Scotland’s hilarious answer to the Springboks’ ‘Bomb Squad’ has already gone viral
The Springboks’ ‘Bomb Sqaud’ is one of the most formidable units in world rugby, where head coach Jacques Nienaber unleashes an entirely new front row minutes after, or even before, half time.
Well Scotland unleashed their own equivalent to the ‘Bomb Squad’ against Wales at the Principality Stadium on Saturday in the Six Nations, as Gregor Townsend made wholesale front row changes minutes after half time.
Instead of Malcolm Marx, Steven Kitshoff and Vincent Koch being unleashed from the bench, it was George Turner, Rory Sutherland and Zander Fagerson, who have been titled the ‘Bam Squad’ on social media.
As funny as this title is for the trio, it is not a bad set of replacements for Townsend. Both Sutherland and Fagerson were British & Irish Lions last summer against the Boks, so these are high level replacements. Scotland have clearly taken a leaf out of South Africa’s book of perhaps starting their best front row on the bench in order for them to unleash hell in the second half.
https://twitter.com/glove931/status/1492520337019490311?s=20&t=9sHolV0x-l6ZmDrQx6rAgg
That'll be The Bam Squad*
*@topofthemoonGW 2022
— Iolaire20 (@iolaire20) February 12, 2022
My timeline just Scottish people saying "Bam Squad" as the replacement front-row comes on…
— Alan Dymock (@AlanDymock) February 12, 2022
— Stevie Crighton (@scubacrighton) February 12, 2022
— Morag (@moragkatie) February 12, 2022
Here comes the Bam Squad. #WALvSCO #GuinnessSixNations
— Leslie Stoddart (@leslie1976) February 12, 2022
Here come the bam squad
— Scottish Rugby Podcast (@ScotRugbyPod) February 12, 2022
The Bam Squad #WALvSCO
— Thistle Scottish Rugby Podcast (@thistlerugbypod) February 12, 2022
Wales 23
15. Liam Williams (Scarlets – 75 caps)
14. Alex Cuthbert (Ospreys – 48 caps)
13. Owen Watkin (Ospreys – 27 caps)
12. Nick Tompkins (Saracens – 17 caps)
11. Louis Rees-Zammit (Gloucester Rugby – 13 caps)
10. Dan Biggar (Northampton Saints – 96 caps), captain
9. Tomos Williams (Cardiff Rugby – 30 caps)
1. Wyn Jones (Scarlets – 39 caps)
2. Ryan Elias (Scarlets – 24 caps)
3. Tomas Francis (Ospreys – 61 caps)
4. Will Rowlands (Dragons – 14 caps)
5. Adam Beard (Ospreys – 30 caps), vice-captain
6. Taine Basham (Dragons – 8 caps)
7. Jac Morgan (Ospreys – uncapped)
8. Ross Moriarty (Dragons – 50 caps)
Replacements
16. Dewi Lake (Ospreys – 1 cap)
17. Gareth Thomas (Ospreys – 6 caps)
18. Dillon Lewis (Cardiff Rugby – 35 caps)
19. Seb Davies (Cardiff Rugby – 13 caps)
20. Aaron Wainwright (Dragons – 35 caps)
21. Gareth Davies (Scarlets – 66 caps)
22. Callum Sheedy (Bristol Bears – 14 caps)
23. Jonathan Davies (Scarlets – 93 caps)
Scotland 23
15. Stuart Hogg – Exeter Chiefs – (Captain) – 89 caps
14. Darcy Graham – Edinburgh Rugby – 23 caps
13. Chris Harris – Gloucester Rugby – 32 caps
12. Sione Tuipulotu – Glasgow Warriors – 2 caps
11. Duhan van der Merwe – Worcester Warriors – 14 caps
10. Finn Russell – Racing 92 – (Vice-Captain) – 59 caps
9. Ali Price – Glasgow Warriors – 47 caps
1. Pierre Schoeman – Edinburgh Rugby – 5 caps
2. Stuart McInally – Edinburgh Rugby – 44 caps
3. WP Nel – Edinburgh Rugby – 44 caps
4. Jonny Gray – Exeter Chiefs – 65 caps
5. Grant Gilchrist – Edinburgh Rugby – (Vice-Captain) – 49 caps
6. Sam Skinner – Exeter Chiefs – 16 caps
7. Hamish Watson – Edinburgh Rugby – 46 caps
8. Matt Fagerson – Glasgow Warriors – 18 caps
Replacements
16. George Turner – Glasgow Warriors – 21 caps
17. Rory Sutherland – Worcester Warriors – 17 caps
18. Zander Fagerson – Glasgow Warriors – 43 caps
19. Magnus Bradbury – Edinburgh Rugby – 15 caps
20. Rory Darge – Glasgow Warriors – Uncapped
21. Ben White – London Irish – 1 cap
22. Blair Kinghorn – Edinburgh Rugby – 28 caps
23. Cameron Redpath – Bath Rugby – 1 cap