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10-try England destroy hapless Wales with a record Cardiff win

By PA
Tommy Freeman celebrates his England try (Photo by Michael Steele/Getty Images)

England took the Guinness Six Nations title race to its final game after destroying Wales 68-14 in Cardiff. Steve Borthwick’s team guaranteed themselves a top-two finish, ahead of favourites France hosting Scotland, in emphatic bonus-point fashion but Wales were condemned to a second successive wooden spoon and 17th Test defeat on the bounce – a record for a tier one nation in the professional era.

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The Prince and Princess of Wales, respective patrons of the Welsh Rugby Union and Rugby Football Union, looked on at the Principality Stadium as England collected a bonus point by half time before completing a record Six Nations win against Wales in 10-try fashion.

There were touchdowns during the opening flurries from captain Maro Itoje and wing Tom Roebuck but the real damage was done during a six-minute scoring blitz just before the interval.

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    Wing Tommy Freeman became only the second player after France’s Philippe Bernat-Salles 24 years ago to score a try in every match of a Six Nations campaign, with Chandler Cunningham-South and prop Will Stuart – on his 50th cap – also crossing.

    It was one-way traffic as scrum-half Alex Mitchell added a sixth England try, with debutant Henry Pollock scoring twice, his fellow replacement Joe Heyes also going over and Cunningham-South adding a second, while Fin Smith kicked five conversions and Marcus Smith four.

    Attack

    196
    Passes
    148
    116
    Ball Carries
    109
    294m
    Post Contact Metres
    265m
    5
    Line Breaks
    6

    Outclassed Wales’ only replies were a Ben Thomas try double, with Gareth Anscombe and Jarrod Evans each landing a conversion as interim head coach Matt Sherratt’s three games in charge came to a demoralising end.

    England made a dream start, monopolising possession and taking a third-minute lead when Itoje picked up and dived over from close range, with Smith converting.

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    Wales thought they had scored an equalising try five minutes later when full-back Blair Murray ran in unopposed from 40 metres but the score was ruled out for scrum-half Tomos Williams being offside.

    England made the most of their reprieve and quickly scored again as Fin Smith’s floated pass took out three home defenders and Roebuck crossed for a try on his first Test start, and the fly-half converted.

    As against Scotland a week ago, Wales had started poorly while England had a confidence about them even if they suffered a 19th-minute blow when lock Ollie Chessum was forced off injured. He was replaced by Cunningham-South.

    Murray continued to be comfortably Wales’ biggest attacking threat and it took a brilliant tackle from England hooker Luke Cowan-Dickie to deny him a score that would have got his team back into the game.

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    Wales then broke through nine minutes before half time, courtesy of a brilliant pass from Williams that found Thomas and he had a simple finish, with celebrations among the crowd being led by Gavin and Stacey co-creator and star Ruth Jones.

    But Welsh cheers were short-lived, with England establishing a 26-point lead by the break as Freeman, Cunningham-South and Stuart breached the Welsh defence.

    Wales tried to fight their way back during the third quarter, yet wing Ellis Mee was guilty of blowing a gilt-edged try chance by ignoring an unmarked Joe Roberts and Aaron Wainwright outside him.

    And England made their opponents pay as Mitchell broke clear for try number six, converted by Smith, as the visitors hit 40 points.

    Wales’ misery was not complete though, with scores from Pollock and Heyes bringing up the half-century, before Pollock and Cunningham-South completed the rout with their second tries.

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    Comments

    3 Comments
    f
    fl 43 days ago

    Extremely gratifying that England not only won, but won by a massive margin in a game where they passed and carried less than the opposition, but kicked more.


    Extremely gratifying that England won with George Ford giving an excellent performance off the bench.


    Extremely gratifying that this rounds off a six nations where the Marcus Smith bubble finally burst.


    Extremely gratifying that this was perhaps the most idiosyncratically Borthwickian team selection of Borthwick's tenure, and it paid off completely.


    Extremely gratifying to know that Borthwick has secured his position for years to come.


    Extremely gratifying that no matter what nonsense Andy Goode and the know-nothing-trogolydtes who frequent the comment section come out with, England will build towards 2027 with a great manager, a great team, and a great set of tactics.

    N
    Nickers 41 days ago

    What made these selections/tactics more Borthwickian than previous teams/selections? And why do you think it took him until his 3rd season in charge to do this?


    I don’t follow Premiership rugby, so my only exposure to Borthwick’s coaching has been his England tenure. I’ve probably watched 90% of their games in that time. I would have characterised his coaching of England as being a lot like Ian Foster’s - Not obvious how they want to play the game. Constant tinkering, changes, and circling back around to the same tried players leading to confusion, haplessness and ultimately underperformance.

    h
    hafid kouloun 42 days ago

    Credit to Borthwick and staff for changing the fortunes of England. Wigglesworth, Harrison, Strawbridge and El-Abd all deserve credit.

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