’ve moved from being a bit-part club to every time we take the field people expecting a bloody hard game. I think we expect to go out and win every game we play now, so we’ve certainly moved on.

— Peter Horne, Glasgow Warriors Centre[8][9]

Team

[edit]

Coaches

[edit]

Staff

[edit]
  • Managing Director: Nathan Bombrys
  • Chairman: Charles Shaw
  • Advisory Group: Walter Malcolm, Douglas McCrea, Alan Lees, Jim Preston, Paul Taylor
  • Rugby Operations Manager: John Manson
  • Kit manager & Masseur: Dougie Mills
  • Clinical Manager: Lisa Casey
  • Team physiotherapist: Nicola McGuire
  • Rehabilitation Physiotherapist: Gabrielle McCullough
  • Team doctor: Dr. David Pugh
  • Commercial Operations Manager: Alastair Kellock
  • Communications Manager: Jeremy Bone
  • Communications Asst: Jack Reid
  • Operations manager: Stephanie Karvelis
  • Marketing and Partnerships Manager: Darroch Ramsay
  • Partnership Sales Manager: Laura Hynd
  • Partnership Account Manager: Oliver Norman
  • Partnership Account Manager: Jim Taylor
  • Game On Project Development Officer: Lindsey Smith
  • Community Rugby Coach: Stuart Lewis[10]

Squad

[edit]
 

Hookers

Scotland Fraser Brown
New Zealand Corey Flynn
Scotland Pat MacArthur
Scotland James Malcolm

Props

Scotland Alex Allan
Scotland Zander Fagerson
New Zealand Jarrod Firth
Scotland Ryan Grant
Tonga Sila Puafisi
Scotland D'Arcy Rae
Scotland Gordon Reid
Canada Djustice Sears-Duru

Locks

Samoa Brian Alainu'uese
Scotland Scott Cummings
Scotland Jonny Gray
United States Greg Peterson
Scotland Tim Swinson
Namibia Tjiuee Uanivi

 

Loose forwards

Scotland Adam Ashe
Scotland Hugh Blake
Italy Simone Favaro
Scotland Chris Fusaro
Scotland Rob Harley
United States Langilangi Haupeakui
Scotland Ruaridh MacKenzie
Scotland Matt Smith
Scotland Josh Strauss
Scotland Ryan Wilson
Scotland Lewis Wynne

Scrum halves

Scotland Grayson Hart
Fiji Nemia Kenatale
Scotland Ali Price
Scotland Henry Pyrgos

Fly halves

England Rory Clegg
Scotland Finn Russell
New Zealand Hagen Schulte
South Africa Brandon Thomson

 

Centres

Scotland Mark Bennett
Scotland Alex Dunbar
Scotland Nick Grigg
Scotland Peter Horne
Australia Sam Johnson
Scotland Fraser Lyle
Scotland Richie Vernon

Back three

Scotland Junior Bulumakau
Scotland Rory Hughes
Scotland Lee Jones
Scotland Sean Lamont
Scotland Tommy Seymour
Scotland Stuart Hogg
Scotland Peter Murchie
Italy Leonardo Sarto
Australia Ratu Tagive

 

Scottish Rugby Academy players assigned to a professional club were Stage 3 players.[11] They were assigned to the Warriors for the season. Academy players promoted during the season are listed with the main squad.

Other players used by the Warriors during the season:

Player statistics

[edit]

During the season, Glasgow used 57 different players in competitive games. The table below shows the number of appearances and points scored by each player.

