The key takeaway from this tour will be that Scotland lost the one match that really mattered, the one match that had real jeopardy and meaning attached to it, writes Calum Crowe

When the dust settles on Scotland’s summer tour of the Pacific, the bare facts will show that they won two of their three matches.
Although Gregor Townsend will argue that two out of three ain’t bad, the reality is that this tour has been harmful to Scotland and their prospects for the next World Cup.
This seven-try rout of Samoa ensured the Scots bounced back from the defeat to Fiji last weekend and finished on a high. But it proved nothing. The damage had already been done.
The loss to the Fijians was a hammer blow to Scotland’s world ranking and their hopes of securing a top seeding for the World Cup draw later this year.
Realistically, they were never going to lose to the Maori All Blacks or to Samoa. The Māoris ran them close, whilst Samoa were swatted aside with ease.
Ultimately, the key takeaway from this tour will be that Scotland lost the one match that really mattered, the one match that had real jeopardy and meaning attached to it.
Kyle Rowe of Scotland is tackled during the Test victory against Samoa in Auckland

Matt Fagerson tries to bulldoze his way through the Samoan defence

Gregor Townsend has much to ponder after two wins and a damaging defeat on tour
So for all that Townsend will talk about squad depth and the experience as a whole, the reality is that this tour is another black mark against his stewardship as head coach.
Before the tour started, Scottish Rugby chief executive Alex Williamson boldly expressed a desire to extend Townsend’s contract, which is set to expire in April next year.
Plainly, there has been precious little evidence over these past three weeks that Townsend would be deserving of an extension.
Indeed, quite the contrary. Having presided over a defeat in the one match that really mattered, this tour only strengthens the feeling that his time should really be up.
If the Williamson and the SRU continue this bizarre clamour to hand him a new deal, they are rewarding mediocrity.
In a stadium which is the most revered fortress in world rugby, Scotland cruised to victory at Eden Park against a Samoa side who looked second-rate in every department.
Jamie Dobie and Fergus Burke were the two standouts, the half-back pairing combining to good effect as Scotland’s attack clicked into gear in Auckland.
But context was needed in the sense that this was a Samoa team featuring several debutants and who hadn’t played a whole lot of rugby together.
Scotland scored four tries in the first half through Ewan Ashman, Rory Hutchinson, Arron Reed and Kyle Steyn, before Grant Gilchrist, Kyle Rowe and George Turner added three more after the break.
Ashman and Rory Sutherland only played 40 minutes. Taken off at half-time, they will now head over to Australia to join the British and Irish Lions.
Part of the Scots trio who were belatedly called up this week, Darcy Graham had already travelled to join the Lions and so did not play in this clash with the Samoans.
This was Scotland’s first match at Eden Park since a 16-12 defeat to England in the 2011 World Cup, a result which effectively eliminated the Scots from the tournament.
There was close to 60,000 fans inside the iconic venue for that clash between the Auld Enemies. The crowd this time was far more modest, with huge swathes of empty seats.
When the teams lined up for the anthems prior to kick-off, the music to Flower of Scotland ended up woefully out of sync.
Some players had almost finished signing the anthem, yet the music was only midway through the second verse.

Fergus Burke breaks away against Samoa with the stand-off impressing on tour
A few of them saw the funny side, whilst others looked bemused and angry that the anthem had been so badly botched.
Their job, of course, was to ensure that pre-match mishap would not set the tone for what followed against a Samoa side ranked 13th in the world.
But Townsend’s side were quick to assert their dominance and scored two tries inside the opening quarter of an hour.
Ashman got the first after the hooker profited from a powerful lineout maul, peeling off the back after it had rumbled its way towards the Samoa line.
Stafford McDowall was the architect for the second, cleverly drawing the Samoan defence on to him before dropping a rubber-kick in behind.
His midfield partner Hutchinson was on to it in a flash and raced away to score under the posts, with Burke’s conversion making it 12-0.
Scotland were looking good any time they got the ball wide, with winger Reed scoring their third try on 32 minutes after taking a lovely, looping pass from Dobie.
Dobie was having a fine game at scrum-half and was instrumental in the move which saw Steyn touch down for Scotland’s fourth try shortly before half-time.
Making his return to New Zealand, Burke was also showing up well at fly-half as the Scots dominated and led 22-0 at half-time.
Steyn was nursing a slight hand injury and was taken off at half-time, with Dobie shifting to the wing and George Horne coming on at scrum-half.
Gilchrist powered over from close range to extend Scotland’s lead, with full-back Rowe also getting in on the rout with a try of his own.
Scotland took their foot off the gas midway through the second half, with Samoa scoring twice through Benjamin Petaia Nee-Nee and Duncan Paia’aua.
On as a replacement for Ashman at half-time, Turner added another try in the final moment to add a little more gloss to the scoreline.
But whilst Scotland’s players congratulated each other on the win at full-time, the full extent of the damage from this tour will only be known by the end of the year when the World Cup draw is made.
In terms of Townsend’s future as head coach, it has been a tour which has raised more questions than answers.