Jenkins takes heart from Wales effort against Ireland

Dafydd Jenkins believes Wales are learning from the hard times and can take heart from pushing the Irish, one of the best teams in the world, so far and hard at Principality Stadium in Round 3 of the Guinness Six Nations. The former Wales skipper put in a stellar 80 minute performance in the 27-18 […]

The post Jenkins takes heart from Wales effort against Ireland appeared first on Welsh Rugby Union | Wales & Regions.

Morgan says Wales ready to build on Ireland performance

Wales captain Jac Morgan says his team are ready to build on their performance against Ireland over the next fortnight as they prepare to take on the Scots at Murrayfield in two weeks time. Wales led at the interval thanks to a try by Morgan on the stroke of half-time that overturned a 10-point deficit to […]

The post Morgan says Wales ready to build on Ireland performance appeared first on Welsh Rugby Union | Wales & Regions.

England and Ireland remind Six Nations rivals that points win prizes

Making tries worth more could be worth considering but for now Steve Borthwick’s men remain in Six Nations hunt

Style and beauty count for only so much in top‑level sport, as Welsh and Scottish supporters were eventually reminded on Saturday. There are no marks for artistic merit, no specific rewards (beyond a try bonus point) for throwing the ball around in the name of entertainment. Occasionally, though, there are days when the losers’ enterprise and energy leaves the deepest impression.

None more so, at long last, than Wales. After barely four training sessions under their interim head coach, Matt Sherratt, they looked a team who have not so much had an extreme makeover as assumed a whole fresh identity. Last time out they were gloomily trudging through Italian treacle; suddenly they were running and passing with elan and briefly threatening to cause the mother of all tournament upsets.

Continue reading...

Antoine Dupont to the fore as France run riot with 11-try thrashing of Italy

  • Italy 24-73 France
  • Visitors earn second-highest tally in Six Nations history

If there were questions over France’s ability to finish teams off after coughing up numerous chances against England a fortnight ago, they have been thoroughly put to bed. A ruthless 11-try demolition of a handy Italy side on their own patch served as a reminder that, on their day, there are few better outfits in rugby than a French team in full flow.

Fabien Galthié, the head coach, made some bold selection decisions, dropping his ace wing Damian Penaud and fly-half Matthieu Jalibert from the match-day 23. A seven-one bench split was a sign of the plan and France’s power game duly delivered. They stomped over the gainline with just about every carry, unloaded six heavies off the bench in one go on 48 minutes and pulverised the Italians, who sparkled on rare occasions but were totally outgunned.

Continue reading...

Steve Borthwick may focus on results but England fans want to see an identity | Gerard Meagher

The kicking game – whether coaches or players initiated it – saw off Scotland. But there’s a reason the crowd booed

About an hour after the final whistle on Saturday, England’s victorious players still swigging from the Calcutta Cup, Steve Borthwick was deep inside Twickenham discussing how his players finally got their hands back on the trophy. He was justifying their route-one tactics, explaining why England showcased so little with ball in hand; essentially, why they seemed to revert to a tactical approach that wins matches but few admirers.

Borthwick was asked a perfectly reasonable question – was it the coaches’ decision to do so or the players adapting on the hoof in response to Scotland’s gameplan? – and he did not answer it properly. He was bristling, looking for hidden meaning in the question that just wasn’t there. He was asked it again and once more failed to provide an answer. Make no mistake, Borthwick cares a great deal about how his team are perceived. The boos sting, the derogatory implications of “Borthball” bother him.

Continue reading...

Freeman believes in England’s Six Nations title hopes despite fans’ boos

  • England have favourable fixtures against Italy and Wales
  • Steve Borthwick backtracks on George Furbank’s fitness

Tommy Freeman has admitted that England understand supporters’ frustrations amid a chorus of boos during the scrappy win against Scotland, but he believes Steve Borthwick’s team are still alive in the Six Nations title race after back-to-back wins.

Borthwick has revealed that Freeman’s Northampton teammate George Furbank is unlikely to feature in the final two games, against Italy and Wales, having suggested previously that he could, but England go into the second fallow week third in the table with favourable fixtures to come.

Continue reading...

