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Australia lose, SA lose again, NZ win a tight match vs France

Congrats on the great win vs the ABs last week. We were pretty much full strength and had no answers for that defense. It was a real wake up call for a few people.

Should be an interesting world cup.
 
Congrats on the great win vs the ABs last week. We were pretty much full strength and had no answers for that defense. It was a real wake up call for a few people.

Should be an interesting world cup.

Cheers buddy! It was a fantastic game tbh. Watched it in the local with the family, atmosphere was electric.

Its crucially important for us though, that the usual hype generation before every WC doesnt kick into gear. Every tournament the media and select people go into overdrive, hail us as dark horses or contenders and we bottle it when it counts. We've achieved literally nothing at a WC level and for that to change, need to keep focused and avoid dwelling too much on these Tests.

Should be interesting indeed. Also gonna tag [MENTION=132954]Aman[/MENTION] in revenge for 2013
 
Cheers buddy! It was a fantastic game tbh. Watched it in the local with the family, atmosphere was electric.

Its crucially important for us though, that the usual hype generation before every WC doesnt kick into gear. Every tournament the media and select people go into overdrive, hail us as dark horses or contenders and we bottle it when it counts. We've achieved literally nothing at a WC level and for that to change, need to keep focused and avoid dwelling too much on these Tests.

Should be interesting indeed. Also gonna tag [MENTION=132954]Aman[/MENTION] in revenge for 2013
You guys deserved to win, you played really well.
 
Congrats on the great win vs the ABs last week. We were pretty much full strength and had no answers for that defense. It was a real wake up call for a few people.

Should be an interesting world cup.
Man and here I was thinking Barrett was getting into Carter territory, the last few games have given me a wake up call and reminded me just how great Carter was.
 
Man and here I was thinking Barrett was getting into Carter territory, the last few games have given me a wake up call and reminded me just how great Carter was.

Barrett is a ridiculous player but he has never been quite a pure first five eighth. He can murder teams in broken play at any time we know that. However if you can get to some sort of parity with the all black forwards at the breakdown you can shut him down completely with a good rush defense. Crusaders done it in super rugby and SA, Eng and Ireland have managed it in the internationals this year. The way to counter this is to kick in behind the line but his kicking game just isnt accurate enough.

It was a different story when he had Nonu outside of him who could bust the line or pass on a dime equally as good. Which is why they keep trying to presist with Sonny Bill with no success because hes far too one dimensional.
 
I could go on all day but really beating the all blacks is simple.

Beat them at the break down and at least hold your own at set piece. If you can do that without tiring out in the last quarter you have a good chance of winning.
 
I do think people are sleeping on Steve Hansen big time though. Hes a very cunning operator and i reckon he wont show his full hand til world cup time. The tactics this year have been very uncharacteristicly straight forward and direct.
 
Paris - Ireland's Johnny Sexton was named World Rugby Player of the Year on Sunday for leading his nation to the Six Nations Grand Slam.

Sexton beat All Blacks flyhalf Beauden Barrett - the winner for the last two years - South Africa scrumhalf Faf de Klerk, New Zealand try machine Rieko Ioane and Springbok hooker Malcolm Marx.

The 33-year-old Leinster flyhalf is only the second Irish player to win the award after hooker Keith Wood in 2001.

It was an Irish triple at the ceremony in Monaco as Ireland were named Team of the Year and Joe Schmidt won Coach of the Year.

Jessy Tremouliere became the first French winner of the women's Player of the Year award having helped Les Bleues win the Six Nations Grand Slam.

With Sexton at their heart, Ireland only lost once all year, to Australia in June, and bagged a memorable Grand Slam against England on St Patrick's Day at Twickenham.

They also beat the All Blacks on Irish soil for the first time with a 16-9 win on November 17.

Sexton lost his voice so Ireland team-mate Rory Best had to read out his acceptance speech, saying: "If a No 10 wins an award like this, it is due to the team around him and his coaches making his job easier.

"We have some of the best coaches in the world and are led superbly by Rory Best."

New Zealander Schmidt is expected to announce by the end of this month whether he will remain in charge beyond next year's Rugby World Cup in Japan.

But first he will aim to guide the Irish to the last four of the global showpiece for the first time.

Full list of World Rugby Awards winners:

World Rugby Men’s 15s Player of the Year - Johnny Sexton (Ireland)

World Rugby Women’s 15s Player of the Year, in association with Mastercard - Jessy Trémoulière (France)

World Rugby Team of the Year - Ireland

World Rugby Coach of the Year - Joe Schmidt (Ireland)

World Rugby Breakthrough Player of the Year -

Aphiwe Dyantyi (South Africa)

World Rugby Men’s Sevens Player of the Year - Perry Baker (USA)

World Rugby Women’s Sevens Player of the Year - Michaela Blyde (New Zealand)

World Rugby Referee Award - Angus Gardner (Australia)

Vernon Pugh Award for Distinguished Service - Yoshiro Mori (Japan)

Award for Character - Doddie Weir (Scotland)

Spirit of Rugby Award - Jamie Armstrong, The Clan (Scotland)

IRP Special Merit Award - Stephen Moore (Australia) and DJ Forbes (New Zealand)

IRP Try of the Year - Brodie Retallick (New Zealand v Australia)

https://m.sport24.co.za/Rugby/johnny-sexton-named-world-rugby-player-of-the-year-20181126
 
Attack coach Scott Wisemantel has left his role with England, leaving boss Eddie Jones with another position to fill before the Six Nations.

The 49-year-old's contract with the Rugby Football Union ended after England's defeat by South Africa in the Rugby World Cup final this month.

Scrum expert Neal Hatley has already left to join Premiership side Bath.

Forwards coach Steve Borthwick is expected to join Leicester's coaching staff in the coming months.

However, the RFU is confident former England captain Borthwick will remain in position for at least the Six Nations, with Jones' side starting their campaign against France in Paris on 2 February.

Wisemantel joined the England coaching team in the summer of 2018 and is credited with sharpening the side's attacking play over the past 18 months.

However, the Australian has been courted by Rugby Australia and is tipped to join new coach Dave Rennie's backroom team.

"Scott's contract finished at the end of the Rugby World Cup and we had some discussions but he has decided to move on," Jones said of his compatriot.

"Whatever role he takes on next I know he will do an outstanding job because he was fantastic for us. We will miss him but we wish him all the best and his family."

Jones, along with his number two John Mitchell, is contracted until the summer of 2021.

Source: https://www.bbc.com/sport/rugby-union/50553733.
 
I have never met a pakistani, indian or bangladeshi who watches rugby, except for the odd wc game, when the late great jonah lomu(apologies if i spelt his name wrong) played.
Suprised by this thread!
 
The 2020 Six Nations Rugby Tournament Thread

2020 Six Nations: France v England
France (17) 24
Tries: Rattez, Ollivon 2 Con: Ntamack3 Pens: Ntamack
England (0) 17
Tries: May 2 Cons: Farrell 2 Pen: Farrell

World Cup finalists England fell to a chastening defeat to a resurgent France as their Six Nations hopes wilted in the Parisian rain.

Coach Eddie Jones had talked of unleashing a brutal physicality upon a callow France side with an average of just 10 caps apiece.

But it was France who tenderised England in a one-sided first half, converted tries from Vincent Rattez and captain Charles Ollivon plus a Romain Ntamack penalty opening up a deserved 17-point lead.

Ollivon dived over for his second try to stretch that advantage to 24, before two brilliant solo scores from Jonny May suddenly brought hope in the final quarter.

But England could add only a late Owen Farrell penalty, their hopes of only a second Grand Slam in 17 years disintegrating in the face of a France defence superbly drilled by Shaun Edwards.

Jones said his team wanted to become the greatest team in history, but they were second-best to Fabien Galthie's new wave of Gallic talents.

England stunned by resurgent France in Paris - reaction
Six Nations table
Six Nations fixtures & results
Women's Six Nations: England beat France 19-13
New-look France tear into England
In a febrile atmosphere England made early inroads when Sam Underhill capitalised on an overthrown line-out to thunder deep into the French 22 before his back-row partner Tom Curry spilt the ball in the tackle.

But it was France who struck first to light up the stadium, Teddy Thomas with a quicksilver break down the right before left wing Rattez - only in as a late replacement for Damian Penaud - cut a cute line on Ntamack's inside shoulder to crash through Ben Youngs' tackle and over.


Six Nations 2020: France dominate early on against England
Ntamack popped over the conversion, and when England's forwards were penalised at a ruck a few metres from their own line, the young fly-half landed his second kick to extend the lead to 10 points.

Worse was to come for the men in white. Talismanic centre Manu Tuilagi limped off, to be replaced by Jonathan Joseph, then France struck a second hammer blow.

As Ollivon challenged for a kick ahead, England stopped, expecting referee Nigel Owens to blow for a knock-on. But the whistle never came, and Ollivon galloped 30 metres to dive into the left-hand corner.

Ntamack's nerveless conversion made it 17-0, tricolors being waved frantically all round celebrating stands as the brass band behind the England posts blasted out the Can-Can.

Under that intense aural and physical assault England's errors began to mount, debutant George Furbank dropping one pass, captain Owen Farrell knocking on another.

Not since 1988 had England been kept scoreless at half-time in a Five or Six Nations match, but the scoreline reflected a fractured and ugly display.

2020 Six Nations
Team Played Won Lost Bonus points Points
Wales 1 1 0 1 5
France 1 1 0 0 4
Ireland 1 1 0 0 4
England 1 0 1 1 1
Scotland 1 0 1 1 1
Italy 1 0 1 0 0
May day comes too late for battered England
A year ago France led Wales by 16 points in their opening game of the tournament only to capitulate in a dramatic second half.

And when England opted to take a scrum on successive penalties in front of the France posts the pressure was finally on Galthie's side, only for Joseph to have the ball stripped as he took a short pass five metres out, and then Itoje knock on in a subsequent ruck.

It was the seventh time England had been within five metres of the France tryline without coming way with a point, and Jones rang the changes.

Luke Cowan-Dickie came on for Jamie George and Ellis Genge for Joe Marler with half an hour to go, but it initially did nothing to stem the irresistible blue tide.

