SIX NationsIt should be a 3-way fight between England, Ireland and Wales for the Six Nations title on Saturday, although France still have an outside chance.

The Top 3 are locked on 6 Points with 3 wins apiece, while England’s points difference of +37 puts them 1st, ahead of Ireland’s +33 and Wales’ +12.

France are 4th with 4 Points and a points difference of +22.

Philippe Saint-Andre’s side could still steal the title if Wales and Ireland lose and Les Bleus then beat England by a margin of 8 points or more, but it looks a remote possibility.

If teams are level on points, and match-points difference, then England are likely to win the Championship on tries scored, having crossed 11 times to Ireland’s 4 and Wales’ 5. In the highly unlikely event this was also level come Saturday night, the trophy would be shared.

Wales are in action 1st away to Italy in Rome (14:30 SA Time, 12:30 GMT), before Ireland take on Scotland at Murrayfield (16:30 SA Time, 14:30 GMT), ahead of England’s home match against France at Twickenham (19:00 SA Time, 17:00 GMT).

With the Six Nations wide open, we assess the 4 teams’ chances.

 

England vs France:

England are slight favourites and have the advantage of a superior points difference and playing last, so they will know what they have to do.

France might not be the ideal opposition for a title contender’s final match, but Les Bleus have been as frustrating and underwhelming as ever this year, losing to Ireland and Wales.

England, with lock Geoff Parling replacing Dave Attwood in their only change from the Scotland victory on 14 March, have not won the title since 2011 but, against an underachieving French side, will be hopeful of ending that wait.

The French have made 2 changes from the side that beat Italy, both enforced by injury, as Jules Plisson replaces Camille Lopez at flyhalf while Vincent Debaty starts at loosehead prop in place of Eddy Ben Arous.

England must beat France by a sufficient margin that if Ireland defeat Scotland, England’s current 4-point advantage over the Irish is not eroded – and that, of course, assumes Wales have not hammered Italy.

If the Irish and Welsh both lose their matches then the match at Twickenham effectively becomes a title decider.

Although England will be favourites, should both Wales and Ireland lose, then France could pull off the unlikeliest of title heists.

 

Wales vs Italy:

As they did in 2013, Wales have recovered from a poor start to haul themselves back into title contention.

An opening defeat by England dented confidence and shattered hopes of a 3rd Grand Slam under Warren Gatland but victories against Scotland, France and Ireland have given them a chance of lifting the Six Nations trophy again.

The odds are against Wales – they travel to Italy with the daunting task of having to win handsomely, knowing that even that might not be enough should Ireland beat Scotland or England win against France.

They need to win by at least 26 points to overtake England’s points difference (a 22-point victory is required to leapfrog Ireland) before the later games.

Italy’s away win against Scotland showed what a threat they can be, and they will only be stronger in Rome – all Wales can do is win big and hope other results go their way.

They make 2 changes to their starting 15 – Aaron Jarvis comes in at at tighthead and Rob Evans makes his first start at loosehead in place of the injured Samson Lee and Gethin Jenkins.

 

Ireland vs Scotland:

Hopes of a Grand Slam may have evaporated in their defeat by Wales, but Ireland still have a strong chance of winning the title.

They are away against winless Scotland, and they will be aiming to pile more misery on Vern Cotter’s squad.

After losing to Wales, Irish confidence may be dented but against a Scotland team seemingly destined for the Wooden Spoon, they are still strong title contenders.

Ireland make 2 changes from the Wales defeat, as winger Luke Fitzgerald comes in for Simon Zebo and loosehead prop Cian Healy replaces Jack McGrath.

They have the benefit of knowing what Wales will have done, but with England kicking off after they have finished, they may be hesitant about whether to stick or twist.

 

bbc

109 Responses to SIX Nations: Exciting final weekend beckons

Users Online

Total 43 users including 0 member, 43 guests, 0 bot online

Most users ever online were 3735, on 31 August 2022 @ 6:23 pm