Cardiff and Ospreys chasing Scarlets U18 Regional Academies title

Having turned around their defeat to the Scarlets in the semi-finals of the Regional Academies U18 tournament, Josh Turnbull’s Cardiff side will now turn their attention to getting even with the Ospreys in the final at the Arms Park on Sunday 23 February Revenge was certainly sweet for the young Blacks & Blacks on their […]

The post Cardiff and Ospreys chasing Scarlets U18 Regional Academies title appeared first on Welsh Rugby Union | Wales & Regions.

England v Scotland: Six Nations – as it happened

England regained the Calcutta Cup in a nailbiter

10 mins. Both teams are already trading penalties at the breakdown as their combative backrows spoil possession and win turnovers. The latest is Ritchie setting up a lineout platform in the England half.

7 mins. England hit back into the 22 via lineout. There are lots of phases after the initial drive, but they are one-out runners that are being contained by the Scottish line defence. Scotland are offside and on the advantage Freeman calls for the ball close to the ruck to force over under the attention of a couple of tacklers.

Continue reading...

Brython Thunder swamped by rampant Clovers

Brython Thunder went down to a 7-94 defeat to Irish powerhouse Clovers in Round 8 of the Celtic Challenge at Parc y Scarlets this morning. The experienced Irish side proved to strong for a young and inexperienced Welsh side and underlined why the  two sides across the Irish sea have dominated the League. The Thunder […]

The post Brython Thunder swamped by rampant Clovers appeared first on Welsh Rugby Union | Wales & Regions.

Gwalia Lightning bounce back with a bang

Gwalia Lightning returned to winning ways with an impressive 19-31 victory on the road over Glasgow Warriors in Round 8 of the Celtic Challenge at Scotstoun Stadium in Glasgow this afternoon. Welsh internationals Sian Jones and Gwennan Hopkins, centres Molly Anderson-Thomas and Kelsie Webster all crossed for tries to secure the bonus-point. Fly half Carys […]

The post Gwalia Lightning bounce back with a bang appeared first on Welsh Rugby Union | Wales & Regions.

Wales v Ireland: Six Nations – live

  • Follow the 2.15pm GMT kick-off from Cardiff
  • Get in touch with Lee | Sign up to the Breakdown

6 mins. A strong first phase attack from Ireland moves the ball left quickly. They are into the Wales 5m zone and the visitors inevitably drift offside as they defend frantically. The ball is put in the corner for a lineout which is won and two phases later Conan drives over the line.

4 mins. The scrum ends with a Wales penalty after WillGriff John forces Porter to the floor. The clearing kick and lineout gives phased possession in the Ireland half, but the ball is not secured and Ringrose puts in a delightful drilled, bobbling kick up the right touchline. It’s a 50:22 and Ireland will have the ball in the Wales 22.

Continue reading...

Time is running out for England’s and Scotland’s Lions hopefuls to state their case | Ugo Monye

All the way across the field there are mouthwatering head-to-heads with players pushing for the tour to Australia

For British & Irish Lions hopefuls, time is running out. Three Test matches left to stake their claim, to catch Andy Farrell’s eye and book a place on the plane. Farrell is due to be at Twickenham on Saturday and he will be analysing everything. As a player that’s precisely where you want to be.

At this stage of the Six Nations, England against Scotland feels all the more pivotal for Lions hopefuls. We can safely say that there will be a large Ireland contingent and, unless something dramatic happens in the coming weeks, a relatively small group of Wales players. That congested middle is full of England and Scotland players and that makes Saturday’s match all the more mouthwatering.

Continue reading...

Time for England to end Calcutta Cup blues and show France was no fluke | Robert Kitson

Red Rose have lost four in row against Scots, but if they can back up Les Bleus win there will be talk of top-two finish

In recent times the Calcutta Cup has morphed into the “Scottish play” the English would rather not mention by name. One Red Rose win in seven attempts and four consecutive victories for Gregor Townsend’s side has certainly been an uncomfortable sequence for those who, for decades, regarded death and taxes as only marginally more inevitable than Scotland losing down south.

So much for the supposed dead weight of history. “What’s done cannot be undone,” murmured Lady Macbeth but she wasn’t privy to the skill and daring of Finn Russell or the killer finishing of Duhan van der Merwe. The last time England lost three or more consecutive home games in this fixture was in the early 1900s before Twickenham became their spiritual home.

Continue reading...