May was turned over by replacement prop Jefferson Poirot, and when scrum-half Antoine Dupont stepped through a static defence there was Ollivon once again to slide over the line.

At 24-0 England were facing humiliation, the noise around the Stade de France defeaning.

May's opportunistic try after kicking ahead with 23 minutes left provided a desperately needed ray of sunshine for England on a sodden, grey afternoon.


Six Nations 2020: 'What a try!' May scores superb running try
And he conjured up something even better eight minutes later, racing on to Elliot Daly's fast, flat past to carve past three weary defenders and under the posts.

From nowhere England had hope, France mangling a line-out in their own 22 after a clever George Ford kick to set up a series of drives.

But replacement scrum-half Willie Heinz lost the ball as he tried to burst through off a ruck, and, although George Kruis was held up over the line at the death, France held on to secure a famous win.

Man of the match: Antoine Dupont
Antoine Dupont
Captain Charles Ollivon and number eight Gregory Alldritt had fine games, but scrum-half Antoine Dupont helped create two of his side's three tries, his half-back partnership with Romain Ntamack promising much as France build towards a home World Cup.
'Everyone made errors today' - what they said
Former England captain Dylan Hartley: "It was a collective - everyone made errors today. From one to 15, guys were making errors and that's why we had such a poor performance. The best thing to do is restart, that's all you can do. If we eradicate personal errors, we're in that game."

Former England centre Jeremy Guscott: "Eddie Jones must be fuming. You can't have that many entries into the opposition 22 and come away with zero. The tries England scored were literally flashes of brilliance from Jonny May."

Former England captain Martin Johnson: "England needed to turn pressure into scores. You need more subtlety against a big, strong team like France because they can defend all day."

LINE-UPS
France: Bouthier; Thomas, Vakatawa, Fickou, Rattez; Ntamack, Dupont; Baille, Marchand, Haouas, Le Roux, Willemse, Cros, Ollivon (c), Alldritt.

Replacements: Poirot for Baille (49), Bamba for Haouas (49), Palu for Willemse (57), Woki for Cros (57), Mauvaka for Marchand (67), Jalibert for Ntamack (77) Vincent for Vakatawa (80).

Replacements not used: Serin.

England: Furbank; May, Tuilagi, Farrell (c), Daly; Ford, Youngs; Marler, George, Sinckler, Itoje, Ewels, Lawes, Underhill, Curry.

Replacements: Joseph for Tuilagi (16), Cowan-Dickie for George (49), Genge for Marler (52), Ludlam for Lawes (54), Kruis for Ewels (57), Heinz for Young (62), Stuart for Sinckler (73), Devoto for Ford (76).

Referee: Nigel Owens (Wales).

https://www.bbc.com/sport/rugby-union/51349854
 
England were really poor, a young Fr team showed a lot of heart to beat them. Little Dupont is something else, and with other young players such as Jalibert coming through, maybe the Fr can finally get their act together.
 
Six Nations Championship: Scotland v England

Venue: Murrayfield Stadium, Edinburgh Date: Saturday, 8 February Kick-off: 16:45 GMT

Lewis Ludlam says England bring just as much hatred and aggression to Saturday's Calcutta Cup fixture as Scotland, promising the hosts a "war".

The flanker, 24, disagreed when it was suggested Scotland bring more fury to international rugby's oldest rivalry.

"We are emotionally there. They hate us and we hate them. There is no difference," he said.

"We're revved up. We want to be brutal. We don't want to give them an inch to breathe. We're coming for them."

Ludlam was a second-half replacement in England's 24-17 defeat by France on the Six Nations' opening weekend.

Head coach Eddie Jones had called for "brutality" from his side before the match. His comments caused controversy in France, where they were taken by some to have connotations of violence.

However Ludlam continued the fighting talk, explaining how desperate his side are to avenge their loss in Paris.

"It wasn't the result we wanted against France. The best teams don't roll over and take a performance like that. They come back fighting. That is something we are thinking about," he added.

"It's a battle. It's going to be a war and it's something we're excited for and we'll be ready for.

"We are going out to get stuck into them and they are going to do the same to us. I don't think there is any difference in the passion between the two sides."

England's last visit to Murrayfield was a 25-13 defeat in 2018 with the match preceded by a tunnel scuffle between Owen Farrell and Ryan Wilson and followed by Jones being abused by Scotland fans as he returned home the following day.

England have won on only three of their last seven trips to Murrayfield, suffering defeats in 2006 and 2008 and sharing a 15-15 draw in 2010.

Ludlam says such difficult away trips only bring out the best in him.

"I love being the team that everyone is rooting against," he added.

"People being against you has got a way of really revving you up.

"For my second cap away at Wales there were old ladies and kids giving you the finger going into the stadium.

"That gives you goosebumps and gives you something to say: 'We will shut you up with the rugby'."

https://www.bbc.com/sport/rugby-union/51397165
 
Wales are seeking a ninth Six Nations victory in a row
Wayne Pivac's side thrashed Italy 42-0 last week
Ireland beat Scotland 19-12 on opening weekend


HT: Ireland 12-7 Wales
 
2020 Six Nations

Ireland (12) 24

Tries: Larmour, Furlong, Van der Flier, Conway Cons: Sexton 2

Wales (7) 14

Tries: Williams, Tipuric Cons: Biggar, Halfpenny

Ireland sent out a statement of intent as they ran in four tries to end Wales' hopes of consecutive Grand Slams with a deserved 24-14 win in Dublin.

Tries from Jordan Larmour and Tadhg Furlong, either side of Tomos Williams' reply for Wales, saw the hosts lead 12-7 at half-time in the Six Nations game.

Josh van der Flier's score after the break and Andrew Conway's 75th-minute try sealed the home side's win.

Justin Tipuric's injury-time score provided late consolation for Wales.

The reigning Six Nations champions had chances to fight back before Conway's late finish in the corner and missed a glorious chance as, just as Stuart Hogg did last week, when Hadleigh Parkes lost control of the ball as he stretched to ground it over the try-line.

It is Wales' first Six Nations defeat since they last visited Dublin two years ago as their eight-match winning run in the competition came to an end.

Alun Wyn Jones tangles with Peter O'Mahony as Wales prop Wyn Jones exchanges pleasantries with James Ryan
Ireland produced a hugely committed display after struggling against Scotland last weekend
Ireland much-improved from Scotland win
A week on from a blunt attacking performance against Scotland, Ireland appeared a far more threatening force as they enjoyed 66% of the first-half territory in a varied and accurate display.

Aided by a narrow Wales defence, the Irish back three of Larmour, Conway and Jacob Stockdale were afforded far more opportunities to run with ball in hand as the hosts constantly sought to send the ball wide.

Conway in particular put in several well-judged territorial plays as the Irish attack found a much better balance.

In midfield Robbie Henshaw and Bundee Aki provided destructive ball-carrying options as Nick Tompkins, on his first international start, found himself targeted in defence on numerous occasions.

While too easily allowing Ireland into their 22, Wales flexed their defensive muscles in the opening exchanges, forcing three turnovers inside the opening nine minutes.

However Ireland broke the visitors' resistance after 19 minutes, with the pack working through the phases before Larmour stepped inside Tompkins' poor tackle before holding off three defenders to ground.

Tomos Williams bursts past Jordan Larmour and Cian Healy to score Wales' first-half try
Tomos Williams breached the Ireland defence to score Wales' first-half try
Williams goes from hero to villain
While on the back foot in terms of possession, Wales' passing was that of a side full of confidence and eight minutes after falling behind a wonderful offload from Alun Wyn Jones to Dan Biggar allowed Williams to run a simple support line and level beneath the posts.

The danger for Ireland was that they would fall victim to the same issue that blighted Scotland last weekend, failing to make hay from their territorial advantage as solid defending kept them at bay.

However three minutes after his try, Williams gifted Ireland with a perfect opportunity as he dropped a regulation catch on his own five-metre line.

From the set-piece Ireland's forwards piled round the corner as Furlong drove over to restore the lead.

Ireland hold out at key stage
After Van der Flier finished a rolling maul seven minutes after the restart to push Ireland into a two-score lead, Wales set up camp in the Irish half for the first time in the game.

The visitors, who lost talismanic winger Josh Adams to a first-half injury, thought they had wrestled back the momentum when Parkes picked an excellent line to crash over only for replays to show he lost the ball before touching down.

Still Wales remained in Irish territory and, having enjoyed the better of the first-half scrum battle, kept faith in the set-piece as they stayed in position to strike back.

After over 10 minutes in the 22, Wales were penalised for collapsing a five-metre scrum right between the posts allowing Ireland to clear their lines. The roar from the Dublin crowd pointed to the significance of Ireland weathering the storm with 20 minutes remaining.

Just like it was a week ago, much of Ireland's win was owed to a solid defensive structure which held firm when their backs were pinned to the wall.

From that moment the momentum was clearly with the hosts, whose replacements added impetus to their ball carrying.

Another scrum, this time in the Welsh 22, set the platform for Ireland to move the ball right allowing Conway to dive over in the corner and claim the bonus point.

With nothing more than pride left to fight for, Wales rallied one last time and Tipuric stretched to touch down with the last act of the match after CJ Stander's sin-binning had reduced the hosts to 14 men.

Line-ups
Ireland: Larmour; Conway, Henshaw, Aki, Stockdale; Sexton (capt), Murray; Healy, Herring, Furlong, Henderson, Ryan, O'Mahony, Van der Flier, Stander.

Replacements: Kelleher, Kilcoyne, Porter, Toner, Deegan, Cooney, Byrne, Earls.

Wales: Halfpenny; North, Tompkins, Parkes, Adams; Biggar, Williams; Jones, Owens, Lewis; Ball, Wyn Jones (capt), Wainwright, Tipuric, Faletau.

Replacements: Elias, Carre, Brown, Beard, Moriarty, Davies, Evans, McNicholl.

Match officials
Referee: Romain Poite (France)

Touch judges: Luke Pearce (England) & Mike Fraser (New Zealand)

TMO: Glenn Newman (New Zealand)

https://www.bbc.com/sport/rugby-union/51388167
 
Six Nations

Scotland (0) 6

Pens: Hastings 2

England (3) 13

Try: Genge Con: Farrell Pens: Farrell 2

England won back the Calcutta Cup and kept their Six Nations title hopes alive with a turgid victory over Scotland in awful weather conditions.

