Scotland continued their stranglehold on Six Nations rivals Italy with a 34-13 victory at the Singapore National Stadium on Saturday.
Tries from Ali Price, Tim Visser, Damien Hoyland and a brace from Ross Ford proved too much for Italy, who scored through tries from Michele Campagnaro and Angelo Esposito.
The Scots have now won eight of the nine previous meetings between these sides with that solitary loss only coming by a three-point margin.
Following up their 29-0 trouncing of the Azzurri in the Six Nations in March, the Scots asserted their dominance over the Italians here once again.
It was a convincing performance in Gregor Townsend's first match in charge of the Scottish national team. What will please him the most is their creativity on attack and Finn Russell's excellent display at fly-half.
Despite the Scots dominating the territory and possession stakes, they were unable to turn this dominance into points for the majority of the first-half. Much of this had to with the Italians' dogged defence and conservative gameplan. The Azzurri seemed to be more focused on not conceding points than scoring any of their own. Their attack lacked in imagination and was largely blunt and route one, preferring to take it up through the forwards on the fringes of the ruck as opposed to going wide.
The first half was largely devoid of any try-scoring opportunities with the fly-halves exchanging penalties. It was a stop-start 40 minutes in which both sides struggled for continuity on attack until the Scots came to life with five minutes to go.
Finally, the try came on the stroke of half-time and it was a well-deserved one. It was scrum-half Price who reached over after good work by his forwards.
There was still time for one more. With the hooter already gone, Russell showed his class by chipping over an onrushing Italian defence for wing Visser to collect and dot down. It was superb play from Finn who exploited the space behind the Azzurri defence to great effect as Scotland took a 15-3 lead in to the interval.
Scotland continued their dominance straight after the break with their third try. This time it came from a well-controlled driving maul with hooker Ford going over at the back. Russell added the extras as they took a 22-3 early second-half lead.
After repeated warnings by referee Paul Williams to the Italians for infringements at the breakdown, Dean Budd was sin-binned six minutes into the second-half for going off his feet.
Scotland's fourth try was a combination of superb interplay and expert handling. Russell made the break with Hoyland and Ben Toolis involved in the build-up that led to Ford grabbing his brace. It was a memorable team try.
Italy got their first try of the match when they profited on an errant Scotland pass to intercept. From the intercept, Maxime Mbanda offloaded to Campagnaro who showed good support play and a sharp turn of pace to dot down.
The Azzurri were guilty of more indiscipline. Referee Williams yellow-carded Italian substitute Abraham Steyn in the 73rd minute for lifting Price off the ground and putting him down in a dangerous horizontal position after the whistle had blown.
Soon after, Hoyland got on the scoresheet as the pressure told on the Italians for playing with 14 men. Taylor drew the man cleverly to tie in the last defender before giving the late pass to Hoyland who was not going to be stopped with his pace.
Italy grabbed a second in the closing minutes. After sustained pressure on the Scottish defence, Edoardo Gori's box-kick was well collected by Esposito who went over the line.
