Former Scotland Lock Jim Hamilton Lets Loose On Vern Cotter In Extraordinary Reveal
Latest posts by Will Matthews (see all)
- Bad news for Craig Casey and more as Munster Rugby issue squad update - December 16, 2024
- Irish Rugby post cryptic contract signing that has everyone talking - December 15, 2024
- Ireland set to receive massive boost ahead of the Six Nations - December 15, 2024
Absolute madness.
Former Scotland and Saracens lock Jim Hamilton has opened up about Vern Cotter dropping him from Scotland’s Rugby World Cup 2015 squad in extraordinary reveal.
Hamilton says Cotter spoke to him “like a dog”, and completely misled him about his selection. The veteran lock won an impressive 63 caps for Scotland between 2006 and 2015, before his infamous dropping ahead of the Rugby World Cup.
He had played two of the three warm-up games leading up to the showpiece event, before Cotter went with Tim Swinson. To make matters worse, Swinson hadn’t trained due to being away on honeymoon, and Hamilton was told a bare face lie by Cotter in stating that he was only bringing three second-rows.
“I got dropped from the 2015 World Cup squad and I was surprised I didn’t get in but the way that I was mishandled by the coach was the worst thing that ever happened in my career,” he revealed on The Rugby Pod.
“I ended up getting a phone call on a Saturday to tell me that I wasn’t in the squad as they were only taking three second rows, Richie Gray, Jonny Gray and Grant Gilchrist. I told him [Cotter] I was disappointed but that I appreciated his honesty and would be at home waiting.
“Greig Laidlaw then rang me on the Saturday night, asked if I’d seen the squad and said he was gutted I hadn’t made it but he mentioned that Tim Swinson was in the squad.
“I thought it was a mistake. Swinson had been on his honeymoon for six weeks and then got called up to the World Cup squad, having not done a day’s training.
“I flew up to Scotland after he told me, had a few beers on my own and went into the office at 6am the next day. I went in, shook Vern’s hand and said, ‘That’s the end of the road for me.’
“He told me there might be injuries but he had four second rows. He didn’t even have the decency or respect to tell me that he was taking four second rows and he told me that he was only taking three.
“I was in that team for 10 years, played 63 times for that country and gave everything and he didn’t even have the decency to tell me that straight. I think that is disgusting.”
Hamilton says he was in the best shape of his life heading into the tournament.
“I was the fittest I’d ever been when I turned up to the pre-World Cup training camp. I got 19.2 in the Yo-Yo test, which was the highest score I’d ever got, and I beat all the other front five forwards. That meant that I had to train with all the back rows when we got to France and were training at altitude, while the other front five forwards were doing strongman sessions,” he said.
“I was a hundred metres behind the next person and Vern was shouting, ‘Show me how much you want to be here’.
“My eyes were in the back of my head but I was just trying to keep my head down and keep going.
“I played in two of the three warm-up matches and we won both of them against Ireland and Italy away. I actually started in the Italy game. I wasn’t meant to but Grant Gilchrist was ill on the day of the game. We won the game in horrible conditions and the next morning we had to be down for team breakfast at 5am before heading home.
“Vern had this rule that everyone had to shake each other’s hands in the morning, which I didn’t agree with. Nobody was shaking hands that morning because it was so early, everyone was rushing and some guys were ill but Vern smashed his hand on the table, stood up and called me out.
“He said, ‘You should know better. Get outside now. You should be shaking people’s hands!’
“He was speaking to me like a dog.”
Hamilton also revealed that he was so distraught over the whole ordeal that he didn’t want to see his country do well.
“Honestly, it got to the point where I didn’t want Scotland to win. There was a part of me that did because my mates were there but deep down I didn’t want them to win,” he said.
“I could sit here and say that I wanted to Scotland to win the World Cup but I was raging. I couldn’t even watch their games. Someone told me Scotland were beating Australia and I was devastated.
“The competitive edge inside you does say that if you’re not playing, you don’t want them to do well.
“It took me about a year to get over that and want Scotland to do well again.”
Quotes via Rugby Pass.