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Four England talking points after their Six Nations rout of Wales

By Liam Heagney at Principality Stadium, Cardiff
Chandler Cunningham-South celebrates his second England try against Wales with teammate Tom Willis (Photo by David Rogers/Getty Images)

What an incredible difference six weeks can make. Exiting Dublin’s Aviva Stadium on February 1, you would have got long odds on the fanciful notion that the just slain England would somehow finish above Ireland when the curtain fell on Guinness Six Nations 2025.

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The post-round one expectation was for the power-surging Irish to bag an unprecedented hat-trick of successive championship titles, with the clunky English alternatively enduring another frustrating campaign, fuelling further concerns that Steve Borthwick remained out of his depth head coaching Test rugby.

Come to the final round mid-March denouement, though, and this early February assessment had aged brutally. Ireland ended the tournament looking stale, error-ridden and bereft of inspiration.

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    And England, by wild contrast, had instead become the grand entertainers, winning four matches on the bounce, scoring tries for fun in their closing two games and fully meriting their second-place finish a point ahead of their opening round nemesis. In Steve we now trust. Here are four English talking points following their humiliation of a hapless Wales:

    The next step…
    If England continue with their rate of progress under Borthwick, they will be crowned 2026 Grand Slam champions. They were fourth in 2023 with two wins, third in 2024 with three wins, and now second in 2025 with four wins.

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    You can see where this is going… and it will mean that the photographers will get their trophy shot and not mass exiting as they did from the Cardiff media room on Saturday night when Yoram Moefana scored the clinching 62nd-minute try for France on TV which meant England wouldn’t be returning to the Principality for a trophy lift.

    What Six Nations 2025 will do is put an end to the criticism suggesting that Borthwick doesn’t know what he is doing and is just making it up as he goes along.

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    He does seemingly have a plan and while there are times he struggles to convincingly publicly express that due to his habit of deflecting to platitudes, his team have lived up to what he said they would do after a frustrating Autumn Nations Series.

    That they would win tight matches, that they would shore up their leaking defence and that they would play a bit more rugby and stop being so attackingly blunt. Borthwick has now earned the freedom to step forward with confidence and not have criticisms suggesting he won’t make it to Rugby World Cup 2027. He will.

    You still feel that Borthwick is short a wise old owl in his managerial set-up, someone who has been there and done it all in Test coaching to be a sounding board in critical moments. However, he curiously dropped the name of Andrew Strawbridge, his unheralded Kiwi, into the post-game mix in Cardiff.

    The skills development guru is just over a year on the beat and he now wants even more time with the players, which should bode well for an even better fluency than the 10-try display that had just crushed the Welsh.

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    “I was just having a conversation a few minutes ago with Andrew Strawbridge who, when he first joined up with us over a year ago, talked to be about skill development, the handling skill within the forwards, within the whole team,” began Borthwick.

    “He has pushed that skill development throughout, from that first day when he discussed it with me right the way through to his week and he is pushing me for more skill development time. It’s brilliant to have a coach of his quality and experience helping the players.” It sure looked that way on the evidence from the Principality.

    The Chris Boyd effect
    A long-term process benefitting England now is the revamp that Chris Boyd began at Northampton in 2018. He wanted to develop players good enough to become Test team 50-cappers, not those who briefly got a taste and were then condemned to falter in the shadows, unable to kick on.

    Alex Mitchell and Tommy Freeman have both had their international setbacks but they have shown they can rise above this adversity and rebound all the better for it. The uptick in England’s spring play with Mitchell back at scrum-half with rookie Fin Smith outside him at out-half, compared to the annoyance without him in November when he was injured, was transformative.

    England’s collective delivery of 25 tries in this Six Nations, eight more than the vaunted Ireland this term and 12 more than what Mitchell and co managed in 2024, will bring invaluable confidence to the squad that yes indeed their game is evolving at tempo and headed in the right direction.

    Just like the trajectory of Freeman, who on Saturday became only the second player after France’s Philippe Bernat-Salles in 2001 to score a try in every match of a Six Nations campaign.

    Not only has he brought the level of his wing play to enjoyable new heights, but he showed in Cardiff with his switch to outside centre that he can also put on a credible shift as a midfielder.

    Bless the few kilos he put on a couple of years ago at his club to become a better Test option. He now packs a powerful presence… just look at his first-half choke tackle against the Welsh. That was a classy intervention at a crucial time in the game.

    The still-rookie Smith and the debut-making Henry Pollock are the latest cabs off the Saints rank, two players with oodles of ability to go on and enjoy lengthy Test careers based on their influence in Wales. What they each delivered was very spick and span. Fraser Dingwall also proved his worth. Well played, Northampton. England owe you a debt of gratitude.

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    The Lions race
    With just seven players starting all five matches – Ellis Genge, Will Stuart, Maro Itoje, Tom Curry and Ben Earl in the forwards and Mitchell and Freeman in the backs – there is no such thing as a closed England selection door.