Position Nation Name Pro12 Champions Cup Total
Apps
(sub)
Tries Points
kicked
Apps
(sub)
Tries Points
kicked
Apps
(sub)
Total Pts
HK Scotland Fraser Brown 10(1) 1 0 7 2 0 17(1) 15
HK New Zealand Corey Flynn 5(7) 3 0 (3) 0 0 5(10) 15
HK Scotland Pat MacArthur 7(8) 2 0 (4) 1 0 7(12) 10
HK Scotland James Malcolm 1(4) 1 0 0 0 0 1(4) 5
PR Scotland Alex Allan 9(9) 1 0 (7) 0 0 9(16) 5
PR Scotland Jamie Bhatti 1(5) 0 0 0 0 0 1(5) 0
PR Scotland Zander Fagerson 5(5) 0 0 7 0 0 12(5) 0
PR Scotland Ryan Grant (3) 0 0 0 0 0 (3) 0
PR Scotland Adam Nicol (1) 0 0 0 0 0 (1) 0
PR Tonga Sila Puafisi 11(8) 1 0 (5) 0 0 11(13) 5
PR Scotland D'Arcy Rae 6(8) 0 0 (2) 0 0 6(10) 0
PR Scotland Gordon Reid 11(2) 1 0 7 0 0 18(2) 5
PR Canada Djustice Sears-Duru 1(3) 0 0 0 0 0 1(3) 0
LK Samoa Brian Alainu'uese 11(2) 0 0 1(2) 0 0 12(4) 0
LK Scotland Scott Cummings 5(3) 2 0 0 0 0 5(3) 10
LK Scotland Jonny Gray 11 2 0 7 1 0 18 15
LK Scotland Callum Hunter-Hill (1) 0 0 0 0 0 (1) 0
LK Scotland Rob McAlpine 1(3) 0 0 0 0 0 1(3) 0
LK United States Greg Peterson 2(1) 0 0 (1) 0 0 2(2) 0
LK Scotland Tim Swinson 12(1) 2 0 6 0 0 18(1) 10
LK Scotland Sam Thomson (1) 0 0 0 0 0 (1) 0
LK Namibia Tjiuee Uanivi 1(4) 0 0 0 0 0 1(4) 0
BR Scotland Adam Ashe 5(3) 2 0 1 0 0 6(3) 10
BR Scotland Matt Fagerson 3(4) 1 0 (1) 0 0 3(5) 5
BR Italy Simone Favaro 8(1) 0 0 1(1) 0 0 9(2) 0
BR Scotland Chris Fusaro 7(4) 0 0 (4) 0 0 7(8) 0
BR Scotland Rob Harley 16(3) 1 0 7 0 0 23(3) 5
BR United States Langilangi Haupeakui (4) 0 0 0 0 0 (4) 0
BR Scotland Matt Smith 2(1) 1 0 0 0 0 2(1) 5
BR Scotland Josh Strauss 8 1 0 5(1) 1 0 13(1) 10
BR Scotland Ryan Wilson 10 0 0 7 2 0 17 10
BR Scotland Lewis Wynne 5(8) 0 0 (2) 0 0 5(10) 0
SH Scotland Grayson Hart 2(6) 0 0 0 0 0 2(6) 0
SH Scotland George Horne (3) 0 0 0 0 0 (3) 0
SH Fiji Nemia Kenatale (3) 0 0 0 0 0 (3) 0
SH Scotland Ali Price 8(6) 3 0 4(3) 2 0 12(9) 25
SH Scotland Henry Pyrgos 12(2) 0 17 3(3) 1 0 14(7) 5
FH England Rory Clegg 4(6) 1 30 0 0 0 4(6) 35
FH Scotland Finn Russell 8(1) 2 74 7 0 58 15(1) 142
FH New Zealand Hagen Schulte (1) 0 0 0 0 0 (1) 0
FH South Africa Brandon Thomson 2(1) 1 7 0 0 0 2(1) 12
CE Scotland Mark Bennett 9(1) 3 0 3(3) 3 0 12(4) 30
CE Scotland Alex Dunbar 9(2) 2 0 6(1) 1 0 15(3) 15
CE Scotland Nick Grigg 13(3) 4 0 (4) 0 0 13(7) 20
CE Scotland Peter Horne 12(2) 1 42 1 0 0 13(2) 47
CE Australia Sam Johnson 9 1 0 4 0 0 13 5
CE Scotland Patrick Kelly (1) 0 0 0 0 0 (1) 0
CE Scotland Richie Vernon 1(3) 0 0 0 0 0 1(3) 0
WG Scotland Junior Bulumakau 3(1) 2 0 0 0 0 3(1) 10
WG Scotland Rory Hughes 9(4) 3 0 2 1 0 11(4) 20
WG Scotland Lee Jones 12(3) 2 0 5 1 0 17(3) 15
WG Scotland Sean Lamont 4(7) 4 0 1 2 0 5(7) 30
WG Italy Leonardo Sarto 5(2) 1 0 1 2 0 6(2) 15
WG Scotland Tommy Seymour 12 8 0 5 1 0 17 45
WG Australia Ratu Tagive (2) 1 0 0 0 0 (2) 5
FB Scotland Stuart Hogg 10(1) 5 10 7 0 10 17(1) 45
FB Scotland Peter Murchie 11(1) 4 0 (2) 0 0 11(3) 20

Coaching changes

[edit]

Promotion

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Personnel in

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Player movements

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Academy promotions

[edit]

Player transfers

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Competitions

[edit]

Pre-season and friendlies

[edit]
20 August 2016
4pm
England Harlequins22 - 17Scotland Glasgow Warriors
Try: Ross Chisholm
James Chisholm
Mat Luamanu
Jonas Mikalcius
Con: Nick Evans[43]
Preview
Report
Report
Report
Try: Simone Favaro
Leonardo Sarto
Pat MacArthur
Con: Rory Clegg
Twickenham Stoop
Referee: Tim Wigglesworth

Harlequins: 15. Aaron Morris 14. Ross Chisholm 13. Joe Marchant 12. Jamie Roberts 11. Tim Visser 10. Nick Evans 9. Danny Care (C)
1. Joe Marler 2. Rob Buchanan 3. Kyle Sinckler 4. Sam Twomey 5. James Horwill 6. Chris Robshaw 7. Luke Wallace 8. Jack Clifford
Replacements from Dave Ward, Cameron Holenstein, Will Collier, George Merrick, Charlie Matthews, Mat Luamanu, Charlie Mulchrone,
Ruaridh Jackson, Jonas Mikalcius, Winston Stanley, James Chisholm[44]

Glasgow Warriors: 15. Fraser Lyle 14. Leonardo Sarto 13. Nick Grigg 12. Sam Johnson 11. Rory Hughes 10. Rory Clegg 9. Grayson Hart
1. Ryan Grant 2. James Malcolm 3. D'Arcy Rae 4. Tim Swinson 5. Scott Cummings 6. Rob Harley (C) 7. Simone Favarro 8. Lewis Wynne
Replacements (all used): Alex Dunbar, Ali Price, Callum Hunter-Hill, Djustice Sears-Duru, Hagen Schulte, Junior Bulumakau, Pat MacArthur, Richie Vernon, Tjiuee Uanivi and Zander Fagerson.[45]

Gloucester: 15. Tom Marshall, 14. Charlie Sharples, 13. Matt Scott, 12. Billy Twelvetrees, 11. Henry Purdy, 10. Billy Burns, 9. Greig Laidlaw (C)
1.Yann Thomas, 2. Richard Hibbard, 3. John Afoa, 4. Joe Latta, 5. Mariano Galarza, 6. Ross Moriarty, 7. Matt Kvesic, 8. Ben Morgan
Replacements from Darren Dawidiuk, Paddy McAllister, Paul Doran-Jones; Tom Denton; Lewis Ludlow, Callum Braley, James Hook; Mark Atkinson, Alex Craig, Dan Thomas, Andy Symons, Gareth Evans, Elliott Creed, Lloyd Evans, David Halaifonua, Charlie Beckett

