England v France: Women’s Six Nations title and grand slam decider – live | Women’s Six Nations

Key events

PENALTY TRY! England 26-0 France

And a yellow card for the prop Bernadou. She was unquestionably in an offside position as she tackled Lucy Packer on the line. There were questions around the other French players. Would they have prevented the score? The officials didn’t think so which means England have their bonus point, France are down to 13 women and this is getting messy for those in blue.

36 min: Could be a penalty try loading. Bernadou has possibly come in from an offside position.

36 min: A great punt from Kildunne means Bourdon must mop up with her heels on her own try line. Kildunne chases and puts pressure on Boulard and England steal the ball away. They’re on the attack. They’re almost in for a fourth try as Lucy Packer darts from close range. She knocks on as Bernadou makes a desperate tackle.

35 min: That is remarkable defensive work from the captain. No try. If France do come back to win it they’ll have their skipper to thank.

Tell you what. That is exceptional work from the French captain, Forlani. I think she’s prevented the grounding by holding Davies up and getting her body under the ball.

35 min: Davies crashes over from close range! They’ll check this but I think it’s good.

34 min: England are swarming up field now. They’re moving it with greater zip and running with newfound intensity. Kebeya, that human wrecking ball, finds ground. Beckett charges. Suddenly they’re five out. Botterman takes it ti within a metre.

TRY! England 19-0 France (Matthews, 33)

Simple as. Another brutal scrum has the French pack moving backwards. Mathews sniffs the chance, picks the ball up at the back of that set piece and crashes over the score. Rowland can kick this conversion over with her eyes closed and England are now in firm control of this with one hand on the trophy.

Alex Matthews scores England’s third try. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian

32 min: England opt to scrum five metres out right under the poles.

YELLOW! France (Tremouliere, 32)

Heard has space in front of her but slips just as she is about to straighten. The chance is there again with an overlap brewing on the right. Tremouliere sticks an arm out but knocks on. Rules are rules and that’s a clear yellow as it most definitely preventing a chance to score.

31 min: The line-out is good and England are now on the front foot. Kildunne takes it into the 22 on the right wing. Kabeya and Heard each make ground. Two metres out.

29 min: England finding greater cohesion now. Their backline passing isn’t gaining ground but at least the passes are sticking. A late tackle on Packer from Feleu means England can clear. Replays show that was very, very late. Not smart from the French lock.

27 min: Maybe Botterman is knocking on deliberately just so she can scrum. England pack down and win their second penalty in a row. Botterman getting the plaudits.

27 min: Botterman knocks on the restart. That’s the second one England have botched.

TRY! England 12-0 France (M Packer, 25)

Brutal! Marlie Packer cannot be stopped. She won’t be stopped. She bulldozes over tacklers at will. She’s involved earlier in the move with a pop pass of the shoulder that is then worked to Heard who breaks a challenge and opens space. Packer calls for it on the shoulder run and then bruises her way to the line. Rowland converts.

Marlie Packer bursts through to score the Red Roses second try.
Marlie Packer bursts through to score the Red Roses second try. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian

23 min: Aldcroft disrupts the French throw but Bourdon cleans it up. She later box kicks and MacDonald fields well. She’s moving OK now. Vernier wraps up Rowland in midfield. Kabeya burrows under a tackle. Heard runs onto it at speed…

23 min: The line-out isn’t straight. :/ That’s frustrating.

22 min: HUGE scrum from England. France with the feed but they’re peddling backwards under monstrous pressure from the English pack. They win a penalty and send it out for a line-out on the French 22.

21 min: Clean ball of the back of the scrum has Heard run into space and then pop a ball back against the grain. They get into French territory but Heard can’t hold on under pressure so possession changes again. France with the scrum inside their own territory.

20 min: Tremouliere’s kick is too long and goes beyond the dead ball line. Meanwhile MacDonald is limping. Breach is warming up. Scrum for England 10m from the halfway line.

19 min: England make a mess of the restart so France have the line-out on the right inside the 22. It goes to the back and it’s off the top at pace. Boulard has the ball on the opposite wing. They need a response.

18 min: The conversion is missed. There’s a pause while MacDonald gets attention. It was her cutting line that gave Rowland options and it was her pass to Dow that unleashed the winger. She’s back on her feet.