Ellis Genge barrelled home for the only try with 10 minutes remaining.

Driving rain and strong gusts made for a disrupted, error-ridden contest at Murrayfield as Scotland fell short of a third-straight Calcutta Cup.

England climb level on points with second-placed Wales, four adrift of unbeaten leaders Ireland.

Captain Owen Farrell struck a penalty in either half, missing three more attempts from the tee as the weather contributed to a low-scoring affair.

Adam Hastings replied twice for Scotland, his 78th-minute kick ensuring Gregor Townsend's men pick up a second losing bonus point in as many weekends.

Reaction & as it happened
More to follow.

Scotland: 15-Stuart Hogg (capt), 14-Sean Maitland, 13-Huw Jones, 12-Sam Johnson, 11-Blair Kinghorn, 10-Adam Hastings, 9-Ali Price; 1-Rory Sutherland, 2-Fraser Brown, 3-Zander Fagerson, 4-Scott Cummings, 5-Jonny Gray, 6-Jamie Ritchie, 7-Hamish Watson, 8-Magnus Bradbury.

Replacements: 16-Stuart McInally, 17-Allan Dell, 18-Simon Berghan, 19-Ben Toolis, 20-Nick Haining, 21-George Horne, 22-Rory Hutchinson, 23-Chris Harris.

England: 15-George Furbank, 14-Jonny May, 13-Jonathan Joseph, 12-Owen Farrell (capt), 11-Elliot Daly, 10-George Ford, 9-Willi Heinz; 1-Mako Vunipola, 2-Jamie George, 3-Kyle Sinckler, 4-Maro Itoje, 5-George Kruis, 6-Lewis Ludlam, 7-Sam Underhill, 8-Tom Curry.

Replacements: 16-Tom Dunn, 17-Ellis Genge, 18-Will Stuart, 19-Joe Launchbury, 20-Courtney Lawes, 21-Ben Earl, 22-Ben Youngs, 23-Ollie Devoto.

Referee: Pascal Gauzere (France)

Touch judges: Mathieu Raynal (France) & Federico Anselmi (Argentina)

TMO: James Leckie (Australia)


https://www.bbc.com/sport/rugby-union/51407067
 
2020 Six Nations

France: (23) 35

Tries: Thomas, Ollivon, Alldritt, Ntamack, Serin Cons: Ntamack, Jalibert Pens: Ntamack 2

Italy: (10) 22

Tries: Minozzi, Zani, Bellini Cons: Allan 2 Pens: Allan

France are top of the Six Nations table after a bonus-point win despite a lacklustre second half against Italy.

The hosts started strongly with tries from Teddy Thomas and Charles Ollivon before Italy's Matteo Minozzi scored.

A Tommaso Allan penalty cut France's lead to three, but Gregory Alldritt went over just before the break.

Romain Ntamack's try sealed the bonus point, before Italy's Federico Zani scored and France's Baptiste Serin finished off an individual effort.

Mattia Bellini added a consolation score for Italy, but France held on for a victory which sees them move to the top of the table on points difference from Ireland.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/rugby-union/51435380
 
Pro14 final: Leinster beat Ulster 27-5 to win third straight title

Guinness Pro14
Leinster (10) 27
Tries: Lowe, Henshaw, Doris Cons: R Byrne 2, Sexton Pens: R Byrne 2
Ulster (5) 5
Try: Hume
Leinster claimed their third consecutive Pro14 title and extended their undefeated season to 23 games with a 27-5 win over provincial rivals Ulster.

Ulster came into the game chasing their first silverware since their 2005-06 Celtic League triumph, and went ahead after four minutes through James Hume's superb try.

James Lowe responded for heavily fancied Leinster before second-half tries from Robbie Henshaw and Caelan Doris took the game away from Ulster.

For Ulster, who asked questions of their opponent's defence at various stages, it is a reminder that despite undoubted improvement in recent seasons there is still a way to go before they can be considered among Europe's elite.

Despite running out comfortable winners Leinster will know there are areas of their game, particularly the line-out, that will need to be improved if they are to knock Saracens off their Champions Cup perch in next weekend's quarter-final.

Leinster's clinical edge missing in opening half
Leinster's unbeaten season is owed in large part to a clinical efficiency when in scoring positions, with the province displaying an unrivalled ruthlessness in opposition territory.

The trait was on show again in Dublin, but not before the holders had been forced onto the back foot by a wonderful score from Hume, who was invited to exploit a mismatch in Leinster's midfield as the centre flew between two Leinster forwards before holding off Lowe to put the underdogs ahead.

However, the lead lasted less than 10 minutes as Leinster made their way up to Ulster's five-metre line before Jamison Gibson-Park whipped a pass out for Lowe, which evaded the attempted intercept of Rob Lyttle, allowing the Irish-qualified Leinster wing to cross in the corner.

As the half wore on, Ulster's error count crept up, inviting Leinster to take the game by the scruff of the neck.

But aside from Ross Byrne's penalty, Leo Cullen's side were guilty of frequent inaccuracy as Ronan Kelleher saw his line-out picked off four times in the first half.

Ulster had their chance to go into the break with a lead as they pressed towards the line, but Leinster's defence - led by excellent captain Garry Ringrose - held firm before Hume's knock-on released the pressure.

Champions assert credentials in dominant second half
Ulster went into the break no doubt frustrated by their missed chances, but buoyed by the fact that the game remained firmly in the balance.

It felt almost cruel, then, that Leinster whipped it away in a suffocating opening eight minutes to the second half.

After Byrne landed his second penalty, Henshaw read Billy Burns' wide pass, intended for Marcell Coetzee, plucked the ball out of the air and ran between the posts.

The back three of Lowe, Jordan Larmour and Hugo Keenan became greater threats with the ball in hand but Ulster managed to protect their try-line for the next 30 minutes, however going forward they were stifled by Leinster's brutal line speed.

Half-backs Ian Madigan and John Cooney were brought on but couldn't turn the tide against their former province, who in truth never looked like surrendering their advantage once Henshaw crossed.

The inaccuracy that had frustrated the champions in the first half appeared a distant memory as the game approached its conclusion as they again worked themselves into a scoring position before Doris put an exclamation mark on an outstanding personal campaign with the game's final score.

Leinster: Larmour; Keenan, Ringrose (capt), Henshaw, Lowe; R Byrne, Gibson-Park; Healy, Kelleher, Porter; Toner, Ryan; Doris, Van der Flier, Conan.

Replacements: Tracy, E Byrne, Bent, Fardy, Connors, McGrath, Sexton, O'Loughlin.

Ulster: Lowry; Lyttle, Hume, McCloskey, Stockdale; Burns, Mathewson; O'Sullivan, Herring, O'Toole; O'Connor, Henderson (capt); Rea, Reidy, Coetzee.

Replacements: Andrew, McGrath, Moore, Carter, Murphy, Cooney, Madigan, Timoney.

Source: https://www.bbc.com/sport/rugby-union/54066673.
 
NRL Grand Final: Melbourne Storm win thriller in front of 37,000 fans

Melbourne Storm won their fourth National Rugby League Grand Final with a 26-20 victory over the Penrith Panthers.

The match was played in front of 37,303 fans at the 80,000-capacity ANZ Stadium in Sydney.

The NRL season was suspended in March, but restarted in May under strict Covid-19 protocols.

"We did it the hard way there," said Storm captain Cameron Smith, 37, who finished with 14 points.

"But the feeling is awesome. We haven't been home for about five months and, to cap off a pretty challenging season, we'll take that."

Suliasi Vunivalu's 60-metre solo try was the pick of Melbourne's 22-0 first-half display and the defending champions, who finished second behind their opponents in the regular season, continued their dominance after the break.

Full-back Ryan Papenhuyzen extended the lead minutes after the restart with a wonderful 70-metre intercepted try, as hooker Smith, making his 430th NRL appearance, kicked 10 points to compliment his cheeky first-half try.

The Panthers replied through tries from Brian To'o and Stephen Crichton as Melbourne's game began to unravel when Jahrome Hughes was sent off for a professional foul with nine minutes to play.

A fourth Panthers try with just three seconds to play set up a nail-biting finish, but Storm, who also saw Brandon Smith sin-binned in the final minute, held on to secure their fourth title in 11 years.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/rugby-league/54681380
 
Six Nations 2020: Jack Willis and Jacob Umaga named in England's squad

Wasps flanker Jack Willis has been rewarded for his outstanding club form with a call-up to the England squad.

Willis's club-mates Jacob Umaga and Dan Robson have also been named in a 36-man squad for England's autumn matches.

Exeter's double-winning lock Jonny Hill has also been selected, but there is no place for Chiefs fly-half Joe Simmonds.

England could seal the Six Nations title with a bonus-point win against Italy on Saturday if the result of France v Ireland goes their way.

Eddie Jones' side will then play four games in the Autumn Nations Cup.

The game in Rome will be their first fixture in more than seven months after the meeting with the Barbarians last Sunday was called off after several players breached Covid protocols.

"We were obviously disappointed with the postponement of the Barbarians game but we moved to plan B, had a highly competitive training session instead of the match and now we are fully focused on the Italy game and the goal of winning the Six Nations," said Jones.

Exeter hooker Luke Cowan-Dickie has been ruled out through injury, as has club-mate Jack Nowell, while Northampton lock Courtney Lawes and Sale centre Manu Tuilagi are also long-term absentees.

Meanwhile Elliot Daly, George Ford and Joe Marler are also out of the game in Rome, with Ford's absence handing Umaga the chance of a first cap.

"With nine players out injured, it does create some opportunities for the younger guys to show what they can do," added Jones.

Worcester centre Ollie Lawrence, who was set to make his first England appearance against the Barbarians, is one of nine uncapped players in the squad, alongside Umaga, Hill and Willis, Bristol's Max Malins, Gloucester's Ollie Thorley, Bath's Tom Dunn and Beno Obano and Northampton lock David Ribbans.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/rugby-union/54691879
 
Six Nations going to the wire next Saturday!

Ireland, England and France can all win.

England look the most likely to win. They play Italy and can expect to get the bonus point.

