No. | Name | |
---|---|---|
15Elliot Daly, - | ||
14Jack Nowell, - | ||
13Henry Slade, - | ||
12Manu Tuilagi, - | ||
11Jonny May, - | ||
10Owen Farrell, - 4 | ||
9Ben Youngs, - | ||
1Ben Moon, - | ||
2Jamie George, - | ||
3Kyle Sinckler, - | ||
4Joe Launchbury, - | ||
5George Kruis, - | ||
6Mark Wilson, - | ||
7Tom Curry, - | ||
8Billy Vunipola, - | ||
Replacements | ||
16Luke Cowan-Dickie, - | ||
17Ellis Genge, - | ||
18Dan Cole, - | ||
19Brad Shields, - | ||
20Nathan Hughes, - | ||
21Ben Spencer, - | ||
22George Ford, - | ||
23Ben Te'o, - |
*Players currently on the pitch are shown in bold
Match Commentary
After everything Wales are the Grand Slam winners.
England and Ireland will look back on disappointing campaigns that looked unlikely after such good times during the November internationals.
France as always go from disarray to decent in the blink of an eye, while Scotland seem to constantly be in games but just can't convert that to wins. And Italy are still behind them all.
In 187 days they all head to Japan for the start of the Rugby World Cup. There's plenty more reaction to come on ESPN.co.uk. Bye for now!
England are left asking how in the world they let a 31-point lead slip, but might just breathe a sigh of relief to have not lost.
After all that one thing is for certain -- that was the highest-scoring draw in international rugby history, and in some way it doesn't do much for either side.
England and Scotland have nothing to play for but pride (and the Calcutta Cup) but this is still an international rugby match in a World Cup year. Twickenham may be a bit muted but it still matters, a bit.