Glasgow Warriors: 15. Rory Hughes. 14. Leonardo Sarto, 13. Alex Dunbar, 12. Sam Johnson, 11. Sean Lamont, 10. Peter Horne
9. Henry Pyrgos (C), 1. Gordon Reid, 2. Corey Flynn, 3. Zander Fagerson, 4. Greg Peterson, 5. Scott Cummings, 6. Rob Harley,
7. Fraser Brown, 8. Ryan Wilson
Replacements: (used:) Ryan Grant, Pat MacArthur, Sila Puafisi, Tim Swinson, Tjiuee Uanivi, Simone Favaro, Lewis Wynne, Ali Price, Rory Clegg, Richie Vernon, Fraser Lyle, (unused:) D'Arcy Rae, Grayson Hart

Glasgow Warriors: Peter Murchie (C), Junior Bulumakau (Robert Beattie, 41), Nick Grigg (Patrick Kelly*, 44), Fraser Lyle (Patrick Kelly*, 41–43), Lee Jones (rep:Rory Hughes, 41); Hagen Schulte (Josh Henderson*, 61), Nemia Kenatale (George Horne*, 7); Alex Allan (Rep: Jamie Bhatti, 49), James Malcolm (Cameron Fenton*, 41), D'Arcy Rae (Jarrod Firth, 49), Sam Thomson, Greg Peterson (Kiran McDonald, 49), Callum Hunter-Hill* (Shaun MacDonald, 41), Matt Fagerson*, Peter McCallum (Alex Taylor, 41). [* Member of the BT Sport Scottish Rugby Academy]
Canada A: J Wilson-Ross (James Bay D Joyce, Dublin University, 68); K Lloyd (Mississauga Blues), M Samson (Calgary Saints, D Fraser, Ladysmith, 55), P Parfrey (Swilers), D Moor (Balmy Beach, S Hayward, Sydney, 68); R Povey (Bedford, G du Toit, UVIC Vikes, 30), G McRorie (Calgary Hornets, A McMullan, Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue, 70); D Sears-Duru (Glasgow Warriors, A Luca, Burnaby Lake, 61), E Howard (Brantford Harlequins, A Mascott, UBC Thunderbirds, 38–41), R Kotlewski (Calgary Saints, C McClary, Port Alberni, 57), C Keys (UVic Vikes), K Baillie (Ohio, A Wadden, Oakville Crusaders, 63), A Cejvanovic (Burnaby Lake), N Dala (Castaway Wanderers, M Heaton, Darlington Mowden Park, 49), T Larsen. [48]

Pro12

[edit]

The Pro12 began with an away match at defending champions Connacht, the club which had taken the title from them the previous season. The Warriors were eager for the match, and secured a try bonus victory at Galway Sportgrounds; Peter Horne later said, "I think that really told when we finally played them in the first game of the season and hammered them. It was frustration about why we hadn't been able to do it at the end of last year."[49]

The next match, against Leinster, saw Tommy Seymour run in four tries in another five-point victory for the Warriors.[50] This set up an intriguing away match with Cardiff Blues, another team which started well. The Blues saw out a tight match, and the Warriors only managed a losing bonus point.[51]

Finn Russell, back from his freak injury in the end-of-season match against Connacht, started against Ulster.[52] Again, the Warriors contented themselves with a losing bonus point.[53]

An away win against Newport Gwent Dragons and two bonus-point wins against the Italian sides Treviso and Zebre put the Warriors in a good place before the Autumn Internationals, when they lost fifteen players to the national team. Another three Warriors were also asked to train with the Scotland squad: Ali Price, Nick Grigg and Rory Hughes.[54] Four international players (Simone Favaro, Nemia Kenatale, Djustice Sears-Duru and Langilangi Haupeakui) were called up for their respective countries[55] before Sila Puafisi was called up to play for Tonga.[56] A rapidly-growing injury list which sidelined Leonardo Sarto, Richie Vernon, Ryan Grant, Adam Ashe, Greg Peterson, Scott Cummings, Tjiuee Uanivi and Chris Fusaro also tested the Warriors' depth.[57] They lost both of their Autumn International matches, against the Scarlets[58] and the Ospreys.[59] The run of defeats continued with a one-point loss to Munster at the start of December.[60]

Over the winter period, with the international players returning, the Warriors again began winning matches. A healthy lead in the first leg of the 1872 Cup against Edinburgh[61] led to wins against Treviso[62] and Cardiff.[63]

In the Six Nations window, the Warriors provided most of the Scotland national team. Strength and depth again became an issue; three successive losses to Scarlets, Ulster and Ospreys left Glasgow Warriors trailing those teams battling in the play-off hunt.

The international players returned, and the Warriors' results improved. Wins against Newport Gwent Dragons, Connacht and Zebre[64] were a belated challenge for a top-four place, but losses to Munster[65] and Leinster ended Glasgow's play-off hopes.