TRY! England 5-0 France (Dow, 17)

One chance. One try. Sensational. It’s come completely against the run of play. A scrum deep in their own territory ends with a try at the other end. Heard on a dummy run off the back of the set piece creates space for Rowland to exploit She charges 30m up field. MacDonald and then Dow have the ball and the winger turns on the after burners to score a brilliant try.

Abby Dow ouches down for the first score of the match.
Abby Dow ouches down for the first score of the match. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian

15 min: Marlie Packer and then Bern make headway after a clean line-out. But England can’t keep the ball and must defend again in their own territory. France spin down the line and Banet runs straight into and then over Kildunne after a strong fend.

14 min: Forlani collects the line-out at the front and the maul forms but is held back. So they spin out left. Short charges from several players go nowhere. Botterman gets over an isolated runner and comes up with a turnover penalty. France have blown two big chances.

13 min: The penalty is given for a dangerous tackle. I think Lucy Packer is lucky not to see yellow there. France nudge out for a line-out within touching distance of the try line.

13 min: A clever box kick from Bourdon gives Banet something to chase in the corner. It bounces and the French winger jumps to gather. Lucy Packer could be in trouble for taking her out while in the air.

12 min: France line-out on the 22. It’s messy but they keep the ball. All very cagey in the tight channels.

11 min: Rowland has kicked straight out after straying outside the 22. Soft error.

10 min: England just can’t escape from their own 22. They have the ball and eventually find Aitchison who manages to clear beyond the halfway line.

9 min: First scrum. England’s pack is 100kg heavier but they move backwards. Matthews picks up and goes direct. Aicthison’s kick is partially charged down so France have it back in the 22. A massive tackle from Kabeya halts momentum. Still France have it. England’s defence is holding and they steal it. Packer (who else) comes away with it.

8 min: Big carry from Feleu. France camped in England’s 22. Bernadou getting her head down and going direct. Tremouliere cuts back against the grain and knocks-on under pressure from Heard.

7 min: An accurate throuw to the middle of the line-out means France can set their maul. It splinters and England turn the ball right under their posts. Brilliant work on the floor. Aitchison’s clearing kick doesn’t find touch. France come right back at them.

6 min: Another French penalty. England pinned for holding on. Davies guilty this time. Hermet with a great tackle. France go to the corner.

5 min: Oh wow. That was poor from Tremouliere. On a favourable angle and within range, she shunts her penalty kick across the face of the posts.

England’s scrum-half Lucy Packer releases the ball.

England’s scrum-half Lucy Packer releases the ball.
Photograph: Adrian Dennis/AFP/Getty Images

4 min: Strong carry from Escudero. Bourdon controlling the tempo from 9. Brosseau busts through a challenge. Boulard nudges a grubber ahead but it’s well fielded by Kildunne. They come back for a penalty. Aldcroft guilty for not rolling away.

2 min: More kick tennis. Neither side wanting to run it. MacDonald gets caught under a ball and so England return from deep. Tremouliere catches and does run this time. France with the ball inside England territory. Boulard breaks from fullback. Building nicely down the left for France.

1 min: A couple of kicks each. Rowland puts it out on the halfway line and France have the ball. It’s clean and away it spins down the backline.

PEEEEP! History made. My fellow Saffa Aimee Barrett-Theron is the ref and gets us going. England in white, France in blue. Here, we, GO!

Lots of focus on Rowland at 13. She’s never played there and has only just returned from injury. But she’s such a good player. Can do it all. Here’s my early prediction. Really excited to see her rip up the midfield.

Now the anthems. A smattering of blue in the stands. There’ll be enough cheer if France start scoring.

Interesting to note the mismatch in terms of experience in that 10-12 channel. Almost everywhere else on the park, England have players with more games under their belt.

But between them, Holly Aitchison and Tatyana Heard have a mere 32 caps. Compare that with Jessy Tremouliere and Gabrielle Vernier who have over 100. Could be an intersting battle ground in midfield.

Now Middleton speaks:

I don’t think we could have trained any better this week. We’re good to go.

We’ve played them the past three four years and we’ve had some tight wins. We’ve just got to make sure we create opportunities.

[He laughs when asked about the driving maul] It’s part of our armoury. We’ve got to make sure we get in good positions and on the front foot. We’ve got the strategy group who know exactly what they want to do.

