When England’s home crowd are booing, and the team are not even losing, there must be something obvious amiss, and in this latest edition of the madcap close-run scorelines of the Steve Borthwick era,
Fans were passing me in the Twickenham press box, grabbing my attention, and saying “rubbish”. With the ball in hand, it is tough to argue. England were outscored by three tries to one, at home, with a wonderful scrum and line-out,
Scotland has surrendered the Calcutta Cup after Finn Russell couldn’t convert their three tries and lost to England 16-15 in dramatic fashion at Twickenham.
LUCKY England somehow survived a Calcutta Cup ordeal to get their first win over Scotland since the pandemic – and keep their Six Nations title hopes alive. Finn Russell’s will spend much of
These are the three sides that can still win the Six Nations, with Ireland on 14 points, France on 11 and England on 10 with two games to play. Much will become clear in the next round of fixtures as there is a crucial clash between Ireland and France in Dublin on 8 March. A day later England host Italy at Twickenham.
While Scotland fans may feel aggrieved at the seven points Freeman’s “try” earned England, the hosts were playing under penalty advantage on the goal-line, so would have got the ball back even if the winger was ruled to have been held up over the line.
England rugby stars load up on sushi, crispy chicken tenders, bao buns and fruit kebabs as soon as they finish matches as they attempt to replenish their glycogen levels. The dishes, which contain plenty of carbohydrates and protein, help players begin their recovery process after 80 minutes of gruelling match action.
Finn Russell missed a last-minute conversion that would have given Scotland a record fifth successive Calcutta Cup win on Saturday and instead England claimed a tense 16-15 Twickenham victory that keeps them in the hunt for the Six Nations title.
The weekend's Six Nations action prompted plenty of hot takes, but are those reactions irrational or legitimate? ESPN's Tom Hamilton delivers his verdict.
Former internationals Matt Dawson and Fraser Brown react to a dramatic afternoon at Twickenham and explain how England's problem-solving helped them beat Scotland in the Calcutta Cup.
LONDON — Scotland surrendered the Calcutta Cup when Finn Russell couldn't convert their three tries and lost to England 16-15 in dramatic fashion at Twickenham on Saturday. Russell missed his ...
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