France deny England and clinch Six Nations title in Paris
Scotland briefly threatened to spoil the party but France ultimately came to the boil and delivered their first Guinness Six Nations title since 2022 for an expectant home crowd at Stade de France.
France eventually ran out 35-16 winners to shut the door on England, who would have won the championship if there was a rare win in Paris for the Scots.
That scenario looked within the realms of possibility as Gregor Townsend’s men came on strong in the second quarter and they were unfortunate to go in 16-13 behind at the break after a Tom Jordan try was disallowed in the last action of the half.
But Les Bleus, with inspirational captain Antoine Dupont on crutches and watching from the stands after suffering an ACL injury in Dublin last weekend, regained their composure after the break and pulled away to secure only their second title since 2010.
For all the spirit they showed on what was always going to be a challenging night, Scotland were left to reflect on a second consecutive campaign in which they have finished fourth with just two wins from their five matches.
Following a spectacular light show ahead of kick-off and amid a partisan atmosphere, France signalled their intent with a strong start which yielded a penalty which Thomas Ramos kicked between the posts in the fourth minute.
Scotland dug in to stop the fired-up hosts extending their advantage, although their hopes of maintaining a foothold were dented when Jamie Ritchie was sin-binned in the 12th minute for collapsing a maul.
France made the extra man count in the 18th minute after some brilliant work from Gael Fickou to send Yoram Moefana through for the first try of the night, with Ramos adding the extras.
The tide started to turn midway through the half, however, when French hooker Peato Mauvaka was yellow-carded – contentiously avoiding a red – after appearing to headbutt Ben White. Finn Russell put the resulting penalty away from close range to get the visitors up and running.
At the other end, White pulled off a stunning tackle to deny fellow scrum-half Maxime Lucu after he burst towards the line following a fumble by Russell.
This try-saving intervention seemed to have a galvanising effect on the Scots, who silenced the home support in the 28th minute when Russell put Darcy Graham in to score.
Further French indiscipline paved the way for Scotland to level things up at 13-13 as Jean-Baptiste Gros was sin-binned due to multiple team offences, and Russell did the damage with the penalty.
Ramos then restored the French lead with another penalty, but it was Scotland who looked to have edged ahead in the last action of the half when Jordan pushed his way over, only for the TMO to inform referee Matthew Carley that Blair Kinghorn’s elbow had gone into touch in the build-up.
France took full advantage of this dynamic-shifting reprieve and made a blistering start to the second half with Louis Bielle-Biarrey bolting over for his eighth try of the championship – a new try-scoring record by one player in a single Six Nations campaign – which Ramos converted.
A Russell penalty brought Scotland back to within a converted score of being level.
Hwever, Ramos bolted over just before the hour – and then added the extras – to put the hosts 14 points clear and firmly in command of their destiny.
Moefana then added his second of the evening, taking the game beyond the Scots and allowing the party to begin well before the end.
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Go to commentsI’d take the Sharks, Stormers, Bulls, and Lions back in a second. Super Rugby Pacific is improving and the conference system sucked ass and never should have been implemented but if you think the quality of rugby is better without the South African franchises, you are kidding yourself.
And there is nothing authentic about Moana Pacifika, it is a sixth NZ franchise. Almost all of the players are NZ citizens, born and raised in NZ, were developed by NZ secondary schools and play in the NPC. The players just happen to be of Pacific heritage (just as there are a very large number of Pacific heritage players on the original five NZ franchises). Moana Pacifika is a marketing ploy for Auckland’s second SRP franchise.
Fiji Drua are legitimately a Pacific island team. Most players are born in Fiji, the players live and train in Fiji, and they play their home matches in Fiji.
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