Edinburgh Rugby started with intent, finding themselves on the scoreboard within the opening five minutes.

After Pierre Schoeman forced a turnover penalty at the breakdown, young stand-off Cammy Scott showed nerves of steel to slot a 40-metre penalty, giving the home side a 3–0 lead.

The first half was defined by Edinburgh’s defensive resilience. As Glasgow mounted pressure, Scott’s tactical kicking pinned the visitors back, while Liam McConnell produced a try-saving turnover just inches from his own line.

Despite the pressure, Glasgow eventually found a crack in the armour after 30 minutes, spreading the ball wide with a precise crossfield kick for Jamie Dobie to finish clinically in the corner.

 Half-time: Edinburgh 3 – 7 Glasgow Warriors

The second half began as a battle of attrition. Edinburgh were handed a golden opportunity when Glasgow’s Angus Fraser was yellow-carded following an off-field review for a dangerous tackle.

However, despite the one-man advantage, the hosts struggled to find a rhythm, with set-piece errors at the scrum and lineout stalling their momentum.

The match also marked a milestone for young hooker Jerry Blyth-Lafferty, who made his professional debut in the closing stages, though his introduction coincided with a period of renewed Glasgow dominance at the set piece.

With the game hanging in the balance entering the final five minutes, Glasgow showed why they are so dangerous in the red zone.

George Horne sparked the visitors into life, catching the Edinburgh defence napping with a trademark dart from five metres to dive over.

Minutes later, eventual BKT Player of the Match Jamie Dobie put the result beyond doubt, chasing down a perfectly weighted grubber kick to score his second of the afternoon.

The conversion sealed a 21–3 victory for the visitors who once again lifted the 1872 Cup.