EDINBURGH, SCOTLAND – DECEMBER 27: Edinburgh’s Harri Morris (C) in action during a BKT United Rugby Championship match between Edinburgh Rugby and Glasgow Warriors at Scottish Gas Murrayfield, on December 27, 2025, in Edinburgh, Scotland.

Glasgow Warriors claimed the 1872 Cup for the fourth straight year with a 21–3 victory over Edinburgh Rugby at Scottish Gas Murrayfield, sealing the series with two late tries and extending their unbeaten run through December. A brace from BKT Player of the Match Jamie Dobie and a close-range effort from George Horne ensured the trophy returns west along the M8 once again.

Chasing a 12–point deficit from the first leg at Hampden Park, Edinburgh started brightly under grey skies in the capital. Pierre Schoeman’s work at the breakdown earned an early penalty, and fly-half Cammy Scott showed composure from 35 metres to give the hosts a 3–0 lead after five minutes. His tactical kicking kept Glasgow pinned back in the early exchanges, while a key turnover from Liam McConnell on his own line preserved the advantage.

Glasgow, however, steadily grew into the game. Stafford McDowall’s running lines and Matt Fagerson’s direct carrying began to stretch Edinburgh’s shape, forcing the home defence to scramble. A turnover from Fagerson in his own 22 and sharp interventions from Kyle Steyn and Ollie Smith kept the contest tight as both teams tested the fringes without reward.

The breakthrough came just past the half-hour mark. With Edinburgh blitzing hard, Adam Hastings stepped back inside before hanging a cross-field kick into space for Dobie to collect and finish in the corner. Hastings added the extras for a 7–3 lead. Dobie then produced a crucial defensive moment before the interval, tracking back to gather a Ben Vellacott grubber and beating multiple defenders to clear under pressure, helping Glasgow retain their four-point advantage at the break.

The second half opened as an arm-wrestle, defences refusing to buckle under the floodlights. Edinburgh were handed a lifeline when Angus Fraser was yellow-carded following an off-field review for a dangerous tackle, but a malfunctioning set-piece undermined their momentum. A close-range maul was repelled by the 14-man Warriors, and repeated scrum and lineout errors halted promising platforms.

As the sin-bin expired, the Glasgow bench injected control and tempo. With 10 minutes remaining, sustained pressure inside the Edinburgh 22 saw Horne spot the smallest of gaps, diving under bodies to score before converting his own try for a 14–3 lead. Edinburgh’s late push evaporated moments later when turnover ball allowed Glasgow to chip behind the defence; Dobie accelerated through to claim his second of the match, with Dan Lancaster landing a touchline conversion to complete the scoring.

The final whistle confirmed a first Glasgow win at Murrayfield since 2022 and a perfect end to their 2025 calendar year. Edinburgh, by contrast, will reflect on a performance of early promise undone by a lack of precision in key moments.

Glasgow now look ahead to 2026 and their New Year’s opener against Zebre Parma, while Edinburgh will regroup as they aim to turn competitive spells into tangible results.