The Leinster defeat, on 28 April 2017, cost the Warriors its record as the only team which had qualified for a top-four place every year since the Pro12 began in 2011–12. The match, at the RDS Arena in Dublin, was strange; the match was topsy-turvy, with Leinster initially leading before the Warriors took control. Leinster edged ahead with a penalty, and then the stadium lights went out. It looked like the Dublin side would win the match with the abandonment rule, but the referee waited; about 20 minutes later, the lights came back on and Leinster saw out the remainder of the match.[66]

The final Pro12 match was the second leg of the 1872 Cup against Edinburgh Rugby at Scotstoun Stadium. Glasgow was eager to return the cup back to the west after Edinburgh had won it two seasons before. Although Edinburgh won the match (their first 1872 Cup victory in Glasgow), they could not overturn the margin which the Warriors had built up in the away match at Murrayfield Stadium.[67] The Warriors' seventh 1872 Cup win was bittersweet, as it was Gregor Townsend's last match with the Glasgow side.[68]

2016–17 Pro12 watch · edit · discuss
Team P W D L PF PA PD TF TA Try bonus Losing bonus Pts
1 Ireland Munster (RU) 22 19 0 3 602 316 +286 77 34 9 1 86
2 Ireland Leinster (SF) 22 18 0 4 674 390 +284 91 47 12 1 85
3 Wales Scarlets (CH) 22 17 0 5 537 359 +178 66 40 9 0 77
4 Wales Ospreys (SF) 22 14 0 8 556 360 +196 74 42 10 3 69
5 Ireland Ulster 22 14 1 7 521 371 +150 68 47 6 4 68
6 Scotland Glasgow Warriors 22 11 0 11 540 464 +76 72 53 9 5 58
7 Wales Cardiff Blues 22 11 1 10 508 498 +10 59 60 3 4 53
8 Ireland Connacht 22 9 0 13 413 498 −85 47 61 5 3 44
9 Scotland Edinburgh 22 6 0 16 400 491 −91 46 59 1 6 31
10 Italy Benetton Treviso 22 5 0 17 316 664 −348 35 92 1 2 23
11 Wales Newport Gwent Dragons 22 4 0 18 368 569 −201 38 71 1 6 23
12 Italy Zebre 22 3 0 19 318 773 −455 38 105 1 6 19
If teams are level at any stage, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:[69]
  1. number of matches won;
  2. the difference between points for and points against;
  3. the number of tries scored;
  4. the most points scored;
  5. the difference between tries for and tries against;
  6. the fewest red cards received;
  7. the fewest yellow cards received.
Green background (rows 1 to 4) are play-off places and earn a place in the 2017–18 European Rugby Champions Cup.
Blue background indicates teams outside the play-off places that earn a place in the European Rugby Champions Cup.
Yellow background advances to a play-off for a chance to compete in the Champions Cup.[70]
(Q) indicates team has qualified for the play-offs and has qualified for the 2017–18 European Rugby Champions Cup.