    That’s been good for Borthwick and his squad development and it should now also be good for Andy Farrell’s British and Irish Lions.

    If a fifth-place England could manage to get 11 players selected on the 2021 Lions despite just two Six Nations wins, the expectation now is they can enjoy an even bigger representation on the back of a four-win, second-place campaign.

    Itoje has proven himself as captaincy material and has more to offer than Ireland’s Caelan Doris while at the other end of the spectrum, Tom Roebuck and Pollock will be optimistic about being bolter selections.

    In between, there is a plethora of fine candidates including tighthead Stuart. The 2023 Dan Cole recall meant it has taken him time for Stuart to shine but he is now one of England’s most consistent players and will be heading to Australia.

    Ben Curry is another underappreciated jewel, as is Chandler Cunningham-South, who will travel along with backbone types such as Genge, Tom Curry and Ben Earl. So much for the Irish/Scots-heavy Lions predictions at the start of the season. England will very much have a dominant say.

    Can we play you every week?
    The media box at Principality Stadium is not for the faint-hearted as it has fans surrounding it on all four sides and the atmosphere can be bawdy, to say the least with the drinks flowing and the old enemy in town.

    There were plenty of ‘stick your f-ing chariot up your arse’ references to be heard on Saturday, but no one could have predicted what would later transpire, several Welsh fans voting with their feet and walking out in disgust when the first of the Pollock tries was scored less than 15 minutes from the finish.

    It was a sight to behold and a sad reflection on the doldrums the Welsh are now enduring having incredibly lost 17 Test matches in a row.

    Borthwick tried to soften the blow in the aftermath, revealing that he had told the interim Welsh boss Matt Sherratt that England had endured a similar home humiliation when France put 50 on them at Twickenham in Six Nations 2023.

    England have certainly turned their fortunes around in the two years since then, but it’s difficult to envisage a similar transformation for Wales as their regional system isn’t what it needs to be to quicken the recovery.

    What it meant on Saturday was that the closing minutes unfolded with delirious England fans chiding the exiting Welsh supporters with shouts of “Can we play you every week?” It was a brutal confirmation of the English supremacy on the day.

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    Comments

    7 Comments
    M
    MP 7 hours ago

    ‘Slain’.someone’s feeling agitated.

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    JJ 17 hours ago

    I guess the final score will depend on how you count Jack Will and Owen Farrell. Neither are eligible for the england team, so there could be 9 from the 6Nations team but 11 overall.

    T
    Tom 16 hours ago

    The flyhalf battle is probably the most interesting. At the start of the tournament I thought it unlikely Farrell would go especially considering he's been injured but none of the incumbents really nailed it. Fin Smith was good but is young and not many other English backs are likely to go now that Lawrence is injured so no natural chemistry. Mitchell will go but likely won't start tests. Ireland can't work out who is their best ten and Fin Russell’s stock has fallen. Marcus could make it as a utility player but may miss out as he's not had success at 10. He could still do a job midweek and provide a 6:2 bench option. Ford looked good but has had no game time. Door is definitely ajar for Faz and Daddy is picking the team.


    Realistically Willis is one of the best backrowers in the world but with so many excellent 7s to choose from he's not “needed” per se.

    f
    fl 17 hours ago

    “If a fifth-place England could manage to get 11 players selected on the 2021 Lions despite just two Six Nations wins, the expectation now is they can enjoy an even bigger representation on the back of a four-win, second-place campaign.”


    It isn’t all about the six nations though. England are ranked 6th in the world - at the end of Marc 2021 they were ranked 3rd.


    I suspect England might get 11 players selected, because its likely to be a bigger squad this time around that it was during covid, but the main contingent will be Irish.

    G
    GH 15 hours ago

    well, I think on the contrary that England might have more players selected just because Ireland managed poorly this year and not for the results of England’s team. Really fortunate that the opponent will be Australia and not SA or NZ…

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    Amelia Jonathan 26 minutes ago
    Don't get out over your skis on the Highlanders

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    J
    JW 3 hours ago
    Crusaders vs Force takes: Let's talk about Sevu Reece, forgotten All Black returns

    I think Reece has bulked up too much and now doesn’t have the pace to perform to his previously high standards. He’s making himself less of a winger but I’m not really sure he’s filling another role succinctly either. I think criticism at the AB level has seen him try to redevelop his game, I’m really not sure he can be continued to be used at the highest level. Definitely becoming the wing version Richie Mo’unga is possible (if not already attained) at Super Rugby level however. I loved watching him play when he first broke through.

    The Force are undeniably much improved this season, but it’s going to take some reps to prove to themselves that they really can hang with the big dogs.

    Yeah they’re still well off in the quality personal front.

    It was the 21-year-old’s first appearance of the season, and he certainly made the most of it, with 13 carries accounting for 50 running metres – each of them passing by in a blur as Springer made his may to the try line time and time again.

