France made it a clean sweep in this year’s Six Nations as they overcame England 25-13 to secure a famous Grand Slam in Paris on Saturday.
Led by player of the match Antoine Dupont, Les Bleus responded to Ireland’s win over Scotland as they saw off a gritty England at the Stade de France.
Tries from Gael Fickou, Francois Cros and Dupont were added to by 10 points off the tee from Melvyn Jaminet as Fabien Galthie’s men were victorious.
The battling nature of the England performance will spare Eddie Jones the harshest criticism, but another failed Six Nations Championship places his position as head coach under renewed scrutiny with the World Cup just 18 months away.
England’s best period came immediately after half-time and produced a try for Freddie Steward, but France showed their mettle to sustain only limited damage during a difficult spell.
Dupont ran in Les Bleus’ third try, adding to the earlier scores by Fickou and Cros, to seize back control and had their execution been sharper they would have been out of sight long ago.
England were turned over time and again to hamper their efforts of registering an upset, but they finished strongly and refused to throw in the towel even as France threatened to cut loose.
Victories by Ireland and Italy earlier on Saturday meant the visitors were certain to finish in third place before a ball was kicked in Paris, any hope of winning the title evaporating with a record home defeat by Andy Farrell’s men in round four.
Their evening began with Jones being loudly booed when his name was read out during the boisterous pre-match entertainment and by its end England fans might have shared the sentiment.
A feature of the opening stages was the over-reliance on Ellis Genge, who was stationed in the backfield to run the ball back, but the ploy produced little return and when the first scrum arrived he was penalised, allowing Jaminet to land three points.
Worse was to come as England’s early play was littered with mistakes and in the 15th minute the hosts accepted an invitation to strike by sweeping the ball from one touchline to the other for Fickou to touch down.
Marcus Smith and Jaminet exchanged penalties but France were in the driving seat as they swarmed over Maro Itoje to end a promising attack and soon after Jack Nowell left the field after falling on his arm when challenging for the ball.
If they could just make their passes stick, Les Bleus would be cantering out of sight but perhaps as a sign of nerves, their handling was often snatched.
There was greater precision just before half-time, however, and they were rewarded when waves of attacks that were given an injection of pace by Gabin Villiere and Romain Ntamack ended with Cros going over.
An 18-6 interval scoreline looked ominous for England and they were met with ferocious defending as they started the second half with renewed intent.
But slowly momentum was building and when Joe Marchant found space an opportunity opened up and clever handling sent Steward over in the right corner.
England then imposed themselves up-front through a thunderous maul but their hearts sank as another dominant spell highlighted by Steward’s kick and catch ended when they conceded a penalty.
Sensing their team needed lifting, the home crowd came alive and roared France on to their third try as a series of pick and goes reached the decisive moment as Gregory Alldritt sent Dupont through a gap and the scrum-half’s strength did the rest.
It proved to be the killer blow as for all England’s effort in the latter stages, they lacked the firepower to make any more dents.
In an entertaining and drama-filled encounter, the visitors were full value for their win as they had the upper-hand for long periods and were leading 12-7 at half-time.
Andy Farrell’s men controlled the majority of the match and moved into a 14-0 lead thanks to tries from Dan Sheehan and Cian Healy.
A red card for England second-row Charlie Ewels with just over a minute played handed the hosts a monumental task of overcoming Andy Farrell’s men.
While the defeat once again leaves the Azzurri with the Wooden Spoon, there were plenty of positives for the hosts as they crossed through Callum Braley and a second-half double from impressive replacement Ange Capuozzo, who was making his Test debut.
Les Bleus now go into their final game against England with a huge chance of claiming their first Six Nations title and Grand Slam since 2010.
After an early injury to Gianmarco Lucchesi, Faiva was brought onto the field, but he was then sent off for a dangerous tackle 10 minutes later.
Wayne Pivac’s men were poor in the first half, conceding a string of penalties and seeing Liam Williams sin-binned for a cynical infringement, and they were punished by Smith.
Les Bleus scored six tries in all against their hosts as they exacted revenge over Scotland for their win in Paris last year, with this another big statement.
Smith scored the opener, set up Elliot Daly’s try with a bullet pass and controlled the game nicely for the opening 50 minutes before the Red Rose lost their intensity and allowed the hosts to gain a foothold.
Off the back of their opening round victory over Italy, Les Bleus flexed their muscles to beat an Ireland side that had demolished Wales one week ago.
In a fixture that did not live up to its billing, entertaining moments were lacking as Wales ground out a victory that derails Scotland’s Grand Slam hopes.
It was not the most auspicious of performances from Les Bleus, especially in the opening half-hour, but they eventually pulled away.
Gregor Townsend’s men were on the back foot for much of the first half but still went into the break 10-6 ahead thanks to Ben White’s try and Finn Russell’s penalty.
As the scoreline suggests, this was a one-sided affair with Ireland dominating for long periods and they eventually outscored their opponents by four tries to none with Andrew Conway leading the way with two five-pointers. Their other points came through tries from Bundee Aki and Garry Ringrose while captain Johnny Sexton succeeded with three conversions and a penalty.