Results

[edit]
3 September 2016
17:15
Connacht Ireland5 - 41Scotland Glasgow Warriors (1 BP)
Try: Adeolokun 32' mPreview
Report
Report
Report
Try: Seymour (2) 10' m, 36' m
Hogg 45' c
Swinson 52' c
Puafisi 58' c
Lamont 70' c
Con: Pyrgos (3/5)
Rory Clegg (1/1)
Pen: Pyrgos (1/1) 24'
Galway Sportsgrounds
Attendance: 6,063
Referee: Ian Davies (Wales)
10 September 2016
15:00
(1 BP) Glasgow Warriors Scotland33–25Ireland Leinster
Try: Seymour (4) 15' m, 53' c, 55' c, 73' c
Swinson 31' c
Con: Pyrgos (4/5) 31', 53', 55', 73'
Preview
Report
Report
Report
Try: R. Kearney 25' c
van der Flier 37' c
Kirchner 41' m
Con: Carbery (2/3) 25', 37'
Pen: Carbery (2/2) 44', 63'
Scotstoun Stadium
Attendance: 7,251
Referee: John Lacey (IRFU)
16 September 2016
19:00
Cardiff Blues Wales23–19Scotland Glasgow Warriors (1 BP)
Try: Cuthbert 23' c
Lee-Lo 40' c
Con: Anscombe (2/2)
Pen: Anscombe (2/2) 2', 13'
Shingler (1/1) 77'
Preview
Report
Report
Report
Try: Hogg 26' c
Horne 32' c
Price 48' m
Con: Clegg (2/3)
BT Sport Cardiff Arms Park
Attendance: 8,024
Referee: George Clancy (IRFU)
23 September 2016
19:35
(1 BP) Glasgow Warriors Scotland17–22Ireland Ulster
Try: Reid 19' c
Seymour 57' c
Con: Russell (2/2) 19', 57'
Pen: Russell (1/1) 48'
Preview
Report
Report
Report
Try: Cave 16' m
Penalty try 39' c
Jackson 62' c
Con: Jackson (2/3) 39', 62'
Pen: Jackson (1/1) 6'
Scotstoun Stadium
Attendance: 7,351
Referee: Ian Davies (WRU)
30 September 2016
19:35
Newport Gwent Dragons Wales17–26Scotland Glasgow Warriors
Try: Hobbs 42' c
Dixon 47' c
Con: Macleod (2/2)
Pen: Macleod (1/2) 33'
Preview
Report
Report
Report
Try: Flynn 28' c
Allan 50' c
Con: Russell (2/2)
Pen: Russell (4/4) 9', 25', 35', 78'
Rodney Parade
Attendance: 4,809
Referee: Andrew Brace (IRFU)
8 October 2016
17:05
(1 BP) Zebre Italy28–33Scotland Glasgow Warriors (1 BP)
Try: Fabiani 29' m
Venditti 55' c
van Schalkwyk 74' c
Con: Canna (2/3) 55', 74'
Pen: Canna (3/3) 2', 18', 80'
Preview
Report
Report
Report
Try: S. Lamont (2) 7' m, 46' c
Brown 39' c
Sarto 52' m
Con: Clegg (2/4) 39', 46'
Pen: Clegg (3/3) 25', 27', 79'
Stadio Sergio Lanfranchi
Attendance: 2,001
Referee: Lloyd Linton (SRU)
28 October 2016
19:35
(1 BP) Glasgow Warriors Scotland31-14Italy Benetton Treviso
Try: Gray 9' c
Bennett 13'
Hughes 28' c, 47'
Dunbar 39' c
Con: Russell (3/5) 9', 29', 40'
Preview
Report
Report
Report
Try: Penalty try 24' c
Giazzon 64' c
Con: McKinley (1/1) 24'
Allan (1/1) 65'
Scotstoun Stadium
Attendance: 7,251
Referee: David Wilkinson (IRFU)
5 November 2016
19:35
Scarlets Wales27–3Scotland Glasgow Warriors
Try: Boyde 15' c, 52' c
Evans 41' c
Con: Patchell (3/3) 16', 42', 54'
Pen: Patchell (2/2) 49', 56'
Preview
Report
Report
Report
Pen: Horne (1/3) 32'
Parc y Scarlets
Attendance: 6,059
Referee: Gary Conway (IRFU)
25 November 2016
19:35
Glasgow Warriors Scotland5-22Wales Ospreys (1 BP)
Try: Bulumakau 78' mPreview
Report
Report
Report
Try: Habberfield 36' m
O'Flaherty 49' m
Baker 52' m
Beck 67' c
Con: Matavesi (1/4) 68'
Scotstoun Stadium
Attendance: 7,166[71]
Referee: George Clancy (IRFU)
2 December 2016
19:35
(1 BP) Glasgow Warriors Scotland15–16Ireland Munster
Try: Price 60' c
Nick Grigg 69' m
Con: Clegg (1/2) 61'
Pen: Horne (1/2) 15'
Preview
Report
Report
Report
Try: Conway
Con: Keatley (1/1) 12'
Pen: Keatley (2/3) 8', 36'
Drop: Keatley (1/1) 76'
Scotstoun Stadium
Attendance: 7,351[72]
Referee: Nigel Owens (WRU)
  • 1872 Cup 1st leg
26 December 2016
16:05
Edinburgh Scotland12–25Scotland Glasgow Warriors
Pen: Weir (4/4) 7', 22', 52', 59'Preview
Report
Report
Report
Try: Bulumakau 1' m
Strauss 33' c
Dunbar 66' c
Con: Russell (2/3) 34', 67'
Pen: Russell (1/2) 40'
Drop: Russell (1/1) 56'
Murrayfield Stadium
Attendance: 21,036
Referee: Ian Davies (WRU)
31 December 2016
14:00
(1 BP) Benetton Treviso Italy28-35Scotland Glasgow Warriors (1 BP)
Try: Sperandio 1' m
Budd (2) 32' c, 73' c
Con: Allan (1/2) 32'
McKinley (1/1) 74'
Pen: Allan (2/4) 40', 48'
McKinley (1/2) 61'
Preview
Report
Report
Report
Try: Hogg 16' c
Seymour 18' c
Ashe 29' c
Gigg 51' c
Clegg 76' c
Con: Hogg (5/5) 17', 19', 30', 52', 77'
Stadio Comunale di Monigo
Referee: Elio Rizzo (FIR)
7 January 2017
19:35
(1 BP) Glasgow Warriors Scotland29–15Wales Cardiff Blues
Try: MacArthur 12' c
Murchie (2) 48' c, 55' c
Malcolm 64' m
Con: Russell (3/4) 13', 49', 56'
Pen: Russell (1/1) 34'
Preview
Report
Report
Report
Try: Scully 38' c
R. Williams 77' m
Con: Shingler (1/2) 40'
Pen: Shingler (1/1) 42'
Scotstoun Stadium
Attendance: 7,251
Referee: Andrew Brace (IRFU)
10 February 2017
19:35
Glasgow Warriors Scotland14 - 26Wales Scarlets
Try: MacArthur 15' m
Pen: Clegg (3/3) 2', 26', 48'
Preview
Report
Report
Report
Try: Williams 21' c
Davies 38' c
Con: Williams 23'
Jones 40'
Pen: Jones 6', 29', 54'
Thomas 75'
Scotstoun Stadium
Attendance: 7,166
Referee: George Clancy (IRFU)
18 February 2017
15:00
(1 BP) Ulster Ireland37-17Scotland Glasgow Warriors
Try: Pienaar 52' m
Bowe 21' m
Reidy 30' c
Stockdale 48' c, 77' c
Con: Pienaar (3/5) 32', 48', 78'
Pen: Pienaar (2/2) 10', 44'
Preview
Report
Report
Report
Try: Thomson 39' m
Cummings (2) 68' m, 73' c
Con: Thomson (1/3) 73'
Kingspan Stadium
Attendance: 16,545
Referee: Daniel Jones
26 February 2017
17:05
(1 BP) Ospreys Wales26-15Scotland Glasgow Warriors
Try: Giles 9' c
Matavesi 21' c
Ardron 55' c
Fonotia 55' m
Con: Price (3/4) 10', 22', 55'
Preview
Report
Report
Report
Try: Flynn 24' c
Murchie 55' m
Con: Thomson (1/2) 55'
Pen: Thomson 46'
Liberty Stadium
Attendance: 7,140
Referee: Frank Murphy
4 March 2017
15:00
(1BP) Glasgow Warriors Scotland47 - 17Wales Newport Gwent Dragons
Try: Grigg 28' c, 36' c
Hughes 42' c
Tagive 49' m
Jones 57' c
Bennett 66' c
Horne 74' c
Con: Horne (6/7) 29', 37', 43', 51', 58', 75'
Preview
Report
Report
Report
Try: Landman 22' c
Morgan 80+2' c
Con: O'Brien (1/1/) 23'
Jones 80+2'
Pen: O'Brien 14'
Scotstoun Stadium
Attendance: 7,096
Referee: Andrew Brace (Ireland)
25 March 2017
17:15
(1 BP) Glasgow Warriors Scotland35–24Ireland Connacht
Try: Flynn 11' c
Russell 49' c
Price 54' c
Lamont 77' m
Con: Russell (3/3) 12', 50', 54'
Pen: Russell (2/2) 7', 36'
P. Horne (1/1) 74'
Preview
Report
Report
Report
Try: Adeolokun 4' m
Muldoon 29' c
Con: Ronaldson (1/2) 30'
Pen: Ronaldson (3/4) 19', 48', 66'
J. Cooney (1/1) 76'
Scotstoun Stadium
Attendance: 7,251
Referee: Ian Davies (WRU)
8 April 2017
19:35
Munster Ireland10–7Scotland Glasgow Warriors (1 BP)
Try: Cronin 4' c
Con: Bleyendaal (1/1) 5'
Pen: R. Scannell (1/1) 60'
Preview
Report
Report
Report
Try: Hogg 68' c
Con: Russell (1/1) 69'
Irish Independent Park
Attendance: 8,008
Referee: Nigel Owens (WRU)
14 April 2017
19:35
(1 BP) Glasgow Warriors Scotland45–10Italy Zebre
Try: Grigg 10' c
Murchie 18' c
Harley 26' c
Fagerson 29' c
Johnson 59' c
Smith (2) 62' m, 74' m
Con: P. Horne (5/5) 11', 19', 27', 30', 60'
Preview
Report
Report
Report
Try: Van Zyl 66' m
Baker 78' m
Scotstoun Stadium
Attendance: 7,351[73]
Referee: David Wilkinson (IRFU)
28 April 2017
19:35
(1 BP) Leinster Ireland31–30Scotland Glasgow Warriors (1 BP)
Try: Ryan 5' c
O'Loughlin 9' m
Dooley 35' m
Kirchner 59' m
Con: R. Byrne (1/4) 6'
Pen: R. Byrne (2/2) 31', 41'+1
Carbery (1/1) 75'
Preview
Report
Report
Report
Try: Ashe 46' c
Jones 65' c
Russell 70' c
Con: Horne (1/1) 47'
Russell (2/2) 66', 71'
Pen: Horne (3/3) 3', 26', 57'
RDS Arena
Attendance: 12,975
Referee: Marius Mitrea (FIR)
  • 1872 Cup 2nd leg
6 May 2017
17:15
Glasgow Warriors Scotland18–29Scotland Edinburgh
Try: Gray 40' m
Hogg 65' c
Con: Russell (1/2) 65'
Pen: Russell (2/2) 2', 18'
Preview
Report
report
Report
Try: Hoyland 56' c
Bryce 80' c
Con: Weir (2/2) 58', 80'+1
Pen: Weir (5/5) 7', 14', 33', 43', 53'
Scotstoun Stadium
Referee: Mike Adamson (SRU)

