Scotland Women 14

Italy Women 12

JUST like busses: you wait seven years for a win and then two come along in the same season. If anybody wanted proof of the impressive strides the Scots have made since Shade Munro took over coaching, this was it – a classic and utterly professional example of taking chances and then sitting on the lead.

"We know it has been building and coming for the last couple of years," said Lisa Martin, the captain. "To be in with an opportunity like this and in this environment is fantastic. If you had told me at the start of the Six Nations that we sitting in this position, I would not have believed you.

"It is fantastic, but we are not going to get complacent. Winning is addictive and is becoming a habit for us."

For the first quarter, it had been a classic case of the Scots backs against the Italian pack. as the vistitors kept things tight and they reaped the rewards.

A Scots mistake gave them a line out maul; they won another penalty and repeated the exercise. This time the Scots gave way, and Bettoni Melisa, the hooker burrowed over for the score, converted by Sillari Michela, the wing.

That was bad enough but more sloppy handling gave Italy the chance to repeat same tactic on the other side of the field and it worked almost exactly the same with Melisa getting her second. Crucially, this time it was too far out for the conversion.

Scotland of a couple of seasons ago would have folded at that setback but this team is made from different stuff. They were starting to even things up in the forwards and as the weather dried out, began to find openings to counterattack as their strike runners came into the game.

Martin, the centre, was at the heart of it all, crashing through the midifeld and just when it looked a though she had run out of options, she spotted Chloe Rollie, the full back, wider out. A perfectly placed kick and Rollie was over to the start of the comeback.

That lifted the Scots who started to find space out wide with Rollie dancing through the defence like a mini Stuart Hogg and Martin adding the power. It was the fowards, however, who broke the home defence open with a series of drives so that by the time it got to the backs, they had players over with Rollie finishing her second score.

Crucially Lana Skelton, the hooker, took the kicking duties and though neither conversion was easy, she landed them both, giving her side a narrow lead at the break. Through the second half was scoreless, the Scots were in charge and a more experienced side would have taken advantage of a couple of breaks before they wound down the clock over the final minutes.

Scotland women: C Rollie (Murrayfield Wanderers); M Gaffney (Edinburgh University, E Sinclair, Murrayfield Wanderers, 66), L Thomson (Edinburgh University), L Martin (C) (Murrayfield Wanderers), R Lloyd (Edinburgh University); H Nelson (Murrayfield Wanderers), S Law (Murrayfield Wanderers); T Balmer (Worcester, H Lockhart, Hillhead Jordanhill 7-15, 67), L Skeldon (Hillhead Jordanhill), K Dougan (Edinburgh University, L Smith, Hillhead Jordanhill, 57), E Wassell (Murrayfield Wanderers), D McCormack (Aylesford Bulls, S Bonar, Lichfield, 57), J Forsyth (Hillhead Jordanhill, L O’Donnell, Worcester, 78), L McMillan (Hillhead Jordanhill), J Konkel (Hillhead Jordanhill).

Italy Women: F Manuela; S Michelle, C Mariagrtazia, S Sofia (B Elisa, 71), M Maria; R Beatrice, B Sara; C Elisa, B Melissa, F Maria (E Michela, 55), L Isabella, T Alice, A Ilaria, G Elissa, C Lucia.

Referee: F Murphy (Ireland)