Ireland will win if they defeat France and get the bonus point, but this is unlikely at Parc de Prince. They can still win without the bonus point, but with England likely to beat Italy by forty points this could be tight.

France will have to defeat Ireland, and hope England mess up against Italy somehow.
 
Bledisloe Cup: New Zealand beat Australia 43-5 to lift trophy for 18th consecutive year

New Zealand won the Bledisloe Cup for an 18th consecutive year after a record 43-5 victory over Australia in Sydney.

Richie Mo'unga scored 23 points including two tries and five conversions for the All Blacks at the ANZ Stadium.

It was New Zealand's biggest ever margin of victory over the Wallabies.

Ian Foster's side now have an unassailable 2-0 lead in the four-Test series, with this meeting also the opening game of the Rugby Championship.

This victory follows their 27-7 win in Auckland last week and a 16-16 opening-game draw in Wellington at the start of the month.

Saturday's fixture was played in front of 25,689 fans in Sydney after a loosening of coronavirus restrictions in Australia.

The two sides meet again in Brisbane on Saturday 7 November (08:45 GMT).

Mo'unga went over twice in the first half to put New Zealand in control, with further tries from Karl Tu'inukuafe and Dane Coles making it 26-0 at the break.

Australia responded within two minutes of the restart when debutant Noah Lolesio went over for his first Test try, but it failed to halt the All Blacks' momentum.

Mo'unga's penalty extended their lead before further scores from Rieko Ioane and Jordie Barrett - both converted by Mo'unga - pressed home their superiority.

The Rugby Championship features just three teams this year - Australia, New Zealand and Argentina - after world champions South Africa withdrew because of fears over player welfare and disruption amid the Covid-19 pandemic.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/rugby-union/54760023
 
England win Six Nations, after France beat Ireland on final day of delayed rugby union tournament
 
Rugby Championship: Argentina beat New Zealand for first time with shock 25-15 victory

Argentina beat New Zealand for the first time in their history with a 25-15 win in the Rugby Championship.

The match was Argentina's first Test in 13 months, and their victory ensured the All Blacks suffered a second defeat in a row, after losing to Australia.

The Pumas led 16-3 at the break and kept New Zealand at bay to secure a famous and shock win in Sydney.

"This is a big day for Argentina rugby and also for our country and people," said Argentina captain Pablo Matera.

"It very tough there at the moment and it was tough for us to come here and prepare ourselves for this tournament.

"We just want to show our people that if you work hard with a lot of determination you can get things done.

"We are really proud of this team and of our country."

Victory was Argentina's first in 30 Test matches against the All Blacks.

Fly-half Nicolas Sanchez scored all of their points with a try, six penalties and a conversion.

New Zealand, who lost 24-22 to Australia last week in Brisbane, have been beaten in two consecutive Test matches for the first time since August 2011.

"They probably brought more intensity," said All Blacks captain Sam Cane. "Their defence was outstanding.

"We couldn't really get our game going and put them under any pressure with the ball. Too many little errors and ill-discipline issues and they kept the scoreboard ticking over.

"We weren't good enough, which is extremely disappointing but full credit to them."

https://www.bbc.com/sport/rugby-union/54942697
 
Keith Titmuss: Manly Warringah Sea Eagles player dies aged 20

Manly Warringah Sea Eagles player Keith Titmuss has died at the age of 20 after falling ill following training.

The prop was taken from the Narrabeen training camp to Northern Beaches Hospital, before he was transferred to Royal North Shore Hospital in Sydney, where he died shortly after.

Titmuss had yet to make his National Rugby League (NRL) debut but was in his side's 30-man squad for next season.

"We are all devastated by this news," said Sea Eagles head coach Des Hasler.

"Keith was a very popular character among the playing group. He will be sorely missed but never forgotten by the Sea Eagles."

https://www.bbc.com/sport/rugby-league/55041048
 
England Rugby World Cup winner Steve Thompson and seven other former players claim the sport has left them with permanent brain damage.

They are in the process of starting a claim against the game's authorities for negligence.
 
Scotland claimed a first win at Twickenham since 1983 as returning fly-half Finn Russell orchestrated a shock 11-6 Six Nations victory over England.

Capitalising on the hosts' ill discipline, Russell gave Scotland a three-point lead before helping to set up Duhan van Der Merwe's try.

Defending champions England clawed back six points and Russell's charge was briefly halted by a yellow card.

But a resilient Scotland were undeterred and added another penalty.

England had been favourites to win the tournament but, with France having opened their Six Nations with a 50-10 defeat of Italy, their chances suddenly seem much slimmer.

Scotland, on the other hand, look likely to improve on last year's fourth-place finish with Wales their opponents at Murrayfield next weekend.

Scotland bear burden of Twickenham history
There was no shortage of history surrounding the Calcutta Cup match. It marked the 150th anniversary of the first time England and Scotland played each other and the fact Scotland were without a win at Twickenham in 38 years was a key talking point in the build-up.

All the players had been confined to coronavirus bubbles in the week before the tournament, with England only allowed to socialise outside or otherwise stay alone in their rooms.

The joy of breaking free of their confines combined with the sense of occasion meant both sides sprung out onto the Twickenham pitch, but it was Scotland who looked keenest, determined to throw off the shackles of such a long winless run south of the border.

England, who fielded a relatively inexperienced front row with three experienced props absent, proceeded to concede four penalties in the first five minutes.

The fourth gave Russell - who was returning to international duty after a shoulder injury - the chance to put Scotland ahead.

England's lack of attacking prowess drew criticism in their victorious Autumn Nations Cup campaign and they had promised better in 2021, but it was the visitors who shone in that area as debutant Cameron Redpath made repeated breaks.

For the hosts, the misdemeanours continued. On the eighth penalty conceded, referee Brace had had enough and sent number eight Billy Vunipola to the sin-bin after catching him offside.

As England's penalty count entered double digits, the visitors got their just reward.

It started with Russell and travelled through a who's who of Scotland's backline, the excellent Stuart Hogg, Redpath and debutant hooker George Turner combining to feed Van der Merwe, who stepped inside and powered over near the left corner.

The celebrations were briefly halted as Scotland gave away a penalty and England captain Owen Farrell sent the ball over from just inside his own half.

As Farrell set up for a second penalty, the referee called for the television match official to review a trip by Russell on England scrum-half Ben Youngs - leading to a yellow card for the talismanic 10.

After Russell had left the field, Farrell scored his penalty and cut Scotland's lead to two.
 
Wales took advantage of Peter O'Mahony's 14th minute red card to beat Ireland in their Six Nations opener.

Flanker O'Mahony became the first Irishman to be sent off in the Six Nations following a reckless elbow to the head of prop Tomas Francis.

Ireland bounced back to lead 13-6 at half-time through a Tadhg Beirne try and Johnny Sexton's boot.

Tries from George North and Louis Rees-Zammit and 11 points from Leigh Halfpenny sealed success for Wales.

It was a fourth win for Wales coach Wayne Pivac in 11 competitive matches and the first against a leading nation following previous successes against Italy and Georgia.

Ireland are still to win an away game under Andy Farrell despite the 14 men of Ireland enjoyed territory and possession advantage while Wales' forwards dominated the tackle charts.

Relief was the main emotion for the home side in a frantic finale.

After playing the autumn series at Parc y Scarlets, Wales returned to their Principality Stadium home after the iconic ground had been used as a coronavirus hospital in 2020. The eerie Cardiff city centre atmosphere belied what the Welsh capital would usually be like on international day.

After a period of experimentation, Pivac returned to some tried-and-tested men by picking the most experienced Wales starting side in history.

Captain Alun Wyn Jones played his first game for two months after recovering from a knee injury and was sporting a black eye following an altercation in training with Jake Ball, who was not named in the squad.

Ospreys flanker Dan Lydiate earned a first cap since the win against Australia in November 2018, while Scarlets' Ken Owens returned at hooker.

With British and Irish Lions centre Jonathan Davies injured, George North again lined up in the centre.

Suspension for Liam Williams and Josh Adams, the latter due to a Covid-19 breach, meant Gloucester wing Louis Rees-Zammit made his Six Nations debut while Hallam Amos returned on the other wing.

Farrell had added former Ireland captain Paul O'Connell to his coaching team. Captain Johnny Sexton won a 96th Ireland cap after recovering from a hamstring injury to take part in a 12th Six Nations campaign.

A cagey start saw Leigh Halfpenny open the scoring before his opposite number Hugo Keenan demonstrated his attacking abilities with an incisive break.

Lydiate's return was cut short after his right leg buckled underneath him, forcing the flanker off to be replaced by Josh Navidi.

The game's controversial moment came in the 14th minute when O'Mahony was red carded for a reckless arm to the head of Francis when trying to clear out a ruck.

Referee Wayne Barnes showed the Munster man a deserved red and it looked as if the game's complexion would change.

Irish indiscipline continued with a high tackle from Sexton on Johnny Williams allowing Halfpenny to double the lead.

Wales centre Williams and Ireland lock James Ryan were both forced off with head injuries before Sexton opened the Ireland account with two penalties to level the scores.

Wales' line-out woes continued and another failure set up the platform for Robbie Henshaw to burst through a missed Justin Tipuric tackle to release Josh van der Flier with Tadhg Beirne following up to dive over.

Sexton converted as Ireland deservedly led 13-6 at half-time, at which point Wales lost scrum-half Tomos Williams to a hamstring injury to the final move of the half.

It was a masterful first-half performance of game management orchestrated by Sexton as Wales were starved of possession and forced to make three times as many tackles as the visitors.

Replacement scrum-half Gareth Davies entered the fray before North crossed for Wales' opening try with an excellent break for his 42nd Wales try in his 99th international. Halfpenny missed the conversion as Wales trailed by two points.

The hosts regained the lead with a fantastic finish from Rees-Zammit in the right-hand corner with Halfpenny converting.

A thunderous charge from CJ Stander bounced Faletau on his backside before a Halfpenny penalty gave Wales an eight-point advantage.

Wales rung the changes which included a major backline reshuffle with replacement fly-half Callum Sheedy coming on for wing Amos. The alterations included Biggar moving to full-back and Halfpenny switching to the wing.

Ireland lost Sexton after his head caught the left knee of Tipuric before his replacement Burns reduced the deficit to five points with a penalty.

