Josh Lewsey has warned his England team-mates they must avoid the fate of Sir Alf Ramsey's World Cup winners when they resume their RBS 6 Nations campaign in Edinburgh.
Lewsey, who will line-up on the wing at Murrayfield, is anxious that the current RBS 6 Nations and world champions do not come unstuck against their neighbours.
He said: If you look at Englands history at Murrayfield its littered with upsets.
Complacency is a word that does not enter the vocabulary of this squad any more due to whats happened in the past.
Weve learnt the hard way, which is the best way to learn. Basically it means well go to Edinburgh and treat them with the utmost respect. Scotland will be looking to rectify last weekends defeat in Cardiff.
What people seem to forget is that the last time England won a World Cup the first side to beat them was the Auld Enemy - and that was at Wembley.
England coach Sir Clive Woodward was forced to make one change to his starting line-up, bringing in Chris Jones after an injury to Wasps flanker Joe Worsley.
The 6ft 6in Sale Sharks forward made his debut as a second-half substitute against Italy, scoring the last of seven tries.
His place among the substitutes is taken by Sharks team-mate Alex Sanderson.
Scotland coach Matt Williams named two changes in his side following their 23-10 defeat in Wales.
Williams has promoted Edinburghs centre/wing Simon Webster and Sale Sharks lock/back-row forward Jason White to his starting XV.
Edinburghs Allister Hogg, who made his debut in Cardiff, and Glasgows Andrew Henderson have made way.
We want to put on a performance that everyone will be proud of, Williams told official SRU website www.scottishrugby.org.
The team today is very young and probably the most inexperienced side in the top 10 world rankings just now.
Last week we gave out four new caps and three others were in their first ever 6 Nations match so almost half the team have never played 6 Nations rugby before which is quite extraordinary.
Taking on the world champions is a great opportunity for us to test ourselves against the best.