2014–15 Glasgow Warriors season

The 2014–15 season saw Glasgow Warriors compete in the Pro12 and the European Champions Cup.

Hookers Fraser Brown Kevin Bryce Dougie Hall Pat MacArthur Props Alex Allan Michael Cusack Ryan Grant George Hunter Rossouw de Klerk Gordon Reid Jon Welsh Jerry Yanuyanutawa Locks Jonny Gray Alastair Kellock Leone Nakarawa Tom Ryder Tim Swinson Back rowers Adam Ashe Will Bordill James Eddie Chris Fusaro Rob Harley Tyrone Holmes Josh Strauss Ryan Wilson Scrum-halves Nikola Matawalu Murray McConnell Henry Pyrgos Fly-halves Finn Russell Duncan Weir Fraser Lyle Centres Mark Bennett James Downey Alex Dunbar Peter Horne Richie Vernon Back three Rory Hughes Lee Jones Sean Lamont Sean Maitland D. T. H. van der Merwe Tommy Seymour Stuart Hogg Peter Murchie

During the 2014–15 season, Glasgow have used 52 different players in competitive games.

The table below shows the number of appearances and points scored by each player.

Glasgow Warriors: 1 Alex Allan, 2 Fraser Brown, 3 Euan Murray, 4 Jonny Gray, 5 Leone Nakarawa, 6 James Eddie, 7 Tyrone Holmes, 8 Josh Strauss, 9 Murray McConnell, 10 Duncan Weir, 11 Rory Hughes, 12 James Downey, 13 Mark Bennett, 14 Lee Jones, 15 Peter Murchie Replacements: Jerry Yanuyanutawa, Chris Fusaro, Rossouw de Klerk, Pat MacArthur, Rob Harley, Nikola Matawalu, Peter Horne, D. T. H. van der Merwe, Adam Ashe, Connor Braid, Fergus Scott

Harlequins: 15 Mike Brown, 14 Marland Yarde, 13 Matt Hopper, 12 Jordan Turner Hall, 11 Ugo Monye, 10 Nick Evans, 9 Danny Care, 1 Joe Marler, 2 Joe Gray, 3 Kyle Sinckler, 4 Charlie Matthews, 5 George Robson, 6 Luke Wallace, 7 Chris Robshaw, 8 Nick Easter Replacements: Rob Buchanan, Mark Lambert, Paul Doran Jones, George Merrick, Sam Twomey, Joe Trayfoot, Jack Clifford, Karl Dickson, Ben Botica, Ross Chisholm, Oliie Lindsay Hague, Charlie Walker

PJ Gidlow (replaced by Alec Coombes), 11.

Adam Kwasnicki (c) (replaced by David Cherry) 3.

If teams are level at any stage, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:[5] Green background (rows 1 to 4) are play-off places, and earn a place in the 2015–16 European Rugby Champions Cup.Blue background indicates teams outside the play-off places, that earn a place in the European Rugby Champions Cup.

The top team from each country will qualify.Yellow background indicates the team that advances to a play-off semi-final against Aviva Premiership side Gloucester, who qualified for the play-off as the 2014–15 European Rugby Challenge Cup winners.

[6]Plain background indicates teams that earn a place in the 2015–16 European Rugby Challenge Cup.

Edinburgh Rugby won the 1872 Cup with an aggregate score of 26–24.

Players in BOLD font have been capped by their senior international XV side as nationality shown.

Players in normal font have not been capped at senior level.

Tournaments where competitive debut made: Crosshatching indicates a jointly hosted match.