The Warriors won the 1872 Cup with an aggregate score of 43–41.

Europe

[edit]

The Warriors were placed in Pool 1 of the European Champions Cup. They were drawn against the previous year's finalists Racing 92 and past winners Munster and Leicester Tigers.[74] Since it had been announced that this would be Gregor Townsend's last season with the Warriors, a huge focus for the season would be for Glasgow to get out of the pool stages and qualify for a quarter-final.[75]

Glasgow's previous best in the Heineken Cup was a quarter-final play-off in 1997, when they lost to Leicester Tigers. This season's Tigers were first up in the pool stage.[76]

The match at Scotstoun was a 42–13 victory for the Warriors, with the Glasgow side running in five tries.[77][78] The untimely death of Munster coach Anthony Foley postponed Munster's match with Racing 92, and Munster's next match would be against the Warriors at an emotionally-charged Thomond Park.[79] Foley's death seemed to galvanise the Munster side, and they were 38–17 victors in a difficult match.[80]

A tough doubleheader against last year's finalists was next for the Warriors. Racing 92 had New Zealand fly-half Dan Carter and former Glasgow Warrior favourite Leone Nakarawa in their ranks; Glasgow side crushed the French side in Paris, however, with Townsend describing the victory as the second-best of his Warriors coaching career (after the 2014-15 Pro12 final against Munster).[81]

A home tie proved the Paris result no fluke, as another special night at Scotstoun saw the Warriors dominate Racing. In particular, Finn Russell's outplaying of Dan Carter in back-to-back matches thrust the Scotland fly-half into Lions contention.[82] Townsend said, "Finn deserved to be in the Lions conversation before the games against Racing but he’s playing with lots of confidence and parts of his game have got really strong over the last couple of years. Finn’s been up against Dan Carter and a lot of other big players in big environments, too. He’s started at Scotland at stand-off for the last two-and-a-half years so even though British & Irish rugby is full of quality players, I expect him to be in the mix."[82]

