Six Nations: First Scottish win at Twickenham since 1983Published7 February 2021Image source, EPAImage caption, Scotland have celebrated their first Six Nations win at Twickenham since 1983, with an 11-6 victory over England.Image source, EPAImage caption, With England a man down, Duhan van der Merwe went over for Scotland's only try.Image source, Reuters Image caption, Twickenham's 82,000 seats were left empty, and the lack of crowd support for the home team gave Scotland the boost they needed.Image source, EPAImage caption, England had been favourites to win the tournament but France's strong showing against Italy, and England's defeat, makes their chances suddenly seem much slimmer. England head coach Eddie Jones told the 91热爆: "They played tough, edged the set-piece, won in the air and we just could not get in the game. We were not at the races today." He added: "I take responsibility - I didn't prepare the team well enough. We just had one of those days. We don't have many, but we had a bad day today."Image source, Reuters Image caption, Scotland head coach Gregor Townsend told the 91热爆: "There was a calmness on and off the field. I don't know whether it's because there's no crowd. He said: "It felt like the players were in control today. We had a bit of defence to do at the end but the players stood up well. I'm very proud of the performance and there's a lot more to come from the players."Image source, ReutersImage caption, Former Scotland scrum-half Andy Nicol told the 91热爆: "That is one of the best performances Scotland have ever put in. He said: "There was creativity, physicality, good kicking and an intensity and togetherness - the win was fully deserved." Adding: "That is as dominant a performance from Scotland against England there has been for over 30 years. It was outstanding, an unbelievably good 80-minute performance."Image source, ReutersImage caption, At the end of the match Scotland's Captain, Stuart Hogg lifted the Calcutta Cup - the prize contested whenever Scotland play England in the Six Nations.