Five talking points from round three of Six Nations
Scotland âhave to do betterâ â Six Nations Rugby Special analyse Scotlandâs errors
-
Published
Ireland overcame a resurgent Wales in Cardiff, England squeezed past Scotland after Finn Russellâs late missed kick, and France scored 11 tries to hammer Italy.
Hereâs our round-up of the big talking points from the third round of fixtures in the 2025 Menâs Six Nations.
Borthwick defends winning tactics
Scotland miss late kick to win as England hold on to win Calcutta Cup
Steve Borthwick called for his players to continue playing fast and with aggression after outscoring France four tries to three.
Despite squeezing past Scotland 16-15 to win back the Calcutta Cup for the first time since 2020, England were outscored three tries to one, with a heavy reliance on their kicking game.
England kicked away 69% possession and had a 2.7 pass-to-kick ratio, which means after less than three passes they reverted to the boot, compared to Scotlandâs 9.7.
âIt is not a team that looks like they want to play,â former Wales captain Sam Warburton told BBCâs Six Nations Rugby Special. âEngland are playing off nine rugby much of the time .â
England conceded nine line breaks against Scotland, seven of which came in the wider channels, where in particular Scotland wing Duhan van der Merwe had plenty of joy in the first half.
âI see England being narrow in defence quite regularly but I do feel like it could be fixed,â Warburton said.
âMaybe England are giving teams that space deliberately as Ireland and Scotland found it [in the wider channels] .
âTheir one-on-one tackling has to get better and has hurt them.â
However, despite errors in defence and a lack of free-flowing attacking rugby, Borthwick is not concerned about his game plan always being pleasing on the eye.
âItâs not necessarily how we wish to play, but there are two teams out there and we found a way to win,â said Borthwick.
-
-
Published17 hours ago
-
-
-
Published1 day ago
-
Russellâs missed kicks cost Scotland but could Van der Merwe have done better?
âNot this timeâ â Russell misses late conversion
Despite Scotland outscoring England in tries, Russell failed to make any of his three conversion attempts count.
Meanwhile, England full-back Marcus Smith was successful with all three of his kicks and his namesake Fin Smith nailed an important penalty from halfway with 10 minutes remaining.
Van der Merweâs late try in the corner gave Russell the opportunity to extend Scotlandâs winning run over England to five games.
âIt was a difficult kick from the touchline and he will be ruing the two earlier in the game which were much easier kicks,â former Scotland hooker Fraser Brown told BBCâS Rugby Union Weekly.
âTo go nil from three is not why Scotland lost but as an international 10, Finn will be really disappointed.â
Russell only missed one kick in the Six Nations last year, but this campaign â and in a British and Irish Lions year â is kicking at 38%.
Former England wing Ugo Monye told BBCâs Six Nations Rugby Special that Van der Merwe had to do more to get closer to the posts when crossing for Scotlandâs third try.
âVan der Merwe is running away from the sticks on an outside angle,â Monye said.
âYou can see by his reaction that he does not look like he is celebrating scoring the winning try.
âWhen you look at the margins of how far he has run out against how much it has been missed by, he has to do more.
âAs winger you have to do everything to try and help out.â
-
-
Published1 day ago
-
Ireland & France to meet in showdown
France crush Italy with 11-try win
When the 2025 Six Nations fixtures were first released one fixture stood out â Ireland v France in round four.
âRight when the fixtures came out, you thought that game is going to decide who wins the title,â Warburton said.
Both sides have finished in the top two spots over the past three championships and played out one of the great Six Nations fixtures in 2023.
Billed as a possible Grand Slam decider, Ireland have done their part with three straight wins as they seek an unprecedented third title in a row.
Franceâs last-gasp defeat by England prevented a potential Slam decider, but their 11-try thrashing of Italy gives Les Bleus momentum heading to Dublin on 8 March.
France, with a superior points difference, are three points behind Ireland, making the fixture a potential Six Nations decider.
Warburton when asked for his prediction went for an Ireland win, Barclay went the other way with France.
Fabien Galthieâs side host Scotland in the final round, while Ireland travel to Italy, while England are also still in the title hunt.
Wales get new manager bounce
Wales played âbeyond themselvesâ in Ireland defeat â Bowe
When Warren Gatland left his role as Wales boss, interim head coach Matt Sherratt only had three training sessions to try to produce one of the greatest shocks in Six Nations history.
Facing Grand Slam-chasing Ireland in Cardiff, Wales were inches away from potentially taking the lead in the 73rd minute when Ellis Mee nearly pulled off a miracle finish.
The boot of 22-year-old fly-half Sam Prendergast helped Ireland close out the game 27-18.
While Wales ended up falling to a 15th successive Test defeat, the performance of Sherrattâs side succeeded expectations.
Following a disappointing loss to Italy in round two, Sherratt made eight changes to his squad, which included bringing in Gloucester pair Gareth Anscombe and Max Llewellyn.
Warburton believes Sherrattâs changes in personnel and style brought big improvements.
âThe nine-10-12-13 combination have all worked and played together under Sherratt, and are the best players for their position,â Warburton added.
âHe freshened the boys up, so they were full of beans for the game and he imprinted, so quickly and impressively, his attacking game plan, which was night and day from what weâve seen the last 12 months.
âI canât believe he made so many positive changes within one week.â
-
-
Published19 hours ago
-
-
-
Published1 day ago
-
Ireland beat spirited Wales to keep Grand Slam hopes alive
-
-
Published12 hours ago
-
-
-
Published1 day ago
-
20-minute red card needs âfirmer punishmentâ
âItâs all about player safetyâ â Are 20-min red cards working?
In January, it was announced that this yearâs Six Nations will use 20-minute red cards for the first time.
Lawmakers say the 20-minute red card trial is designed to âpunish the player and not the teamâ, with sides able to replace a dismissed player after 20 minutes instead of playing the rest of the game with 14.
Ireland centre Garry Ringrose got his timing wrong on a big first-half hit on Walesâ Ben Thomas and his high tackle was later upgraded to red.
With Ireland down to 14, Wales had their best period of the match and scored a superb try in the corner through Tom Rogers.
Once the 20 minutes passed, Bundee Aki replaced Ringrose and played a key role in seeing the game home for Ireland.
âRingrose is an exceptional player and defends so physically but in my opinion those collisions need to be out of the game,â Barclay said.
âThat is a player who has made a decision to fly in. In my view, and a lot of other people, that should be a straight red card.â
Warburton says playersâ behaviours have not changed enough since he retired in 2018.
âThere needs to be a much firmer punishment on individuals off the field,â he said. âIf Ringrose gets a one or two-week ban then he is going to do that again.
âA four-week ban and he probably doesnât do that tackle again. We need to punish the player individually much more harshly off the field.â