Georgia's head coach Milton Haig (3R)

Georgia coach Milton Haig believes Scottish Rugby have made "a massive mistake" in not offering his old playing and coaching partner Vern Cotter a new contract after guiding Scotland to seventh in the world rankings.

Haig, who played and coached alongside Cotter in their native New Zealand, is convinced that Scottish officials have missed an opportunity to maintain the national side's progress by deciding to replace his opposite number with Glasgow head coach Gregor Townsend next June.

"I think it's a massive mistake," Haig told AFP ahead of Georgia's match against Scotland on the artificial football pitch at Rugby Park in Kilmarnock on Saturday.

"I know Vern personally and I know how good a coach he is. The fact that Scotland are now ranked seventh in the world speaks for itself.

"That's all to do with the culture and the self-belief that Vern has developed within the Scottish team. Why you wouldn't want to keep that going, I'm not too sure. I think it's a massive mistake but one door closes and another one opens."

Cotter -- who played at No 8 alongside scrum-half Haig for Bay of Plenty and started his coaching career with Haig as his assistant with the New Zealand provincial side in 2000 -- will move on to Montpellier in the French Top 14 when his contract expires in June.

Before then, however, the former Clermont boss has the chance to become the first Scotland coach in the professional era to leave the job with more wins than defeats. 

The dramatic 19-16 victory over Argentina secured by Greig Laidlaw's injury time penalty at Murrayfield last Saturday, Cotter's 30th match in charge of Scotland, evened the coach's tally at 15 wins and 15 losses -- with four home matches to come in his final six games, starting with Georgia's first ever Test in Scotland.

- 'Surreal' -

Not that Cotter is expecting anything other than a difficult match against a team who have prospered under Haig. The Lelos beat Tonga in last year's World Cup, overcame Samoa 20-16 in Tbilisi last Saturday and stand 12th in the World Rugby rankings.

"We know that this is a very important game for Georgia," said Cotter. "They want to come and make a statement with regard to Six Nations inclusion.

"Their coach is a good friend of mine. He has done a great job. They will be a hard, tough team."

Haig was appointed after the two nations contested what remains their only meeting: a dour, try-less 15-6 Scotland victory during the 2011 World Cup. The Scots have only one survivor in their line up on Saturday from their starting XV that day -- Ross Ford, who replaces Fraser Brown at hooker. 

Cotter has made four other changes, lock Richie Gray and flanker Rob Harley coming into the pack and Mark Bennett replacing the injured Huw Jones at outside centre.

Haig, who was player-coach of the Scottish club Preston Lodge in the 1990s, met up with Cotter on Monday, when the pair travelled back to Edinburgh together after a World Rugby meeting in London. 

"We were talking about how surreal it is that we started our coaching careers together in New Zealand in 2000 and here we are, 16 years later, coaching international sides against each other," Haig reflected.

"There's a nice little twist to the occasion, for sure, but come Saturday he'll be trying to win the game and I'll be doing my best to try to make sure he doesn't."

Source: AFP