Facts about Scott Hastings ๐Ÿ‰


Scott Hastings (4 December 1964 โ€“ 17 May 2026) was a Scottish sports commentator and Scotland international rugby union player. At the point of his retirement he was Scotland’s most-capped player ever, but this record has now been beaten.

๐Ÿ† Club and District Career

Hastings played for Watsonians. While with Watsonians, they won the Scottish Premiership in the 1997โ€“98 season and the Melrose Sevens in 1996. He played for Edinburgh District, and with the district side they won the Scottish Inter-District Championship for 3 successive seasons (1986-87, 1987โ€“88 and 1988-89).

He played for Combined Scottish Districts on 1 March 1986 against South of Scotland. He played for and captained the Cities District side in their match against Australia on 3 November 1996.

๐Ÿด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ณ๓ ฃ๓ ด๓ ฟ Professional and International Career

When Scotland adopted the professional rugby union model in 1996, Hastings went on to play for and captain Edinburgh Rugby. He retired from professional rugby in January 1999. He guided Edinburgh Rugby to win the 1997โ€“98 and 1998-99 Inter-District Championships.

He played full back for Scotland Schools and for Scotland ‘B’ against Italy ‘B’ on 7 December 1985. He then won 65 full senior caps at centre for Scotland from 1986 to 1997. The brothers both earned their first full senior cap on 17 January 1986 against France.

In June 1996, Hastings made his 62nd Scotland full international appearance and became for a time the country’s most capped rugby player, surpassing his brother Gavin. Hastings was twice a member of the British Lions: in 1989 (Australia) and 1993 (New Zealand). On the latter tour, a cheekbone injury kept him out of the test matches.

He played in 13 matches for the Barbarians, between 1986 and 2000, captaining the side against New Zealand in December 1993.

๐Ÿ“บ Media and Personal Life

Hastings appeared as a guest presenter on STV’s daily lifestyle show The Hour on a few occasions. He was a co-commentator for ITV’s coverage of the 2011 Rugby World Cup. On 10 July 2014, he made his dรฉbut on the BBC’s political discussion show Question Time. During the 2014 Scottish independence referendum, Hastings supported the Better Together No campaign against independence.

Scott was part of the ITV team covering the 2019 Rugby World Cup. In 2016 he and his wife Jenny were announced as ambassadors for mental health charity Support in Mind Scotland. He was a patron of MND Scotland. He was supporter of the Euan MacDonald Centre, a research centre that is part of the University of Edinburgh and which looks at motor neurone disease.

Hastings was the younger brother of Gavin Hastings, also a Lions and Scotland international rugby union player. Hastings’s daughter was selected to play hockey for Scotland in 2019. In May 2022, he spoke about his diagnosis of non-Hodgkin lymphoma and that he had received chemotherapy as treatment for this. Later that year he described that he had received his cancer diagnosis five years previously, and was then in remission.

In September 2024, his wife, Jenny, died by suicide at a location used for wild swimming in the Firth of Forth. Hastings died from non-Hodgkin lymphoma on 17 May 2026, aged 61.

Category Detail Year(s) Note
Birth 4 December 1964 1964 Scottish
Death 17 May 2026 2026 Non-Hodgkin lymphoma
Scotland Caps 65 full senior caps 1986โ€“1997 Centre position
British Lions 1989 (Australia) and 1993 (New Zealand) 1989, 1993 Cheekbone injury in 1993
๐Ÿ Scott Hastings was a Scottish rugby union player and commentator who earned 65 caps for Scotland and played for the British Lions twice. He was Scotland’s most-capped player at his retirement and later worked as a TV presenter and commentator. He died from non-Hodgkin lymphoma in 2026 at age 61.