The scorers:
For Italy:
Tries: Campagnaro, Esposito
Pen: Allan
Yellow Cards: Budd, Steyn
For Scotland:
Tries: Price, Visser, Ford 2, Hoyland
Cons: Taylor, Russell
Pen: Russell
Italy: 15 Edoardo Padovani, 14 Angelo Esposito, 13 Michele Campagnaro, 12 Tommaso Boni, 11 Leonardo Sarto, 10 Tommaso Allan, 9 Edoardo Gori (c), 8 Robert Julian Barbieri, 7 Maxime Mata Mbanda, 6 Francesco Minto, 5 Dean Budd, 4 Marco Fuser, 3 Simone Ferrari, 2 Luca Bigi, 1 Andrea Lovotti
Replacements: 16 Ornel Gega, 17 Federico Zani, 18 Pietro Ceccarelli, 19 Andries van Schalkwyk, 20 Abraham Steyn, 21 Marcello Violi, 22 Carlo Cane, 23 Tommaso Benvenuti
Scotland: 15 Duncan Taylor, 14 Damien Hoyland, 13 Matt Scott, 12 Alex Dunbar, 11 Tim Visser, 10 Finn Russell, 9 Ali Price, 8 Josh Strauss, 7 Ryan Wilson, 6 John Barclay (c), 5 Ben Toolis, 4 Tim Swinson, 3 Willem Nel, 2 Ross Ford, 1 Allan Dell
Replacements: 16 Fraser Brown, 17 Gordon Reid, 18 Zander Fagerson, 19 Rob Harley, 20 Magnus Bradbury, 21 Cornell du Preez, 22 Henry Pyrgos, 23 Peter Horne
Referee: Paul Williams (New Zealand)
Assistant Referees: Mike Fraser (New Zealand), Tim Baker (Hong Kong)
TMO: Minoru Fuji (Japan)
Tries from Akihito Yamada, Kenki Fukuoka and Michael Leitch saw them to the success, with Jumpei Ogura kicking 18 points from the tee.
Tries from Israel Folau (2), Henry Speight (2) and Stephen Moore saw them to victory, with Bernard Foley kicking 12 points in a slick showing.
Only one try was scored in the game and it went the way of Irish lock Iain Henderson, as the hosts held on for a morale-boosting success.
A 20-minute spell on the Welsh line was the conclusion to this fixture as Camille Chat's try, converted by Camille Lopez, saw France win.
The home side were full value for their win as they dominated for large periods — especially during the first half — although Italy will be disappointed with their effort and poor goalkicking from Carlo Canna, who failed to convert three penalties in the first half, meant they failed to score any points.
A hat-trick from outside centre Jonathan Joseph led the way for Eddie Jones' charges, with Anthony Watson, Billy Vunipola and Danny Care (2) also crossing as they move an impressive eight points clear in the table.
Italy took a surprise lead through Sergio Parisse but France responded in kind through Gaël Fickou, with three penalties from Camille Lopez to two from Carlo Canna giving France a 16-11 advantage by the break.
North's try and a Leigh Halfpenny penalty handed Wales an 8-6 half-time advantage, after three-pointers in response from Johnny Sexton and Paddy Jackson.
Eddie Jones's men stuttered and fumbled their way through the first half allowing Italy's intensity to throw them off their game after Giovanbattista Venditti scored just before halftime it looked as though Italy were about to claim their second big scalp under Conor O'Shea after beating South Africa in November.
Both teams were unaffected by Dublin's rainfall and produced a passionate game of rugby that typified European rivalry.
They had waited a decade for a victory over Wales, their last success coming at Murrayfield with a 21-9 win back in 2007, and ultimately were more than worthy victors after tries from Tommy Seymour and Tim Visser, remarkably winning the second half alone 20-0.
In an entertaining encounter, in which both teams kept the ball alive at every opportunity, momentum between the two sides ebbed and flowed, but it was the hosts who got the rub of the green in the end coming away with a deserved victory.
In an attritional encounter, in which both sides went at each other hammer and tongs for the full 80 minutes, Wales will be kicking themselves for losing this Test as they dominated for large periods.
Bouncing back from a first round loss to Scotland, the Irish were superb against the Azzurri as they made it six points from two matches.
Despite falling behind to Edoardo Gori's try on 29 minutes, Rob Howley's men hit back through Jonathan Davies, Liam Williams and George North with Leigh Halfpenny contributing 16 points from the tee in an assured display.
Although their campaign started with a win — and they have now stretched their winning run to 15 successive Tests — the defending champions' boss, Eddie Jones, will not be happy with his side's effort as they had to dig deep to win this one.
Greig Laidlaw secured his side the win after a spirited Irish fightback, with two penalties in the last ten minutes of the match.
It has been a sensational year for the English team after going 13 games unbeaten, claiming victories over all the Six Nations sides and three of the Rugby Championship teams. It is England's first year since 1992 that they haven't lost a single game to make it a perfect season.