France vs England LIVE: Six Nations rugby result, final score and reaction as France seal Grand Slam
France 25-13 England: Follow live as France seal a Grand Slam and a first Six Nations title since 2010 in Paris
Follow live coverage as France beat England 25-13 in the finale of the Six Nations in Paris to win the Grand Slam and lift the championship trophy for the first time in 12 years.
Fabien Galthie’s side made history as they claimed a Grand Slam and a first championship title since 2010. Victory over England achieved both those goals but the pressure was on, as any other result would have seen Ireland snatch the title after they beat Scotland earlier in the day.
Tries from Gael Fickou, Francois Cros and Antoine Dupont secured the title for Les Bleus in front of a raucous crowd at the Stade de France.
Follow all the latest reaction from the Stade de France:
The French bench impact
France will be hoping that they will not require a huge impact from their bench, but this is a unit prepared to add plenty of second-half punch if needed. Replicating the strategy used by South Africa during the World Cup, Fabien Galthie has a second set of tight five forwards who are all similar to the players in the starting XV they will replace.
It’s been a wretched tournament for England in the final quarter of games, ceding the lead in defeat to Scotland, failing to ignite against Italy, nearly allowing Wales to storm back, and then, having fought valiantly, letting Ireland power away last time out. This is the fittest French side of recent memory, aided by a pre-Six Nations training camp alongside the French Foreign Legion – if things are close come the 60-minute mark then that could make the difference.
Can I Kick It?
Barring a rather large surprise, expect this to be a kick-heavy Crunch. France kick more than any team in the competition and the indication is that England intend to match them, having seen the success of Wales’ shrewd strategy with the boot in Cardiff last Friday.
There is a thought that France’s back three might be vulnerable under the high ball: Damian Penaud is a converted centre, Gabin Villiere an ex-Sevens start and late developer, and Melvyn Jaminet hasn’t looked entirely secure aerially during his first Six Nations. With Freddie Steward on the wing and Ben Youngs at scrum-half, England are ready to provide a stiff challenge.
Team News – England
Making more radical alterations is Eddie Jones. It must be said that England have suffered some real injury misfortune during this tournament, with Tom Curry the latest to drop out having torn a hamstring – the flanker is expected to miss up to ten weeks.
The availability of a fit-again Sam Underhill is thus timely, with the fellow Kamikaze Kid a straight swap at openside flanker for Curry. Kyle Sinckler has barely trained in the last two weeks, first due to a back issue and then while going through return-to-play protocols, so Will Stuart is handed the biggest test, and opportunity, of his career so far, starting at tighthead. Nick Isiekwe’s extra lineout spring gets him the second row nod alongside Maro Itoje with the set-piece again a vital battleground.
The backline is also picked with aerial challenges in mind. Ben Youngs returns to the starting side for the first time since Round One with a heavy kicking remit, while Freddie Steward is pushed out to the wing to allow George Furbank to come into the side. The Northampton full-back starts his first game at 15 for England since Round Two in 2020 with England looking to match France with the boot.
Of note on the bench: Jamie Blamire’s Six Nations contribution will amount to one lost lineout in the final minute at Twickenham last week, with Nic Dolly the preferred Paris back-up for Jamie George; Ollie Chessum is the lock/six cover with similarly long limbs to the starting trio ready to disrupt French ball if required.
England XV (1-15): Ellis Genge, Jamie George, Will Stuart; Maro Itoje, Nick Isiekwe; Courtney Lawes, Sam Underhill, Sam Simmonds; Ben Youngs, Marcus Smith; Jack Nowell, Henry Slade, Joe Marchant, Freddie Steward; George Furbank.
Replacements: Nic Dolly, Joe Marler, Kyle Sinckler, Ollie Chessum, Alex Dombrandt; Harry Randall, George Ford, Elliot Daly.
Team News - France
One of the hallmarks of this French side is how settled it is. While Fabien Galthie has had to deal with plenty of Covid and injury disruption this tournament, the France head coach has made just a single change for tactical reasons during the campaign, and again only makes subtle, logical alterations to the team that won in Cardiff.
Damian Penaud is back available having recovered from Covid, and is a straight swap on the right wing for the injured Yoram Moefana, who has filled in well wherever needed during this tournament. Otherwise, it is as you were from the start for France.
Also out of isolation is Romain Taofifenua, whose return enables Galthie to revert to his favoured six forwards, two backs bench split and again ready an entirely new front five among his substitutes to make an impact come the second half. Mohamed Haouas again gets the nod ahead of Demba Bamba as the replacement tighthead.
France XV (1-15): Cyril Baille, Julien Marchand, Uini Atonio; Cameron Woki, Paul Willemse; Francois Cros, Anthony Jelonch, Gregory Alldritt; Antoine Dupont, Romain Ntamack; Gabin Villiere, Jonathan Danty, Gael Fickou, Damian Penaud; Melvyn Jaminet.
Replacements: Peato Mauvaka, Jean-Baptiste Gros, Mohamed Haouas, Romain Taofifenua, Thibaud Flament, Dylan Cretin; Maxime Lucu, Thomas Ramos.
France vs England
France determined to crown resurgence against wounded England
Fabien Galthie’s side can secure their first grand slam and Six Nations title in 12 years in front of an expectant Stade de France
Crunch Time
Here we are then. Just one game remains in the 2022 Men’s Six Nations, a wounded England in Paris for Le Crunch as France go in search of Le Grand Chelem. The French capital has been bouncing this evening, with plenty of travelling England supporters drowned out by an expectant home crowd. The Stade de France is ready, so let’s get going.
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