In a frantic finale, Gareth Davies needlessly kicked the ball away with 10 seconds left before Tipuric produced a wonderful tackle on Garry Ringrose as Ireland battered away at the Wales defence.

Ireland had a final chance, but Burns inexplicably kicked the ball dead from a penalty as a relieved Wales secured victory.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/rugby-union/55973275
 
France kept their Grand Slam aspirations intact with a scrappy 15-13 win over Ireland, who remain without a win in this year's Six Nations.

Charles Ollivon scored the sole try of the first half after a passage of attacking brilliance from the visitors.

Damian Penaud touched down for the second try in the 55th minute.

Ireland began to show some fight and Ronan Kelleher's opportunistic try and a Ross Byrne penalty set-up a grandstand finish, but France held on.

Far from their free-flowing best, Fabien Galthie's side found two moments of real flair in a match low on quality, and that ultimately proved the difference between the sides.

Ireland will cling onto the heart that they showed in the final quarter to ensure the game went down to the wire for a second week, but the damage was done in the 60 minutes previous.

It is a first win in Dublin for France in a decade, and a first defeat at home for Ireland head coach Andy Farrell.

A result and performance that will do little to support the belief from inside the camp that this is an Irish side on an upward curve.
 
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Australia 33-30 France: Wallabies edge tight series with win in third Test

Noah Lolesio kicked a last-minute penalty as Australia recovered from an early red card to beat France 33-30 and claim the three-Test series 2-1.

Baptiste Couilloud and Cameron Woki scored tries for the visitors as Tate McDermott and Lolesio crossed for the hosts with the game tied at the break.

The sides exchanged second-half tries before Lolesio struck the winning kick.

Australia lost winger Marika Koroibete in the fifth minute for a high tackle on France captain Anthony Jelonch.

The Wallabies' ninth consecutive win at Suncorp Stadium in Brisbane ensured they won a tight series, in which the previous two games had both been decided by two points.

France had claimed their first away win over Australia since 1990 in the second Test to ensure the series went to a decider.

Elsewhere, New Zealand cruised past Fiji 60-13 to claim their series 2-0.

Fiji-born winger Sevu Reece scored three first-half tries against his native country, before the All Blacks added another six after the interval.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/rugby-union/57874713
 
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/rugby-union/60274404

<b>Six Nations 2022: Scotland 20-17 England - late penalty try helps hosts retain Calcutta Cup</b>

Scotland secured successive Calcutta Cup wins for the first time since 1984 after a dramatic late penalty try helped them claim a nerve-shredding Six Nations victory over England.

The visitors dominated possession and territory in the sides' tournament opener at Murrayfield, and led going into the final quarter thanks to a 17-point haul by Marcus Smith.

But Scotland - who were in front at the break after Ben White's debut score - were awarded seven points after Luke Cowan-Dickie deliberately slapped a Finn Russell cross-kick into touch, and edged to victory with a late Russell penalty.

It was a statement win for Gregor Townsend's side, who have won three of the past five meetings and journey to Wales next Saturday with their Six Nations Championship aspirations burnished.

Eddie Jones' England, meanwhile, have now lost four of their last six matches in the competition and travel to Italy the following day needing a win to salvage any hopes of being contenders.

Mercifully the biblical weather forecast never quite lived up to the doomsday predictions. Murrayfield was packed and heaving and, then, hushed.

If the home crowd was expecting thunder and lightning from their boys from the start, what they saw instead was waves of England possession and territory.

Jones' team didn't do a whole lot with it, but they piled it on none the less. Scotland could hardly get anywhere near the ball as this young England - stripped of so much experience through injury - set the tempo.

Stuart Hogg had to scramble to get Max Malins into touch, then Smith banged over a penalty when Jonny Gray played Ben Youngs illegally.

Scotland lost Ali Price to a VAR soon after. What a moment that was for his replacement White on his debut.

The new scrum-half appeared, lit up Murrayfield with the opening try, and then departed again when Price got the all-clear. In the short history of HIAs there can't have been many greater cameos than White's.

It began with a quick Scottish line-out from George Turner, then a Sam Johnson surge. At last, some Scottish urgency.

Hogg took it on, drew Maro Itoje and found Graham. The wing was terrific, bamboozling Joe Marchant before finding White on his shoulder. Wonderful. Russell made it 7-3 to Scotland, a lead they scarcely warranted.

England carried on dominating possession and territory, carried on trying to pin the Scots back without showing the penetration needed to breach what has been the best Six Nations defence over the past two championships. They prodded away.

Smith floated a cross kick to Henry Slade but it flew just above the centre's head. England launched a maul and drove it over the Scottish line but Slade got held up.

They got some kind of reward for their dominance of the ball when Smith landed another penalty to put them within one.

Russell cancelled that one out just before the break. A four-point advantage at half-time? The Scots were blessed. They'd had one attack, one decent bout of possession. England had 76% of the ball - and a deficit.

All of that flipped early in the new half. England began strongly again, but this time they put points on the board, Smith firing over a penalty to make it 10-9 and then adding that try four minutes later.

Again it was an England maul that had Scotland in trouble. Left woefully short of defenders down the blind-side, Youngs and Smith executed with ease. Smith failed with the conversion but made amends with another penalty just after the hour.

England by seven. The Murrayfield crowd quieter than church mice. The sight of Jamie Ritchie leaving with a serious-looking injury did nothing for their mood.

But that mood altered dramatically. Cometh the hour, cometh the man, Russell cross-kicked right to left for Duhan van der Merwe to stretch England one way, then cross-kicked left to right to stretch them the other. The pivotal moment of the day had arrived.

Graham and Cowan-Dickie competed for it practically on the try-line, the hooker done for batting it into touch deliberately. The tension was off the scale. Penalty try Scotland, yellow card Cowan-Dickie, a game levelled, a crowd in delirium.

Scotland went again, Russell put them in front with a penalty and, incredibly, they'd hit the front.

It looked like they'd put it to bed when they got another penalty in front of the posts, but it was reversed. It looked like England were about to launch a major attack in the last seconds but they coughed up a line-out. Prop Joe Marler unwisely threw the ball in. Why didn't Jones bring on Jamie George for that potentially crucial set piece.

Even still, England had a scrum and reset upon reset in the final play. The visitors were desperate for a penalty, the Scots desperate to survive. The Scots prevailed. Remarkable.

Back-to-back Calcutta Cup wins for the first time in almost 40 years and huge momentum going to Wales next week. For England, more misery at the hands of a resurgent Scotland.
 
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/rugby-union/60281535

<B>Six Nations 2022: France 37-10 Italy - Gabin Villiere scores hat-trick for hosts</B>

<I>Six Nations favourites France pulled away from a spirited Italy in Paris to open their campaign with a bonus-point win.</I>

The Azzurri briefly threatened to derail France's attempt at a first title since 2010 when debutant teenager Tommaso Menoncello scored.

But Anthony Jelonch and Gabin Villiere crossed to put the hosts in front.

After the break, Villiere completed his hat-trick and Damian Penaud also crossed to secure the bonus point.

France top the table after round one from second-placed Ireland on points difference, with Andy Farrell's side travelling to Paris in round two.

Rain fell on the Stade de France for most of the match, but France were still able to display the many options in their box of attacking tricks.

From the outset, the hosts showed off a backline of devastating runners and a sharp kicking game to the jubilant Paris crowd.

But Italy clearly had not read the script and started strongly too, taking an unexpected lead when Paolo Garbisi's cross-field kick set up 19-year-old wing Menoncello to become the youngest try scorer in the tournament since 1967.

France soon hit back as Italy scrum-half Stephen Varney tried to recover from a messy line-out but popped the ball into the hands of the onrushing Jelonch, who scored an interception try.

Italy briefly went ahead again after a Garbisi penalty, before Jaminet claimed three points too, and France asserted their dominance before the break as speedy offloads created space for Villiere to slide across in the left corner.

A Julien Marchand try was ruled out, but France could not be kept out for long as Villiere hung on the shoulder of Gregory Alldritt to grab the ball and step round two Italian defenders to score.

Italy managed to keep France quiet for another 20 minutes before the hosts' quality was too much for the Azzurri as Penaud combined with World Player of the Year Antoine Dupont to secure the bonus-point try.

Again French pressure built and, with the clock in the red, Villiere completed his hat-trick in a solid start to the tournament for Les Bleus.

For Italy, despite having now lost 33 Six Nations games in a row, there were signs of promise which they will hope to build on when they host England in round two.
 
Captain Dan Biggar kicked 15 points in his 100th international to guide Wales to victory against Scotland.

Biggar sealed the win with a late drop-goal after opposite number Finn Russell had received a 68th-minute yellow card for a deliberate knock-on.

Scotland wing Darcy Graham and Wales prop Tomas Francis scored tries while Biggar and Russell kicked penalties as the first half ended 14-14.

There were no second-half tries but Biggar's intervention clinched the win.

— — —

France cemented their position as Six Nations favourites by holding off Ireland in a pulsating heavyweight encounter in Paris.

The hosts led by 15 points early in the second half but Ireland roared back with quickfire tries from Josh van der Flier and Jamison Gibson-Park.

Cyril Baille responded for France before Joey Carbery's penalty reduced the Irish deficit to three.

However Melvyn Jaminet's sixth penalty helped France see out a crucial win.

Billed as a meeting between the northern hemisphere's two form sides - and favourites for this year's title - the relentlessly physical spectacle did not disappoint.

— — —

BBC
 
<b>Italy 0-33 England: Visitors get Six Nations campaign back on track</b>

England got their Six Nations campaign back on track as they outclassed Italy to claim a bonus-point win in Rome.

Despite losing their opener in Scotland, Eddie Jones' England are now second in the table behind unbeaten France after two rounds.

England almost claimed a bonus point before half-time as Marcus Smith crossed and Jamie George scored twice.

Elliot Daly got the fourth try after the break and Kyle Sinckler added another after a dip in intensity.

England head coach Jones had asked his players to "light up" Rome and they duly delivered as the visitors' pace overwhelmed their hosts.

With pre-match headlines focussing on 'new England', Henry Slade showed the older heads should not be overlooked as the centre released another experienced player, Jack Nowell, down the left wing.

