Marcus Smith piloted England’s 70-14 rout of Canada ― unaware he had been called up to the British and Irish Lions tour of South Africa.
Smith’s madcap month took another remarkable twist, with the Harlequins fly-half receiving a Lions call-up midway through England’s 10-try romp at Twickenham.
Jamie Blamire and Adam Radwan bagged hat-tricks, with Joe Cokanasiga claiming a brace and Ellis Genge also crossing in addition to a penalty try.
But Smith’s Lions elevation was the talk of the 10,000 fans in Twickenham ― who all knew about his call-up before the man himself.
The 22-year-old steered Harlequins to an unlikely Premiership final victory on June 26, quickly following that triumph with his first two England caps.
But while the fleet-footed playmaker was en route to a 100 per cent return of nine shots at goal, he was also called up to the Lions squad as injury cover for Scotland fly-half Finn Russell.
The Lions confirmed Smith’s call-up at the start of England’s second half.
And as word filtered around Twickenham, supporters were trying their best to break the news to the uninformed fly-half.
Smith was replaced by George Furbank with 15 minutes to play, and appeared to discover his Lions fate on leaving the field.
While Smith was all set to race to the airport to jump on a flight to South Africa, his other England team-mates were left to toast a well-constructed win.
Ross Braude and Kainoa Lloyd claimed tries for a Canada side that were outclassed, with England effectively in control throughout.
Sam Underhill’s immediate turnover from kick-off set the tone for England’s near total dominance.
Blamire capped a driven penalty lineout, Smith converted ― and so started the procession of try scorers.
Braude hit back straight away with a neat finish from a tapped penalty, but a penalty try had England back in control.
Lock Conor Keys was sin-binned for collapsing a maul to gift England that penalty score.
Radwan capped a neat arcing break with a good finish for his try, before Cokanasiga bullied the Canada defence for his two scores in three minutes.
Captain Lewis Ludlow’s cheap yellow card opened the door to a second Canada score, with wing Lloyd finish well in the right corner and Peter Nelson converting.
Blamire crossed again to ensure England had the last word in the half however, for Jones’ men to lead 42-14 at the break.
Vice-captain Genge opened the scoring after the interval, for England’s seventh try.
Radwan raced in for his second score of the game quickly afterwards, taking a fine scoring pass from Alex Dombrandt.
Smith extended his 100 per cent record still further with yet another conversion, to put the hosts 56-14 to the good.
Blamire completed his hat-trick with final act of the afternoon before being substituted.
And just moments later, Radwan sealed his own treble.
Pumas full-back Juan Cruz Mallia was sent off for a dangerous high challenge on Wales scrum-half Kieran Hardy after 29 minutes.
In a fast-paced and exciting game, New Zealand found things very different to last week,
In a hard-fought and evenly contested battle, France held the lead for the entire game but Australia kept their nerve and pounced on an error from the visitors ― who did not put the ball into touch from a lineout after the final hooter ― and after winning a penalty, Lolesio clinched the triumph with the match-winning kick.
England were missing their British and Irish Lions contingent but Eddie Jones’ men did enough to overcome the visitors, despite a frustrating second half.
With seven of their contingent on British and Irish Lions duty and captain Johnny Sexton, plus Keith Earls and Cian Healy, rested, there was a fresh look to the hosts in their first meeting against Japan since the 2019 World Cup.
The Six Nations champions ran in 10 tries, although victory came at a cost after full-back Leigh Halfpenny’s 100th Test for Wales and the British and Irish Lions lasted just two minutes before he was carried off injured.
As the scoreline suggests, this was an easy outing for the men in black with Will Jordan leading the way with five tries and Brad Weber was next best with a hat-trick.
It wasn’t a vintage performance as there were signs of rustiness from the Boks, who were playing their first game since their triumphant 2019 World Cup campaign, but they improved as the match progressed and eventually outscored the Lelos six tries to none.
The Wales forwards departed inside the opening 21 minutes but it was the serious injury suffered by tour captain Jones that caused the greatest alarm as he was escorted from the pitch.
France needed to score four tries and beat Scotland by 21 points to deny Wales the title but the visitors stunned their hosts with a superb victory.
Les Bleus had lock Paul Willemse sent off 11 minutes from time for making contact with the eye area of Wales prop Wyn Jones, while the visitors played the last eight minutes with 13 men following yellow cards for Taulupe Faletau and Liam Williams, and ultimately could not hold out.
The highlight of Ireland’s most impressive outing since Andy Farrell took charge after the 2019 World Cup was Jack Conan’s try that concluded 23 phases of highly polished play.
Skipper Stuart Hogg admitted ahead of the game he was feeling nervous about standing-in for the injured Finn Russell at fly-half.
The Dark Blues needed to turn around a woeful run that had included just one win in 10 against the Irish if they were to cling on to hopes of catching frontrunners Wales.
Les Blues led 20-16 until the 76th minute when Maro Itoje bulldozed over the whitewash from short range and with Owen Farrell rifling over the conversion, they had edged the tournament favourites.
The unbeaten tournament leaders reeled off a third successive bonus-point victory to increase pressure on their rivals for silverware.
While Wales wrapped up the first major silverware of head coach Wayne Pivac’s reign in bonus-point fashion, his opposite number Eddie Jones saw England’s title hopes reduced to ruins.
Scores from Garry Ringrose, Hugo Keenan, CJ Stander and Keith Earls, plus a brace for Will Connors, helped the Irish bounce back from defeats to Wales and France in emphatic fashion.
The Irish suffered successive losses at the start of a Six Nations campaign for the first time following scores from Charles Ollivon and Damian Penaud, plus five points from the boot of Matthieu Jalibert.
Gregor Townsend’s team were looking to build on last week’s historic Twickenham victory over England and got off to the perfect start with tries from Darcy Graham and Stuart Hogg.