Edinburgh hold nerve in Treviso thriller
4 Jan 2026Edinburgh Rugby secured a monumental result on Italian soil last night, weathering a late storm at Stadio Monigo to claim a 14-15 victory over Benetton.
Edinburgh Rugby secured a monumental result on Italian soil last night, weathering a late storm at Stadio Monigo to claim a 14-15 victory over Benetton.
The result marks the capital side’s first away win of the season and their first triumph in Treviso since 2017, ending a long-standing hoodoo in one of the BKT United Rugby Championship’s toughest environments.
The visitors started with intent, asserting their dominance from the opening whistle. For much of the first half, Edinburgh were the superior side, moving the ball with a slickness that frequently pierced the Benetton line.
The pressure eventually told when scrum-half Ben Vellacott sniped over from close range for the opening try. Ross Thompson added the extras and later slotted a penalty to stretch the lead to 10-0.
While the halftime scoreline favoured Edinburgh, it arguably did not reflect the extent of their control. Several promising incursions into the Benetton 22 went unrewarded due to minor inaccuracies at the clinical moment, leaving the door ajar for the hosts.
The second half began with a moment of pure individual brilliance from Darcy Graham. Deep inside his own 22, the winger reacted quickest to a loose ball.
Sensing an opportunity, he launched a speculative kick downfield, outpaced the covering defense, and dived on the ball once more to score a sensational solo effort.
The score moved Edinburgh into a 0-15 lead and seemingly put them in the driver’s seat. However, the Italian outfit refused to crumble.
Spurred on by a vocal home crowd, Benetton ignited. In a frantic ten-minute window, the hosts crossed the whitewash twice, converting both to bring the score to 14-15.
With the momentum firmly behind the Italians, Stadio Monigo was on its feet, and Edinburgh found themselves in a defensive dogfight.
The shift in the trenches was led by Freddy Douglas, who produced a masterclass at the breakdown to earn the BKT Player of the Match award.
Alongside him, the defensive shift was relentless; Glen Young, Harri Morris, Tom Dodd, James Lang, and Matt Currie put in a massive shift to halt the green-and-white waves of attack.
The final ten minutes were a test of pure resolve. Harri Morris came up with a vital turnover penalty to relieve pressure, a feat mirrored moments later by Darcy Graham, who proved as effective in defence as he was in attack.
Drama peaked in the 80th minute when Edinburgh had the chance to seal the game with a penalty.
In a heart-stopping moment, the strike hit the upright and bounced back into play.
Benetton gathered and launched one final, desperate assault down the short side. However, the Edinburgh line held firm, and a spilled Italian pass finally brought the gruelling contest to an end.