An emboldened Munster came to Scotstoun and ground out a three-point win. The last Pool 1 game for Glasgow was at Welford Road in Leicester. The Warriors went to Leicester with purpose, and gave the Tigers their worst result in European history.[83] The Tigers failed to score, and Glasgow ran in six tries for a 43–0 victory. By the end of the match, the Warriors pushed for 50 points in the Tigers' 22. Leicester's Freddie Burns was tackled, and the ball about to be turned over when Burns reached out for the touchline to end the match and avoid another Warriors score. The Warriors were the first Scottish team to defeat Leicester at home since the Fettesian-Lorettonian Club managed it 112 years before,[84] when they won by a try to nil on 28 December 1905[85] with Jobson scoring the three points.[86]

The Warriors qualified for a European Champions Cup quarter-final for the first time in their history. They drew Saracens away and, as the European champions, Sarries were heavy favourites. Still 6,000 Warriors fans went to London, however, and provided the Aviva Premiership team with their largest home attendance at Allianz Park.[87] The first half was tighter than expected; a few attempted tries by Saracens were ruled out for infringements, but the London club led. Warriors captain Jonny Gray was taken off injured; returning from injury in his first game back, Greg Peterson tried to cover Gray's absence.[citation needed]

The second half began well for the Warriors, and a try by Lee Jones brought a period of Warriors dominance. A missed kick to touch by Finn Russell to consolidate Warrior pressure into a lead was the turning point of the match, however, and the Saracens began running in tries. A consolation try at the end by Ryan Wilson was the Warriors' only reply.[citation needed]

Townsend later blamed himself for the defeat, saying that he had over-analysed the Saracens and prevented Glagow from playing their own game: "Nothing might have worked, because Saracens are so good, but I got it wrong".[7] Despite the loss, the Warrior Nation made many friends and Glasgow were now firmly on the European rugby map. Saracens would go on to the European Champions title, again defeating Clermont in the final at Murrayfield Stadium.[88]

P W D L PF PA Diff TF TA TB LB Pts
Ireland Munster (2) 6 5 0 1 160 64 +96 18 4 3 1 24
Scotland Glasgow Warriors (6) 6 4 0 2 160 86 +74 18 10 2 1 19
England Leicester Tigers 6 2 0 4 61 190 –129 3 23 0 0 8
France Racing 92 6 1 0 5 89 130 –41 12 14 1 0 5

Results

[edit]
14 October 2016
19:45
(1 BP) Glasgow Warriors Scotland42–13England Leicester Tigers
Try: Sarto (2) 24' c, 76' c
Brown 28' c
Pyrgos 33' m
Bennett 68' c
Con: Russell (4/5) 24', 28', 68', 76'
Pen: Hogg (1/1) 14'
Russell (2/2) 55', 67'
Preview
Report
Report
Report
Try: Thompstone 20' c
Con: O. Williams (1/1) 20'
Pen: O. Williams (2/2) 8', 37'
Scotstoun Stadium
Attendance: 7,351
Referee: Mathieu Raynal (FFR)
22 October 2016
13:00
(1 BP) Munster Ireland38–17Scotland Glasgow Warriors
Try: Bleyendaal 4' c
Taute 14' c
Zebo 30' c
Penalty try 47' c
Scannell 75' c
Con: Bleyendaal (4/4) 4', 14', 30', 47'
Keatley (1/1) 75'
Pen: Bleyendaal (1/1) 7'
Preview
Report
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Try: MacArthur 66' c
Bennett 70' c
Con: S. Hogg (2/2) 66', 70'
Pen: Russell (1/2) 10'
Thomond Park
Attendance: 25,600
Referee: Jérôme Garcès (FFR)
10 December 2016
16:15
Racing 92 France14–23Scotland Glasgow Warriors
Try: Imhoff 7' c
Carter 72' c
Con: Carter (2/2) 8', 72'
Preview
Report
Report
Report
Try: Dunbar 29' c
Price 41' c
Con: Russell (2/2) 30', 42'
Pen: Russell (3/4) 10', 14', 65'
Stade Yves-du-Manoir
Attendance: 8872
Referee: JP Doyle (RFU)
16 December 2016
19:45
Glasgow Warriors Scotland23–7France Racing 92
Try: Strauss 3' m
Brown 13' c
Price 46' m
Con: Russell (1/3) 14'
Pen: Russell (2/2) 29', 38'
Preview
Report
Report
Report
Try: Chauveau 78' c
Con: Dambielle (1/1) 79'
Scotstoun Stadium
Attendance: 7351[89]
Referee: George Clancy (IRFU)
14 January 2017
17:30
(1 BP) Glasgow Warriors Scotland12–14Ireland Munster
Pen: Russell (3/3) 13', 47', 59'
Hogg (1/2) 32'
Preview
Report
Report
Report
Try: Saili 71' m
Pen: Bleyendaal (3/4) 20', 34', 50'
Scotstoun Stadium
Attendance: 7,351
Referee: Luke Pearce (RFU)
21 January 2017
17:30
Leicester Tigers England0–43Scotland Glasgow Warriors (1BP)
Pen: Burns (0/2)Preview
Report
Report
Report
Try: Seymour 5' c
Penalty try 21' c
Bennett 29' c
Gray 35' c
Wilson 47' c
Swinson 60' m
Con: Russell (5/6) 5', 22', 30', 36', 48'
Pen: Russell (1/2) 12'
Welford Road
Attendance: 19,345
Referee: Mathieu Raynal (FFR)
2 April 2017
13:00
Saracens England (3)38–13(6) Scotland Glasgow Warriors
Try: Ashton (2) 31' m, 78' c
Bosch 59' c
Barritt 73' c
Con: Farrell (3/4) 59', 73', 78'
Pen: Farrell (4/4) 9', 15', 27', 70'
Preview
Report
Report
Report
Try: Jones 48' m
Wilson 80' m
Pen: Russell (1/1) 11'
Allianz Park
Attendance: 15,000[90]
Referee: Jérôme Garcès (FFR)

