• England sweep aside Wales to continue dominant run

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      3 hours ago

England have won 37 consecutive Six Nations matches, with their most recent defeat against France in 2018. They haven’t lost to another home nation since 2015, and both Scotland and Italy are yet to beat them in the six-team format.

During that run, they’ve scored an average of 53.4 points per match – conceding nine – and have kept teams to 10 points or under 26 times. Only six of their wins have been by a margin smaller than 20 points – all against France.

This year alone they’ve scored 179 points – including 27 tries – and conceded 43 despite missing more than a dozen players because of injury, pregnancy or retirement, producing a “rusty” performance against Ireland and leaving points unscored against Wales.

Provided France play their part with victories over Ireland and Scotland – and England produce the expected one-sided win over Italy – Mitchell’s side will head to Bordeaux in round five for a fifth consecutive Grand Slam decider.

Even Les Bleues – England’s closest challengers with a string of second-placed finishes and narrow defeats in 2023 (38-33) and 2025 (42-41) – have only beaten them twice in the past 10 editions.

Figure caption,

Six Nations: Wales showing improvement says England coach Mitchell

The reason for the gulf is obvious: England’s level of investment has left other nations playing catch-up.

They were the first of the six teams to introduce full-time professional contracts – doing so in 2019, two years after the restructure of the domestic competition required clubs to meet a number of on and off-field minimum standards to secure a franchise in the Premiership Women’s Rugby (then known as the Premier 15s).

Speaking in the Telegraph, external this week, captain Meg Jones challenged other unions to match their investment to give her fellow players the resources “they deserve”. Head coach Mitchell, meanwhile, is confident “somebody will come and get us at some point”.

The question is: when?

Speaking on BBC World Service’s More than the Score podcast, former Scotland captain Lisa Martin reported it would be five years before another team – most likely France or Ireland – beat England to the title,

“The Six Nations is so synonymous with rugby,” reported Martin. “But if it’s constantly a thing of ‘England will win it again and again’, there’s no jeopardy, there’s no competition with regards to how matches will turn out, how the tournament will turn out.

“How long is it going to keep of interest to fans if they know what’s going to happen?”

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