A series of flat passes from Smith - growing into his role of England's starting 10 with every game - saw England pick their way through the Italy defence.

That move ended in a try for Smith after a slick exchange with Max Malins but at times England's attempts to put on a show led to handling errors that would be punished by any other side in such a tight championship.

Perennial wooden spoon side Italy, however, helped England's cause as they committed mistakes of their own and conceded eight penalties to the visitors' three in the first half.

After Nowell was permanently replaced by Daly because of a failed head injury assessment, young scrum-half Harry Randall showed what he can offer.

Randall's speedy work off a line-out got England on the front foot and after Maro Itoje's break, returning hooker George dived over for a try.

Smith showed his all-round prowess - and for the full 80 minutes - as he made sure England's forward dominance was rewarded with points as well as doing his bit defensively, hauling brawny winger Federico Mori into touch when he was in a position to score.

Smith picked up after the break where he had left off as his pinpoint pass was met by Daly at full tilt for the bonus-point try that puts them in front of Ireland in the table.

But then England's unshackled attack began to stutter.

Jones - criticised for replacing Smith when England were ahead at Murrayfield - left the fly-half on for the whole match but introduced Ben Youngs to partner him in place of Randall.

Youngs now has 114 England caps, equalling the record for England men's appearances set by Jason Leonard.

However in Randall's absence the visitors' speed and intensity dropped.

Jones had asked his replacements to invoke the iconic image of Muhammad Ali standing over the defeated Sonny Liston in the closing stages.

Instead, England's impressive performance somewhat spluttered towards the end, with the exception of two late moves.

Smith - with George Ford now next to him at inside centre - sent Malins through a gap and Sinckler was on the winger's shoulder to score under the posts.

The Harlequins playmaker's impressive step nearly set up another, but Slade could not ground the ball.

An immediate bounce back after the defeat in Scotland may have optimistic England fans thinking about a final-weekend showdown in Paris, but Wales and Ireland will undoubtedly pose significant hurdles at Twickenham before then.

<b>Man of the Match:</b> <u>Marcus Smith</u> did not look like a player in his first Six Nations campaign as he guided England to a comfortable victory in Rome. The fly-half beat six defenders - more than any other player - in another promising attacking performance.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/rugby-union/60368640
 
Updated Six Nations table.

One round of fixtures left.

1D8EA860-59C8-476A-80AB-55E4E0F42563.jpg

Looks like it’s going to be France or Ireland to win.

France v England in Paris could be the deciding factor.
 
What a brilliant win for Italy. Surely one of their best ever.

FT: Wales 21-22 Italy
 
Just finished watching the France v England match in Paris.

What a team the French are at the moment - surely one of the best in the world.

France strutted to a first Grand Slam in 12 years as they ran in three tries to comfortably see off England in front of a jubilant Stade de France.

Tries from Gael Fickou and Francois Cros gave the hosts a healthy half-time lead and left England playing catch-up.

England's Freddie Steward, deployed on the wing, stepped and swooped to score after Joe Marchant's break after the interval.

But it was a rare moment of danger from England, who were kept at arm's length.

France captain Antoine Dupont darted under the sticks soon and the hosts played out the final 10 minutes in comfort as their fans started the party.

La Marseillaise reverberated round the stands and tricolores fluttered from every seat as the final scrum was set with the clock in the red.

Gregory Alldritt's kick to the stands moments later was the signal for his team to drop to their knees and savour a clean sweep that has been brewing for the last couple of campaigns.

England finish third in the Six Nations, but this contest revealed the chasm that separates them from the champions.

France were superior in every area. Stronger up front, more accurate in the backs, tighter in defence, more clinical in attack.

For England, defeat is a sobering reality check. There are still 18 months until the start of the Rugby World Cup, but to close the gap on France in that timeframe requires swift, steep improvement.

There was little sign of it at the Stade de France. A campaign that started with Eddie Jones' side stifled by Scotland, ended with them overwhelmed in Paris, and there have been precious few positives in between.
 
Ireland won their series in NZ!

And England theirs in Australia!

Northern Hemisphere on the march.
 
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Well this is a 17-year-old thread….

Ireland won their series in NZ!

And England theirs in Australia!

Northern Hemisphere on the march.
But Wales lost in South Africa and Scotland lost in Argentina!

England and Ireland are pretty much where they will be when the World Cup comes around.

The Wallabies can’t improve much as they are the usual mix of private school boys and Pacific Islanders. But I think the All Blacks have the reserve talent to be able to improve substantially.
 
But Wales lost in South Africa and Scotland lost in Argentina!

England and Ireland are pretty much where they will be when the World Cup comes around.

The Wallabies can’t improve much as they are the usual mix of private school boys and Pacific Islanders. But I think the All Blacks have the reserve talent to be able to improve substantially.

There was a time, not long ago, when no Northern Hemisphere side could beat the All Blacks, Wallabies and Springboks.

Is the power shifting North?
 
Ireland won their series in NZ!

And England theirs in Australia!

Northern Hemisphere on the march.

About time. We have been second best up here for a long time.

Though it does seem that South Africa are a top class side still.
 
There was a time, not long ago, when no Northern Hemisphere side could beat the All Blacks, Wallabies and Springboks.

Is the power shifting North?
I think we are seeing the inherent demographic limitations of major rugby countries.

England and Australia have tiny pools of private schoolboys, topped up with Pacific island imports.

New Zealand and South Africa have a base of 5 million - the entire population of NZ and the white (and honorary white) population of South Africa.

And now world rugby is the weakest that it has been since the switch to professionalism.
 
St Helen’s win again.

Four consecutive Super League victory.
 
England fell to a shock semi-final defeat as Samoa won a golden-point thriller to set up a meeting with Australia in their first World Cup final.

Stephen Crichton's drop-goal saw the England players slump to the ground after the sides could not be separated at the end of 80 minutes.

The host nation thrashed Samoa 60-6 in the tournament opener less than a month ago but Matt Parish's side exacted a sweet revenge at Emirates Stadium.

Stephen Crichton's second try had seen the Pacific Islanders lead 26-20 in a gripping finale before Herbie Farnworth's second try and a Tommy Makinson conversion took the contest into extra time.

Samoa's victory sees them become the first side other then Australia, New Zealand, England/Great Britain to reach the final of the tournament in the last 50 years.
 
England have sacked Eddie Jones, leaving the team without a head coach nine months before the Rugby World Cup.

Forwards coach Richard Cockerill will take over the running of the team on an interim basis.

Jones departs after a dismal year of results, with only five wins from 12 Tests in 2022.

The 62-year-old won three Six Nations titles in his seven years in charge and led the team to the 2019 World Cup final, which they lost to South Africa.

Jones' sacking follows a review into England's disappointing autumn campaign, which saw one win from four matches.

"I am pleased with much that we have achieved as an England team and I look forward to watching the team's performance in the future," said the Australian.

"Many of the players and I will no doubt keep in touch and I wish them all well in their future careers."

How Jones ran out of road as England boss
Rugby Football Union chief executive Bill Sweeney praised Jones' "huge contribution" to English rugby.

"He has the highest win ratio of any previous England head coach and has helped develop the leadership skills of many players and coaches," said Sweeney.

"I am grateful to Eddie for all he has done for England across many areas of the game and the professional way in which he has approached reviewing the performance of the team.

BBC
 
Risky to change head coach so close to the World Cup, but the results had been poor so can’t blame England for this decision.
 
<b>Steve Borthwick: New England coach signals new era</b>

Sitting beside a new head coach as they faced the media at Twickenham on Monday, Bill Sweeney declared this was the "launch of a new age of England rugby".

Steve Borthwick's appointment, as Rugby Football Union chief executive Sweeney suggests, is about more than just a change of personnel.

With a new head coach, there is a new attitude and approach too.

After years of Eddie Jones framing everything in the context of the 2023 Rugby World Cup, the tournament in France barely got a mention all day.

Instead, there were other messages. Pride. Performance. Winning. Reconnecting a weary rugby public with its national team. Focus on the next game; nothing else matters. Turn the boos to roars.

"I am privileged to be England head coach," Borthwick told the Rugby Union Weekly podcast, shunning his usual tracksuit to make a rare outing in a suit.

"I was the little kid who fell in love with the game watching the England rugby team play on the TV.

"This England team has incredible power, the power to inspire kids and the power to move people."

Borthwick wouldn't look too far ahead; he refused to let the narrative drift even as far as England's second Six Nations match against Italy in mid-February, let alone the World Cup in September.

"I want to maximise every minute that we have. The World Cup is just on the horizon, it is not far away at all," he added.

"But I want to be really clear. That first game of the Six Nations, I want to us to be working for that game.

"Our responsibility is to make sure we play and fight and work, so our supporters can see how much our players care, and how much they are hurting about what has happened previously."

The RFU, which hitherto supported Jones and his 'World Cup or bust' policy, seems to have performed something of a 180 itself.

"The World Cup is not the entire focus," stressed Sweeney.

"We have fans who want to see us competitive in the Six Nations as well. A balance is needed."

While Sweeney admitted this was never the masterplan, instead hoping Jones would hand over the reins to his successor along with the Webb Ellis trophy, he was adamant the decision to change head coach was made for the right reasons, at the right time, after five wins in 13 matches in 2022 and a poor autumn campaign.

"The results were not what we expected," he added.

"Eddie is a tournament animal. But you make decisions based on your information. You sit down and analyse it and you make a decision whether it was the right thing to do.

"We believe it was the right thing to do."

But after previously supporting Jones' vision to build a World Cup-winning outfit over a number of years, the RFU's timing means Borthwick will have little time to make his mark.

"The time is what the time is, it is neither short nor long," Borthwick said.

"We think there is plenty of time now for us to continue on our goal for the World Cup," Sweeney added.

The last two weeks have been tough for Borthwick, as the RFU and Leicester negotiated both his contractual exit, and that of his right-hand man Kevin Sinfield.

Straight and honest, Borthwick had been uncomfortable with constantly having to evade questions about his future while on Leicester duty.

"It's been tough leaving that group of players," he added.

"For the last two and a half years, they have come together and grown.

"I have asked them to work hard, and they have worked hard to try and achieve something special."

Borthwick will have to hit the ground running, finalising his coaching team and his Six Nations squad by mid-January, and he warned against any England fans expecting overnight fixes.