    Will Jordan was playmaking superbly to assist the youngster’s points tally, but it was all individual brilliance in the 53rd minute when Springer tiptoed down the sideline before collecting his own chip kick and outpacing the final two defenders to score under the posts.

    After pre-season I said that I wanted Springer to cement the starting jersey, and that (well I’ve not no idea exactly which sides they play) another new wing recruit, Kunawave, would replace Reece as the Fijian Flyer in the team by season end. Reece might be making that tough, but unfortunately it looks like there wasn’t a full squad spot for the young fella and he has since made his AB7s debut instead. Watch this space though as he and Saifoloi look to have the X factor👍


    That Jordan pass to Springer aside it was otherwise a very lackluster game for him as he looks to be struggling with processing his option taking in this new style he’s trying. Still have to think a man of that talent and ingenuity is going to make it click sooner or later though!

    t’s a congested position, and after Ennor shot down talk of him being swept up by a Top 14 outfit this week, it looks as if the Crusaders have some selection headaches to solve in the coming weeks.

    That’s great news. I can’t remember if it was because he actually made his return in pre-season or not but for some reason I was liking how Ennor looked like he might be providing the right options for Saders and even ABs when back. Very pleased to see him fit straight in though there was plenty of space on offer but he almost looked as if he was more dangerous with no space. Could be the long looked for option at 13?

    11 Go to comments
    J
    JW 3 hours ago
    Chiefs vs Blues takes: Blues need Spider-Man, McKenzie is All Blacks’ form 10

    Chiefs were in the driver’s seat for most of Saturday night’s fixture in the Tron

    I don’t know about that. The majority of stats all favour the Blues.

    Referee Ben O’Keeffe did show the rising star a yellow card during the second half after a series of infringements from the Blues, but that shouldn’t take away too much from the main point here. Taele looks at home with the Blues in Super Rugby Pacific.

    There were a few errors that crept into his performance in that second half, but yes, I was surprised after watching him a few times how comfortable he looked in his role as a 2nd5, and even how well he performed it. It is a shame for Lam to be injured but I picked up a distinct difference in how the backline functioned by having Taele at twelve instead. I might not have given him another go this week but now it will be very interesting to see what Vern does and without knowing what else is going on (Pero might be fit enough to start and psuh Plummer to 12) I think he might start again (Heem has been very very good in the role in recent years, is he fit).

    Shaun Stevenson fails to make an All Blacks-worthy statement

    He’s leaving Hamish (don’t know how you missed that), it’s impossible to make a statement for AB selection, and that also be well out of his mind.


    Watching him in Japan he looked to be struggling as much of his team. Which is often how I think his contributions have depended, how well he fits in with the team. He’s a very unique player and I don’t think the Chiefs have anywhere near the right momentum and structure to unlock Shaun’s strengths. In saying that I thought he played well and that pass showed he’s in a great headspace, you might also be overplaying Corey’s contribution, which from the weekend would be of greatest value if he was Lams midfield replacement imo. I’d like Forbes to return this weekend and don’t think Corey did enough to take that opportunity away from him.

    6 Go to comments
    J
    Jahmirwayle 4 hours ago
    Mixed Wales update on availability of Josh Adams, Gareth Anscombe

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    6 Go to comments
    J
    JW 4 hours ago
    Super Rugby Pacific has turned the ship around in the right direction

    “We want jeopardy in our competition, right? We want ladder movement. We don’t want teams to stay in the same ladder position that they were in last year.

    You need promotion relegation then. You cannot always rely on 4 teams being the right number for Australia, it could mean that they are too strong in future. Or that Fijian Drua doesn’t always has the players to knock of the best.

    “We want unexpected results. We want every fan to be sitting here on a Friday at lunchtime going ‘I’m a chance this weekend’.’’ 

    Oh, so you want a made up fantasy league like the NFL, rather than a quantifiable competition like NPC, and to a lesser degree, then NRL. Meaningless rather than meaningful, you don’t want the best of NSW taking on the best of Queensland, or the Blues region versus the Chiefs region.


    There is still huge room for improvement in the way rugby is played and officiated, it is an incredibly young professional sport. Some of these introduced concepts are tricks taken from others and have done a lot to engage and increase Super Rugby’s appeal, but there has been a hint of whether the game is selling it’s soul to get back on the table.

    For me, Super Rugby’s best years were around the turn of the millennium, when the Crusaders and Brumbies held sway. The speed with which possession was recycled at the breakdown and the minutes the ball was in play remains my benchmark for flowing rugby. 

    Have you used you’re own license for viewing “feels rather than facts” here Hamish?


    I agree, the rugby isn’t as good as it has been at times in the recent past, but it is more engaging. Which I think is due to a whole factor of fortunate and one off reasons, along with targeted ones.

    5 Go to comments
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