Warrior of the Month awards

[edit]
Award Winner
September Scotland Tommy Seymour
October Scotland Rory Hughes
November Scotland Lewis Wynne
December Scotland Ali Price
January Scotland Tim Swinson
February Scotland Scott Cummings
March Samoa Brian Alainu'uese
April Scotland Nick Grigg
May None

End-of-season awards

[edit]
Award Winner
Young Player of the Season Scotland Scott Cummings
Coaches Award Scotland Rob Harley & Scotland Peter Horne
Test Player of the Season Scotland Stuart Hogg
Most Improved Player of the Season Samoa Brian Alainu'uese
Al Kellock Leadership Award Scotland Peter Murchie
Community Club of the Season East Kilbride
Try of the Season Scotland Josh Strauss vs. France Racing 92
Players' Player of the Season Scotland Nick Grigg
Player of the Season Scotland Ali Price

Competitive debuts

[edit]

A player's nationality is taken from the nationality at the highest honour for the national side obtained or, if never capped internationally, their place of birth. Senior caps take precedence over junior caps or place of birth; junior caps take precedence over place of birth. A player's nationality at debut may be different from the nationality shown. Combination sides, such as the British and Irish Lions or Pacific Islanders, are not national sides or nationalities.

Players in BOLD have been capped by their senior international XV side as nationality shown.

Players in Italics have been capped by their international 7s side or by the international XV 'A' side as nationality shown.

Players in normal font have not been capped at senior level.

A position in parentheses indicates that the player debuted as a substitute. A player may have made a prior debut for Glasgow Warriors in a non-competitive, 'A', or 7s match; these matches are not listed.

Tournaments where competitive debut was made:

Scottish Inter-District Championship Welsh–Scottish League WRU Challenge Cup Celtic League Celtic Cup 1872 Cup Pro12 Pro14 Rainbow Cup United Rugby Championship European Challenge Cup Heineken Cup / European Champions Cup
Number Player nationality Name Position Date of debut Venue Stadium Opposition nationality Opposition side Tournament Match result Scoring debut
263 Italy SartoLeonardo Sarto Wing 2016-09-03 Away Galway Sportsgrounds Ireland Connacht Pro12 Win Nil
264 Namibia UaniviTjiuee Uanivi (Lock) 2016-09-03 Away Galway Sportsgrounds Ireland Connacht Pro12 Win Nil
265 Scotland WynneLewis Wynne (Flanker) 2016-09-03 Away Galway Sportsgrounds Ireland Connacht Pro12 Win Nil
266 New Zealand FlynnCorey Flynn (Hooker) 2016-09-03 Away Galway Sportsgrounds Ireland Connacht Pro12 Win Nil
267 Scotland ThomsonSam Thomson (Lock) 2016-09-23 Home Scotstoun Stadium Ireland Ulster Pro12 Loss Nil
268 Scotland FagersonMatt Fagerson (No. 8) 2016-09-23 Home Scotstoun Stadium Ireland Ulster Pro12 Loss Nil
269 Canada Sears-DuruDjustice Sears-Duru (Prop) 2016-09-30 Away Rodney Parade Wales Dragons Pro12 Win Nil
270 Scotland McAlpineRob McAlpine (Lock) 2016-09-30 Away Rodney Parade Wales Dragons Pro12 Win Nil
271 Scotland Hunter-HillCallum Hunter-Hill (Lock) 2016-10-08 Away Stadio Sergio Lanfranchi Italy Zebre Pro12 Win Nil
272 Samoa Alainu'ueseBrian Alainu'uese (Lock) 2016-10-28 Home Scotstoun Stadium Italy Benetton Treviso Pro12 Win Nil
273 United States HaupeakuiLangilangi Haupeakui (Flanker) 2016-10-28 Home Scotstoun Stadium Italy Benetton Treviso Pro12 Win Nil
274 Scotland BhattiJamie Bhatti (Prop) 2016-11-05 Away Parc y Scarlets Wales Scarlets Pro12 Loss Nil
275 Scotland NicolAdam Nicol (Prop) 2016-11-25 Home Scotstoun Stadium Wales Ospreys Pro12 Loss Nil
276 Scotland HorneGeorge Horne (Scrum half) 2016-11-25 Home Scotstoun Stadium Wales Ospreys Pro12 Loss Nil
277 Scotland KellyPaddy Kelly (Centre) 2016-11-25 Home Scotstoun Stadium Wales Ospreys Pro12 Loss Nil
278 Fiji KenataleNemia Kenatale (Scrum half) 2016-11-25 Away Stadio Comunale di Monigo Italy Benetton Treviso Pro12 Win Nil
279 Germany SchluteHagen Schulte (Fly half) 2017-02-10 Home Scotstoun Stadium Wales Scarlets Pro12 Loss Nil
280 South Africa ThomsonBrandon Thomson Full back 2017-02-18 Home Scotstoun Stadium Ireland Ulster Pro12 Loss 7 pts
281 Scotland SmithMatt Smith Flanker 2017-02-26 Away Liberty Stadium Wales Ospreys Pro12 Loss Nil
282 Australia TagiveRatu Tagive (Wing) 2017-02-26 Away Liberty Stadium Wales Ospreys Pro12 Loss Nil

Sponsors

[edit]

Kit supplier: Macron

Kit sponsors:

  • Malcolm Group
  • McCrea Financial Services
  • Denholm Oilfield
  • Ross Hall Hospital
  • Story Contracting[91]

Other sponsors:

Partners:

References

[edit]
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