"We have got a lot of work to do. A lot of people have said we are behind other nations, and we are," he said.

"In 47 days' time when we play Scotland, we won't be perfect, but what everyone needs to see is just how much these players are going to fight for this team, and inspire this crowd so they are so proud of this team."

Never one to bask in the limelight or make wild public pronouncements, Borthwick nonetheless struck an authentic tone throughout his first day in the job, while showing his lighter side as he recalled how one of his sons made it a condition he selected Wales' Tommy Reffell.

But after seven years of the highs and lows, ups and downs, fun and games, and smoke and mirrors of the Eddie Jones reign, it's clear the Borthwick era will be very different - "calm and focused", according to Sweeney.

"Steve is his own man, he is extremely authentic and full of integrity," he said.

"We just want to encourage him to be himself and I am sure that will be fine.

"We are absolutely confident Steve knows how to get his own message across."

Those that have worked with Borthwick and Sinfield, have no doubt the pair have the attributes to revive the England side.

"Steve will lay a plan out for you, with the right players involved, and it's a case of 'go do this, and we will win the game,'" Leicester's Chris Ashton told Rugby Union Weekly.

"As a player you think: 'Right, I can follow that.'

"Throw in there Kev Sinfield leading the defence and it is a recipe for success."

As Borthwick repeated throughout his first day, the hard work starts now.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/rugby-union/64039136
 
The first world cup in a while where a Northern Hemisphere side starts out as favorites. This French side looks really good.

The All Blacks need to get rid of Mo'unga if they are to have a chance. The most useless player I've seen play for the AB's in the last 10 years.
 
Ireland are running all over Wales at Principality Stadium. 3-27 at half time.

COYBIG!
 
Duhan van der Merwe's late try gave Scotland back-to-back wins at Twickenham for the first time, turning Calcutta Cup history on its head with a stunning Six Nations victory against a spirited England.

After Huw Jones and Max Malins traded scores, Duhan van der Merwe scored an individual try that will go down in Six Nations history to take Scotland ahead again.

England stayed patient and were rewarded as Malins finished off a well-worked team try before Owen Farrell's penalty put them one point up at half-time.

Ben White kept Scotland within one after Ellis Genge's try, before Farrell and Scotland fly-half Finn Russell traded penalties to leave the score at 23-22 with 10 minutes left.

A sensational Scottish attack followed, allowing Van der Merwe to score another and make Scottish wins at Twickenham almost as regular as Glastonbury after claiming the first in 38 years in 2021.

Steve Borthwick's England showed fight and contributed to an electrifying match, but they could not give their head coach victory in his first game in charge as Scotland won the Calcutta Cup for the third time in a row.

BBC
 
Warren Gatland's return was spoiled by Ireland as the world's number one side humbled Wales in the opening Six Nations match in Cardiff.

Ireland's storming start saw tries from Caelan Doris, James Ryan and James Lowe - and 12 points from Johnny Sexton - establish a 27-3 half-time lead.

Wales improved in the second half and responded with a Liam Williams try.

But it was Ireland who completed the scoring with a bonus-point try for flanker Josh van der Flier.

That put the gloss on Ireland's first Six Nations victory in Cardiff for 10 years as Andy Farrell's side took another step in the right direction as they target Six Nations and World Cup success in 2023.

Gatland, who was brought back as Wales coach to replace fellow New Zealander Wayne Pivac, will now know the size of his task in a World Cup year.
 
The axis of power in the 6N has shifted away from England as the Celtic lands advance.
 
Full-time - Italy 24-29 France

Defending champions France came from behind to avoid a shock defeat and beat Italy in a thrilling Six Nations game.

The Azzurri led 24-22 before Matthieu Jalibert sniped over from close range as France claimed a bonus-point win.

The visitors looked comfortable thanks to first-half tries by Thibaud Flament, Thomas Ramos and Ethan Dumortier.

But Ange Capuozzo scored before Italy were awarded a penalty try and Tommaso Allan kicked four penalties - but the hosts could not hang on in Rome.

Victory for France stretches their unbeaten run to 14 matches after they won the Grand Slam last year.

They travel to Dublin to face world number one-ranked Ireland on Saturday, while Italy face England at Twickenham a day later.

Line-ups
Italy: 15-Ange Capuozzo; 14-Pierre Bruno, 13-Juan Ignacio Brex, 12-Luca Morisi, 11-Tommaso Menoncello; 10-Tommaso Allan, 9-Stephen Varney; 1-Danilo Fischetti, 2-Giacomo Nicotera, 3-Simone Ferrari, 4-Niccolo Cannone, 5-Federico Ruzza, 6-Sebastian Negri, 7-Michele Lamaro (capt), 8-Lorenzo Cannone.

Replacements: 16-Luca Bigi, 17-Federico Zani, 18-Pietro Ceccarelli, 19-Edoardo Iachizzi, 20-Giovanni Pettinelli, 21-Manuel Zuliani, 22-Alessandro Fusco, 23-Edoardo Padovani.

France: 15-Thomas Ramos; 14-Damian Penaud, 13-Gael Fickou, 12-Yoram Moefana, 11-Ethan Dumortier; 10-Romain Ntamack, 9-Antoine Dupont (capt); 1-Cyril Baille, 2-Julien Marchand, 3-Uini Atonio, 4-Thibaud Flament, 5-Paul Willemse, 6-Anthony Jelonch, 7-Charles Ollivon, 8-Gregory Alldritt.

Replacements: 16-Gaetan Barlot, 17-Reda Wardi, 18-Sipili Falatea, 19-Romain Taofifenua, 20-Thomas Lavault, 21-Sekou Macalou, 22-Nolann Le Garrec, 23-Matthieu Jalibert.
 
Half-time
Ireland 22-16 France

Sexton's penalty was the final touch of a half of rugby that lived up to all the high expectations that there were going into this game.

Pulsating, bruising, exciting, spectacular. It has had it all.
 
Ireland (22) 32

Tries: Keenan, Lowe, Porter, Ringrose Cons: Sexton 2, Byrne Pens: Sexton, Byrne

France (16) 19

Try: Penaud Con: Ramos Pens: Ramos 3 Drop-goal: Ramos

Ireland boosted their Six Nations title hopes and ended France's run of 14 straight wins as they battled to a pulsating bonus-point win in Dublin.

Ireland scored three first-half tries with Hugo Keenan, James Lowe and Andrew Porter all crossing.

Damian Penaud's brilliant counter-attacking try and three Thomas Ramos penalties kept France in touch.

Ramos cancelled out Ross Byrne's penalty with a drop-goal, but Garry Ringrose's try secured Ireland's win.

The victory further underlines Ireland's status as the world's number one side and gives Andy Farrell's side a national record 13th straight home win, while ending France's dream of a second successive Grand Slam.
 
Wales (3) 10
Try: Rees-Zammit Con: Halfpenny Pen: Halfpenny
England (8) 20
Tries: Watson, Sinckler, Lawrence Con: Farrell Pen: Farrell
England heaped more misery on troubled Wales with a scrappy Six Nations victory in Cardiff.

A frantic first half saw the teams separated by a try from England wing Anthony Watson.

Wales wing Louis Rees-Zammit managed an intercept try before England responded with scores from Kyle Sinckler and Ollie Lawrence.

Wales' players had threatened to go on strike in the build-up and could not overcome their troubled preparation.

They have now lost 12 of their last 15 games and suffered a third successive Six Nations defeat since Warren Gatland's return as head coach.

Wales have endured their worst start in the tournament since 2007 and have to travel to face Italy and France as they bid to avoid a first Six Nations whitewash in 20 years.

Following an opening weekend defeat by Scotland, England have picked up successive wins over Italy and Wales and could even afford to miss out on 10 points as a result of four missed kicks from captain Owen Farrell.

England full-back Freddie Steward was named player of the match as he dominated the aerial battle in Cardiff, with Wales continually kicking to him.

It was England's biggest victory in Cardiff since 2003. Steve Borthwick's side now face France and Ireland in their final two matches.
 
Wales' players had threatened to go on strike in the build-up and could not overcome their troubled preparation.

They have now lost 12 of their last 15 games and suffered a third successive Six Nations defeat since Warren Gatland's return as head coach.

Wales have endured their worst start in the tournament since 2007 and have to travel to face Italy and France as they bid to avoid a first Six Nations whitewash in 20 years.

Scary thought. Surely the Welsh will beat Italy though?
 
France 32-21 Scotland: French puncture Scots' Six Nations hopes in Paris epic

France punctured Scotland's rising belief and restored their own Six Nations title hopes with a hard-fought win in an astonishing contest in Paris.

Both sides suffered red cards in the first 10 minutes, and Scotland trailed 19-0 at one stage before roaring back to make it a four-point game going into the final few minutes.

However, France's efficiency won out as a missed Scotland lineout allowed Fabien Galthie's side to go down the pitch, and eventually Gael Fickou powered over to seal a bonus-point win.

It means Ireland - who visit Murrayfield in two weeks - are the only side left chasing a Grand Slam, with France now level with Scotland and England on 10 points after two wins and a defeat.

Romain Ntamack and Ethan Dumortier had scored either side of a red card for Scotland's Grant Gilchrist, before France's Mohamed Haouas was also sent off.

Thomas Ramos grabbed an intercept try and two penalties to keep his side ahead, despite two tries from Scotland's Huw Jones as the visitors put France under severe pressure.

Finn Russell darted over the line and converted his own try to make it a four-point game and set up a grandstand finish with 10 minutes left but ultimately the Scots fell just short.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/rugby-union/64778546
 
England (3)10
Try: Steward Con: Smith Pen: Smith
France (27) 53
Tries: Ramos, Flament 2, Ollivon 2, Penaud 2 Cons: Ramos 6 Pens: Ramos 2

France produced a ruthless display to condemn England to their heaviest home defeat and keep their Six Nations title defence alive with a bonus-point win.

Thomas Ramos scored the first of France's seven tries before Thibaud Flament powered over from close range.

Charles Ollivon added a third to hand France a 24-point lead at the break.

Freddie Steward crossed but Flament and Ollivon did so again and Damian Penaud scored twice as France claimed a first Twickenham win over England since 2005.

