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How the Six Nations affected the world rankings

Chandler Cunningham-South celebrates his second England try against Wales with teammate Tom Willis (Photo by David Rogers/Getty Images)

You can debate long and hard about which team progressed the most throughout the Guinness Six Nations, whether it was champions France or runners-up England.

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Both teams won four games apiece, with England doing so for the first time in five years. This included the 26-25 round two victory over Les Bleus in the latest instalment of ‘Le Crunch’.

France were three or four dropped passes away from beating England comfortably and landing a Grand Slam, while you could look at it the other way and say that England’s transformation from a team that lost tight games to one that won them, was more impressive.

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    Les Bleus were consistently impressive throughout, taking northern hemisphere rugby to new heights with their blend of power and pace, while England fought doggedly and then finished with a flourish by playing well in patches against flaky Italy before routing the worst Welsh team in history.

    A look at the World Rugby Rankings lays it all out in bare facts. But, in truth, the 15 matches had a negligible impact with England the only team to improve their position, moving up to sixth and into the top band of seeds for the 2027 World Cup draw, at the expense of Scotland.

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    England’s rating increased from 82.31 points at the start of the tournament to 84.73, a gain of 2.42 points. France were the only other team to be in the positive column, adding exactly a point to their pre-Six Nations rating of 88.51. That, however, was not enough for Les Bleus to improve on fourth place.

    After having their dreams of a three-peat shattered by the French in Dublin, dethroned champions Ireland lost second place to New Zealand and are now just a third of a point better off than France, in third place with a rating of 89.83 points.

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    Scotland slipped a place and are now in the second band of seeds as things stand for the World Cup draw, their rating reduced by a fraction under a point to 82.36.

    Italy stayed put in 10th but with 0.87 points shaved off their rating, which is now 77.77 points, while Wales sunk to an all-time low of 12th and are closer to 13th-placed Japan in the rankings than Georgia in 11th.

    Wales’ whitewash cost them 0.62 of a point and they’re now on 73.39 points – 1.1 behind Georgia, who have once again called for some form of play-off match in a bid to get into the Six Nations, and just 0.44 of a point more than the Brave Blossoms, who they meet in a crucial two-test series in Japan this July.

    At present, Wales are precariously hanging onto their place in the second band of seeds (for teams ranked seventh to 12th) but a poor set of results against Eddie Jones’ charges will see them drop further down the rankings, possibly to as low as 14th.

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    Rewind to 2024, Italy were the team to make the most gains, having 3.48 points added to their rating, on the back of their most successful tournament, which moved them up three places to eighth.

    2025 World Rankings – Winners & Losers

    TeamCurrent Pts Pre-6N PtsGain/Loss
    England84.73 (6th)82.31 (7th)+2.52
    France89.51 (4th)88.51 (4th)+1.00
    Wales73.39 (12th)74.01 (11th)-0.62
    Italy77.77 (10th)78.64 (10th)-0.87
    Ireland89.83 (2nd)90.78 (2nd)-0.95
    Scotland82.36 (7th)83.34 (6th)-0.98

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    Comments

    4 Comments
    S
    SC 13 hours ago

    I thought after losing at home by 15 points to France that France would have moved to 3 and Ireland fall to 4.

    P
    PT 16 hours ago

    No 3 for Ireland? jeez I thought they'd be lower

    f
    fl 15 hours ago

    why did you think that?

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    Comments on RugbyPass

    J
    JW 1 hour ago
    'France may leave top players at home but will still be serious contenders in New Zealand'

    The country turned septic on Foster for losing a series to what was arguably the best Irish side in history and one that may not have been ranked number one in the world when they arrived, but were by the time they left.

    Imagine how feral the nation will be if Robertson’s All Blacks lose to what is supposedly going to be a French ‘B’ team?

    This author proving he has less of an understanding of rugby than the general population.


    The country was septic because of how easily they got beat Paul. The country is smart enough to rate the relative level of performances, and if Razors team goes backwards like Fosters the criticism you suggest might come will be fully deserved. If France B perform as good as France A and win by the same margins then those with the criticism the team should be winning every game will also be deserved. But the inference that the public didn’t give Ireland the credit they deserved couldn’t be further from the truth imo.

    France have beaten the All Blacks on the last three occasions the two sides have met, and that the former has used 38 players in the process.

    France could leave 40 players at home in July and still be a serious contender

    And to the vibe of this article, it provides abosolutely zero reason to believe the next 38 best French are going to be as good as these first 38. Paul got one thing right, it’s no joke that France will be leaving behind 40 players.


    France have a 45 man squad for 6N (well using Wiki), the team could be made up of these leftovers from the teams not likely to get close to Toulouse and Bordeaux, given that just the third place team is doing commendably well not to be in negative for and against like the rest.

    Uini Atonio ——— Prop

    Giorgi Beria ——— Prop

    Georges-Henri Colombe ———- Prop

    Jean-Baptiste Gros ——— Prop

    Dany Priso ——— Prop

    Rabah Slimani———- Prop

    Hugo Auradou ——— Lock

    Mickaël Guillard ——— Lock

    Matthias Halagahu ——— Lock

    Romain Taofifénua ——— Lock

    Esteban Abadie ——- Back row

    Grégory Alldritt ———- Back row

    Paul Boudehent ———- Back row

    Oscar Jégou ——— Back row

    Nolann Le Garrec ——— Scrum-half

    Gaël Fickou ——— Centre

    Antoine Frisch ——— Centre

    Émilien Gailleton ——— Centre

    Noah Nene ——— Centre

    Théo Attissogbé ——— Wing

    Gaël Dréan ———- Wing

    Gabin Villièren —— Wing

    Léo Barré ——— Fullback


    One wouldn’t think Atonio is going to come (I’d be surprised if Fickou is still not rested or he and Le Garrec aren’t involved in a relegation playoff game) but a few good players there like Leo Barre, Le Garrec, Taofifénua, and that back row, but also a distinct lack of a spine with the 3 best playmakers playing in the Final at home.


    What are the possibilities to fill out these missing spots? looking at Opta’s stats hub Serin and Couilloud provide good back up for Le Garrec by fact of having the highest try involvements in the Top14 (along with Michael Ruru). And Serin’s partner Herve looks the most threatening to carry on the teams style with his elusiveness?

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