-
European football clubs score with stadium rebuilds
-
Trump said Iran 'welcome to compete' in World Cup, says Infantino
-
'No good choice': the Afghans forced to return from Iran
-
Cargo vessels hit as Iran threatens to close Gulf oil chokepoint
-
G7 energy ministers 'ready' to take 'necessary measures' on oil reserves
-
Punch the baby monkey isn't being bullied: Japan zoo
-
German defence giant Rheinmetall sees faster growth as Europe rearms
-
Fears of fuel shortage in Pakistan as tankers wait to fill up
-
Stocks rise again, oil stabilises as report says IEA considers release
-
Cathay Pacific expects to carry more passengers in 2026
-
Yak hack: Kyrgyz want the world to love their blonde bovine beauties
-
Iran women footballers evacuate from safe house in Australia
-
Shabby beauty: Inside Japan's oldest, defiant student dorm
-
Seoul says can deter threats from North if US weapons shifted to Mideast
-
Italy stun United States 8-6 in World Baseball Classic
-
New wave of Iran attacks as oil reserve release weighed
-
Politics meets football as China, Taiwan face off at Asian Cup
-
History offers Scots hope of ending losing run to Irish
-
Trump-Infantino 'bromance' tested by Middle East war
-
Ruthless Sinner subdues Fonseca to reach Indian Wells quarter-finals
-
Kharg Island: Iran's vital oil hub in the crosshairs?
-
Wembanyama stars as red-hot Spurs sink Celtics
-
New generation of Irish actors harness talent for global stardom
-
Brilliant Adebayo scores 83 points, second highest in NBA history
-
Asian stocks extend gains, oil stabilises after crude release report
-
New wave of Iran attacks as IEA weighs oil reserve release
-
'Stealth hit' Pokemon game sends Nintendo shares soaring
-
Brilliant Adebayo scores 83 pts, 2nd highest in NBA history as Heat rout Wizards
-
Australian Katie Perry wins trademark spat against singer Katy Perry
-
CEO of Brazil's Nubank on pending US market entry, Trump, AI: interview
-
Bolsonaro brand fuels Flavio's rise in Brazil election polls
-
Kast: Who is Chile's new hard-right president?
-
Chile's Kast, most right-wing president since Pinochet, takes office
-
China sprint race presents 'huge challenge' in F1's new era
-
Bangladesh sari weaving tradition hangs by a thread
-
Alleged Rihanna mansion shooter charged with attempted murder
-
Microsoft urges Pentagon pause blacklisting Anthropic
-
Harvey Weinstein says prison is 'hell'
-
'Put our faith in God': Tehran residents adapt to wartime
-
Caviar, truffle and chicken pot pies: what Hollywood will eat at the Oscars
-
US says wouldn't be 'happy' if Russia giving Iran intel
-
Yamal denies Newcastle, Liverpool lose and Atletico thrash Spurs in Champions League
-
Olise could be world great, says Bayern coach Kompany
-
Two more members of Iran women's football team claim asylum in Australia
-
'Incredible situation': Spurs coach Tudor on subbing Kinsky after errors
-
Police say deadly Swiss bus fire could be deliberate
-
Bayern on verge of Champions League quarters after hitting Atalanta for six
-
Griezmann dreaming big at Atletico after Spurs rout
-
Howe sees 'hope' for Newcastle despite blow of Barcelona equaliser
-
Dassault pitches latest private jet against US, Canadian rivals
Jones strikes twice as Scotland end England's unbeaten run in style
Scotland ended England's 12-match unbeaten run with a stunning 31-20 Calcutta Cup win at Murrayfield on Saturday that revived their Six Nations campaign.
The Scots suffered a dispiriting 18-15 loss away to Italy in a tournament opener that piled the pressure on Gregor Townsend but Scotland, in the coach's 100th match in charge, made a superb start against their oldest rivals.
Scotland led 17-0 after just 16 minutes and 24-10 at half-time through tries from Huw Jones, Jamie Ritchie and Ben White.
Jones and Ritchie both struck after England were reduced to 14 men following Henry Arundell's yellow card.
Arundell was off the field for good after a 20-minute red card shortly before half-time for taking out opposing wing Kyle Steyn in the air.
Scotland went 31-13 ahead in the 54th-minute when Jones's second try, his team's fourth, secured a bonus point.
Defeat ended England's bid for a first Grand Slam in a decade. They are still looking for their first win at Murrayfield since 2020.
England will try to revive their title challenge at home to Ireland a week on Saturday.
This was Scotland's fifth win in six Tests against England but their first in eight Tests when facing a team in the world's top 10.
For all their recent success in rugby union's oldest international fixture they've never finished higher than third in the Six Nations era. They next go to strugglers Wales.
Scotland tore into England, fly-half Finn Russell's fourth-minute penalty breaking the deadlock.
Another Scotland attack ended with Arundell, fresh from his hat-trick of tries in England's 48-7 rout of Wales at Twickenham, yellow-carded for failing to release after the tackle.
Scotland made their man advantage count when Russell's clever flicked-on pass released Jones, who rounded England captain Maro Itoje.
Scotland's speed was proving too much for England's depleted defence and, after Russell went wide to Steyn on the right, play swept across field with unmarked back-row forward Ritchie scoring a try on the left.
Russell's third successful goal-kick made it 17-0 to the delight of a raucous Murrayfield, with Scotland showing far more in attack than they had during the whole 80 minutes in Rome.
The returning Arundell put England on the scoreboard with a try following a cleverly delayed pass from Ford, whose conversion and 26th-minute penalty reduced Scotland's lead to seven points.
Scotland had been heavily criticised for squandering a 21-0 lead in a chastening November loss at home to Argentina.
But they reacted to England's surge with their third try of the half in the 27th minute.
England prop Ellis Genge fumbled Russell's through kick and scrum-half White pounced on the loose ball.
Russell again added the extras to make it 24-10.
Ford's penalty early in the second half cut Scotland's lead to 11 points.
But Scotland pulled clear again when Ford's drop-goal attempt was charged down by Matt Fagerson, who released Jones, running clear from half-way for a try between the posts.
Committed defence kept England at bay, with No 8 Ben Earl's try two minutes from time too little, too late for the visitors.
R.Fischer--VB