Finn Russell believes his appointment as Scotland co-captain is testament to the newfound harmony he and head coach Gregor Townsend have found following a fractious past.The 31-year-old was named in the role on Sunday, along with back-rower Rory Darge, ahead of the upcoming Guinness Six Nations.Russell being handed such a responsibility was particularly notable given he and Townsend have had a strained relationship at times, with the stand-off admitting there is no way he would have been considered for skipper duties back in 2020.Four years ago, the pair had a well-documented fall-out when the out-half left the squad ahead of the Six Nations after being disciplined for failing to turn up for training following a drinking session.And then in 2022, Russell's Scotland career looked in jeopardy once more when - in the wake of another unauthorised night out during the Six Nations earlier that year - he was surprisingly omitted from the squad for the autumn tests.Russell and Townsend held clear-the-air talks midway through that series 15 months ago which led to a recall and they have managed to get themselves "on the same page" since then, culminating in the head coach choosing the Bath number 10 to lead the Scots into the Six Nations after opting to relieve Jamie Ritchie of the captaincy.
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Please review their details and accept them to load the content. Manage Preferences Listen to the RTÉ Rugby podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. "I think 2020 would have been the closest to that," Russell said when asked on Wednesday if he ever