Now a stirring tribute to Simon Middleton, or “Midds” as the players call him, being shown on the Beeb.

Eights years at the helm. It’s hard to imagine how the RFU replace him.

The Beeb is currently showing some highlights from France’s campaign. “A team in transition,” says Sonia McLuaghlin.

It’ll be the final match for Jessy Tremouliere, a sparkling talent at 10 and the last of a golden generation.

Today’s winning captain will lift a brand new trophy. Thoughts on this one? I like it. Sleek. Classy. I’m a fan.

Less than 30 mins to go. Just confirmed by the BBC. 56,000 fans in Twickenham today. That’s a record for any women’s rugby match.

“It means the world to me,” says Maggie Alphonsi. “I never thought I see it happen.”

It’s hard not to oversell this. It really is just a wonderful occasion. Here’s the players’ view as they made their way to the stadium. What a feeling! Can you just imagine what’s going through heads?

“I think my heart is going to be absolutely pumping. It is the adrenaline it will bring and obviously most of the crowd will be behind England so I think that is something we really have to take confidence in and put on a good performance because that is what they are coming to see. We want to make it a good event so it can happen again and again in the future.”

So says England’s coach, Simon Middleton, who will leave his post after today’s game.

You can read more from a man who has always carried himself with integrity and grace in Sarah Rendell’s preview:

This was more than an hour before kick-off.

Le petit général revient!

There’s something about French scrumhalves. Everything revolves around the puppet master with 9 on their back and it’s great to see Pauline Bourdon return to the starting XV. Keeping her quiet will be key for England this afternoon.

France: Boulard; Banet, M Menager, Vernier, Llorens; Tremouliere, Bourdon; Brosseau, Sochat, Bernadou, Feleu, Forlani (c), Berthomieu, Hermet, Escudero.

Replacements: Riffonneau, Mwayembe, Khalfaoui, R Menager, Gros, Chambon, Arbez, Filopon.

England name formidable team

Marlie Packer leads a squad that has no weak point. Prop Hanna Botterman has overcame an injury scare and will bolster the scrum while Helean Rowland shifts to outside centre, a position that should suit her game just fine.

There’s pace to burn out wide and great zeal in the back row. Keep an eye on the rising star that is Sadia Kabeya. Poppy Cleall should cause damage off the bench as well.

England: Kildunne; Dow, MacDonald, Rowland, Heard; Aitchison, L Packer; Botterman, Davies, Bern, Aldcroft, Beckett, Kabeya, M Packer (c), Matthews.

Replacements: Powell, Carson, Muir, Cleal, Talling, Hunt, Reed, Breach.

Preamble

Daniel Gallan

Daniel Gallan

In a parallel universe we wouldn’t be celebrating the size of the crowd. Over on another timeline it’s taken as a given that one of England’s most successful teams and a standard-bearer in their sport would play a title decider in front of 53,000 fans at the Home of RugbyTM.

But in this world, where female athletes have for so long fought for recognition and an equal footing, where they’ve had to battle discriminatory laws, sexist attitudes, suboptimal training facilities, insulting salary packages and lukewarm government support, the fact that these Red Roses take on France for the Six Nations crown in front of a record crowd for a women’s rugby match is something to celebrate.

Sing it from the roof tops! Tell your friends and family! Join the revolution! This is a landmark moment in a sport that has had a few over the past 18 months or so.

But when that opening whistle sounds, the focus will instantly shift from 56,000 to 15. This is an England team still hurting from the heartache of the World Cup final defeat against New Zealand and they’ll want to underline their supremacy on this side of the equator. A fourth grand slam win in five years will do just that.

France won’t be pushovers. Apart from one rusty performance in the opening round agains Italy, they’ve been imperious, swatting aside Ireland, Scotland and Wales. They’ve got their sights set on a grand slam win themselves.

This is a game that could echo through time and space but that also depends on the quality on the pitch. Thankfully these are two supremely gifted outfits and I’ve got little doubt that they’ll rise to the occassion.

In case it wasn’t clear, I’m absolutely buzzing for this.

If you are too, and you’d like to get in touch, please drop me a line either on Twitter or my email. It should be an absolute belter!

Kick-off at 1pm BST.

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