Victory with the full quota of five points means France will take the title race into the final weekend, regardless of Ireland's result against Scotland on Sunday.

England's title challenge is over and it is a first Six Nations with two home defeats, following their opening-game loss against Scotland.

BBC
 
Six Nations 2023: Ireland 29-16 England - Irish seal Grand Slam in Dublin

Ireland won their fourth Grand Slam as they wore down 14-man England in a tense Six Nations finale in Dublin.

Two early Owen Farrell penalties put England ahead before Ireland hit back with a well-worked Dan Sheehan try.

England's hopes of an upset were dashed when Freddie Steward was sent off just before half-time.

Robbie Henshaw and Rob Herring tries either side of Sheehan's second of the game ensured Ireland's first Grand Slam in five years, and first won in Dublin.

England, much improved from their humiliating defeat by France at Twickenham last week, scored a deserved second-half try through Jamie George, but were unable to pull off a major upset and ruin Ireland's big day.

Despite being tested by a resilient English side, Ireland - as they have so often done under Andy Farrell - found a way to win as they gave talismanic captain Johnny Sexton the perfect send-off in his final Six Nations match, even though his day ended early because of injury.

The full-time whistle was greeted with Irish celebrations at a jubilant Aviva Stadium as the home side delivered on their immense promise, having entered the competition as the world's number one side.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/rugby-union/64992479
 
Great start to the World Cup.

France beating the All Blacks with a very impressive performance in Paris.
 
Italy hammer Namibia 52 8.

Opposition wasn't the strongest, but a good second half for Italy.

They won't be pushovers at this World Cup.
 
Ireland opened their Rugby World Cup campaign with a bonus-point win as they scored 12 tries to overwhelm Romania in stifling heat in Bordeaux.

After Gabriel Rupanu's early score for Romania, Ireland hit back with five tries to lead 33-8 at half-time.

They added seven more in the second period to complete a resounding win.
 
Whilst not at their best, a comfortable win for Australia today. 35-15

Australia subdued Georgia at Stade de France to get their World Cup campaign under way and claim the first win of coach Eddie Jones' second stint in the job.

The Wallabies have lost all five of their Tests since the former England coach returned in January, but found form when they needed it with Jordan Petaia, Mark Nawaqanitawase and Ben Donaldson crossing for tries.

Successfully negotiating their opener puts Australia in the early lead in a pool that also contains Wales and Fiji, who meet in Bordeaux on Sunday.
 
Brilliant performance from 14-man England. 27-10.

George Ford kicked 27 points to steer England to a magnificent World Cup victory over Argentina after they were reduced to 14 men after three minutes.

Tom Curry was sent off by the bunker review system for a clash of heads with Juan Cruz Mallia that took place in the third minute in Marseille.

Fly-half Ford kicked three drop-goals to give England a 12-3 half-time lead.

England controlled the second half and Ford added 15 points as England started Pool D with a morale-boosting win.

Rodrigo Bruni powered over in the 79th minute for the only try of the game for hapless Argentina.
 
The AB Fr game was pretty poor. The Fr looked nervous and never got going and the ABs looked a little better but in the end, lost easily. The England- Pumas was awful and was about enjoyable as watching paint dry. But great resilience from England after going down to 14 men.
 
Japan 42 Chile 12

Chile impressed on their World Cup bow but Japan pulled away to comfortably win their Pool D opener in Toulouse.

Chile led early on with a Rodrigo Fernandez try but Japan soon seized control to go 21-7 ahead by half-time.
Amato Fakatava's two scores sandwiched Jone Naikabula's effort for Japan, who face England next on 17 September.

Alfonso Escobar reduced Chile's deficit but Michael Leitch secured Japan's bonus point, before Ryoto Nakamura and Warner Dearns completed the scoring.
 
Half-time
South Africa 6-3 Scotland

That is that for the first half.

It's been gritty, it's been a battle, and you'd say that the two sides have cancelled each other out.

Scotland haven't clicked into gear in attack, but head to the changing rooms just three points behind, which will encourage Gregor Townsend and co.
 
South Africa 18-3 Scotland: Springboks too strong for Scots in Rugby World Cup opener

Scotland slipped to defeat in their World Cup opener as defending champions South Africa put in a typically ruthless and powerful display in Marseille.

After a fraught and physical first half in which Scotland's forward pack put in an abrasive performance, two quick Springbok tries took the game away from Gregor Townsend's side.

Pieter Steph Du Toit crashed over for the first before a wonderful no-look cross-field kick from Manie Libbok put in Kurt-Lee Arendse for another score four minutes later.

From there, the world champions turned the screw at the set-piece and wore down an increasingly ragged Scotland.

The Scots may point to a potential red card for Jesse Kriel for a dangerous tackle in the opening two minutes that was missed by officials, but they were also undone by errors in key moments, particularly six lineouts going astray while in promising positions.

Townsend's side now face an uphill task to get out of the fiendishly difficult Pool B that also includes the world's number one-ranked side Ireland, while South Africa got their title defence off to a solid start and face Romania next Sunday.

Scotland have a two-week wait to right their wrongs when they take on Tonga in Nice.


BBC
 
South African players are known for their physicality, strength, and athleticism, making them well-suited to the demands of rugby.
 
Wales 32 Fiji 26

Wales held out amid a dramatic late Fiji fightback to edge a captivating World Cup opener in Bordeaux.

Wales led 32-14 through tries from Josh Adams, George North, Louis-Rees-Zammit and Elliot Dee.

Fiji responded with efforts from Waisea Nayacalevu, Lekima Tagitagivalu before Josua Tuisova and Mesake Doge scored late tries to worry Wales.

Fiji centre Semi Radradra dropped the ball with the Wales at his mercy with the final play of the game.

The wonderful eight-try spectacle evoked memories of when Fiji defeated Wales 38-34 in Nantes in 2007, but this time the men in red were the ones celebrating at the end.

The victory gve Wales a boost in the bid for quarter-final qualification from Pool C after Australia defeated Georgia in their opening match on Saturday.

Wales face Portugal in Nice next Saturday before further group games against Australia in Lyon on 24 September and Georgia in Nantes 13 days later.
 
Rugby World Cup 2023: Wales 32-26 Fiji - Warren Gatland's side survive late fightback.

Wales held out amid a dramatic late Fiji fightback to edge a captivating World Cup opener in Bordeaux.

Wales led 32-14 through tries from Josh Adams, George North, Louis-Rees-Zammit and Elliot Dee.

Fiji responded with efforts from Waisea Nayacalevu and Lekima Tagitagivalu, before Josua Tuisova and Mesake Doge scored late tries to worry Wales.

Centre Semi Radradra then dropped the ball with the Wales try line at his mercy in the final play of the game.

The wonderful eight-try spectacle evoked memories of when Fiji defeated Wales 38-34 in Nantes in 2007, but this time the men in red were the ones celebrating at the end with fly-half Dan Biggar named man of the match after kicking 12 points.

Wales made a remarkable 248 tackles compared to Fiji's 70.

Victory handed Wales a boost in their bid for quarter-final qualification after Australia defeated Georgia in the Pool C opening match on Saturday.

Wales face Portugal in Nice next Saturday before further group games follow against Australia in Lyon on 24 September and Georgia in Nantes 13 days later.


BBC
 
Tom Curry: England back row to miss two games after Rugby World Cup red card

Tom Curry will miss England's next two Rugby World Cup matches after his red card in Saturday's win over Argentina.

Curry, 25, faced a disciplinary hearing on Tuesday and was ruled out of the Pool C matches against Japan this Sunday and Chile on 23 September.

The Sale back row was initially shown a yellow card after making head-to-head contact in a tackle with Juan Cruz Mallia inside the first three minutes.

It was later upgraded to a red following a 'bunker' review.

The independent disciplinary committee imposed a ban of three matches on the flanker - but that is reduced to two games if he completes the World Rugby coaching programme on tackling.

It means Curry will be free to return to action for England's final Pool C game against Samoa on 7 October.


BBC
 
New Zealand 71-3 Namibia: All Blacks run in 11 tries but Ethan de Groot sent off

New Zealand stormed to their 50th win at the Rugby World Cup, running in 11 tries to thrash Namibia, but lost Ethan de Groot to a late red card for a dangerous collision.

De Groot was given a yellow card for a high tackle on Adriaan Booysen inside the final 10 minutes with a 'bunker' review upgrading it to a red.

The All Backs had recorded a bonus-point fourth try inside 25 minutes.

They led 38-3 at half-time as Damien McKenzie and Cam Roigard crossed twice.


BBC
 
Samoa began their Rugby World Cup Pool D campaign with a bonus-point win over Chile in Bordeaux.

Chile took an early lead through a try from Matias Dittus, but Samoa regained control at the end of the half.
Former Australia fly-half Christian Leali'ifano kicked 14 first-half points and Duncan Paia'aua scored a late try.

Samoa put in a dominant second-half performance, scoring four tries through Jonathan Taumateine, Fritz Lee and two from Sama Malolo.

The Pacific island nation, who had an initial rest week, are seeking their first quarter-final since 1995, with what is one of their strongest squads assembled, proven by a narrow final 17-13 warm-up defeat by world number one side Ireland in August.

Samoa recruited former All Blacks Lima Sopoaga, Steven Luatua and Charlie Faumuina before the World Cup due to a change in World Rugby eligibility rules. But it was the boot of Leali'ifano that was instrumental in keeping the scoreboard ticking over.

The 35-year-old, who started for Australia in their quarter-final loss to England four years ago, pulled the strings in Samoa's attack, with the pick of tries coming from Paia'aua, after a well-measured grubber kick in the midfield.

Chile became the first team to debut at a World Cup in 12 years when they took to the pitch in Toulouse against Japan last week and, like the game against the Brave Blossoms, could only show glimpses of their attacking style.

Fly-half Rodrigo Fernandez was at the heart of this and set up the opening score of the afternoon with a break, but struggled to have as much impact in the second period.

Sterner tests lie ahead for Samoa, who will be quietly growing in confidence but will likely need to beat two of Argentina, Japan or England for a realistic chance of a knockout return.

They are next in action against the Pumas in Saint-Etienne on Friday, while Chile travel to Lille to face England next Saturday.
 
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