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VIDEO: England edge France 'B-Team' in dramatic extra-time shoot-out

VIDEO: England edge France 'B-Team' in dramatic extra-time shoot-out

NATIONS CUP REPORT: England won the silverware, but France won the accolades.

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The final score said England 22 France 19.

The winning kick, by England centre Owen Farrell, came 15 minutes into extra time.

As a result England won the Nations Cup in an enthralling and entertaining encounter at Twickenham.

* As it happened. To recap all the drama, CLICK HERE!

Owen Farrell put a poor goal-kicking display behind him to land the winning penalty.

France, twice ahead by seven points and missing most of their first-choice players, were 19-12 up when England replacement forward Luke Cowan Dickie forced his way for a close-range try in the final minute of normal time.

England captain Farrell’s conversion sent the match into two extra-time periods of 10 minutes each, with the side scoring first the winners.

Farrell, who saw a penalty hit the post two minutes into ‘sudden death’, then landed the winning penalty five minutes into the second half of extra-time.

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Defeat was harsh on a game France side, who defied a vast gap in experience.

Their starting side, without the likes of scrumhalf Antoine Dupont and back row forward Gregory Alldritt, boasted just 68 caps between them compared to England’s 772.

But France defied pre-game fears of a mismatch to lead 13-6 at the break after fullback Brice Dulin scored the only try of the first half.

France were the only team to have beaten Six Nations champions England this year, winning 24-17 in Paris in February.

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But the French XV on Sunday bore little relation to that side, a release agreement with the Top 14 clubs limiting individual players’ to three appearances on a team sheet in a six game end-of-year schedule re-arranged after the COVID-19 pandemic.

But concerns that a novice France would be overwhelmed soon proved groundless in a match played in front of some 2,000 spectators – the first time fans had been allowed into Twickenham since the COVID-19 pandemic.

Farrell kicked England into a 3-0 lead but France hit back in the 15th minute just as a chorus of ‘Swing Low, Sweet Chariot’ rang round the ground.

England knocked on at a line-out, with France regathering the loose ball and working it across field.

Flyhalf Matthieu Jalibert, 22, shrugged off the tackle of England hooker Jamie George, evaded centre Farrell and then delivered a superb delayed pass that sent fullback Dulin – the most experienced player in the French XV with 30 caps – in for a try at the left corner.

England celebrate

Jalibert converted and France led 7-3.

England fullback Elliot Daly, a long-range kick specialist, cut the lead to a point with a 48-metre penalty.

But France, playing at pace up front, created two more penalty chances for Jalibert, who landed both goal-kicks.

Fallible Farrell

On the stroke of half-time England declined a kickable penalty in the hope of scoring an equalising converted try from a close-range line-out.

But from an ensuing rolling maul, a succession of drives inches from the line failed to pierce the French defence before England prop Ellis Genge, who only replaced the injured Mako Vunipola on Saturday, knocked on as he tried to ground the ball.

Farrell reduced France’s lead to 13-9 early in the second half with a 40-metre penalty

But the normally reliable goal-kicker missed his next two chances, both well within range, and France still led by four points heading into the final quarter.

With Jalibert off the field, replacement Louis Carbonel, just 21 and playing in only his second international, landed the 38-metre chance to put France 16-9 ahead with 10 minutes left.

Farrell’s 73rd-minute penalty cut the deficit to four points.

But England gave Carbonel another chance and his successful penalty put France a converted try ahead at 19-12.

Cowan-Dickie then denied France in the 80th minute before England lock Maro Itoje produced a decisive turnover that led to Farrell’s winning kick.

Man of the match: For France there were flanks Cameron Woki and his second half replacement Sekou Macalou. The best French player was fullback Brice Dulin, who fielded a million high bombs with aplomb. Players like Billy Vunipola, Sam Underhill, Tom Curry, Joe Launchbury, Luke Cowan-Dickie, Joe Marler and Jonny Hill all put in big shifts. Our award goes to England lock Maro Itoje, for his enormous workrate – not just on the ball, winning turnovers, but also off the ball and cleaning rucks, He was the spark in the engine room.

Moment of the match: Almost 100 minutes of drama produced plenty of moments. There were those crucial turnovers by some of the smallest men in the French team – Baptiste Couilloud (captain) and wing Gabin Villiere – in the final; quarter. There was that George Ford touch-kick that set up the maul for an equalising try. The biggest and most significant moment was the Maro Itoje turnover penalty in the second half of extra time that allowed Owen Farrell to slot the winning penalty.

Villain: No villains. Just heroes.

The scorers

For England
Try: Cowan-Dickie
Con: Farrell
Pens: Farrell 4, Daly

For France
Try: Dulin
Con: Jalibert
Pens: Jalibert 2, Carbonel 2

Teams

England: 15 Elliot Daly, 14 Anthony Watson, 13 Henry Slade, 12 Owen Farrell (captain), 11 Jonny May, 10 George Ford, 9 Ben Youngs, 8 Billy Vunipola, 7 Sam Underhill, 6 Tom Curry, 5 Joe Launchbury, 4 Maro Itoje, 3 Kyle Sinckler, 2 Jamie George, 1 Ellis Genge .
Replacements: 16 Luke Cowan-Dickie, 17 Joe Marler, 18 Will Stuart, 19 Jonny Hill, 20 Ben Earl, 21 Dan Robson, 22 Max Malins, 23 Joe Marchant.

France: 15 Brice Dulin, 14 Alivereti Raka, 13 Jonathan Danty, 12 Yoram Moefana, 11 Gabin Villiere, 10 Matthieu Jalibert, 9 Baptiste Couilloud (captain), 8 Selevasio Tolofua, 7 Anthony Jelonch, 6 Cameron Woki, 5 Baptiste Pesenti, 4 Killian Geraci, 3 Dorian Aldegheri, 2 Pierre Bourgarit, 1 Hassane Kolingar.
Replacements: 16 Peato Mauvaka, 17 Rodrigue Neti, 18 Uini Atonio, 19 Guillaume Ducat, 20 Sekou Macalou, 21 Sebastien Bezy, 22 Louis Carbonel, 23 Jean Pascal Barraque.

Referee: Andrew Brace
Assistant referees: Frank Murphy, Craig Evans
TMO: Ben Whitehouse

England versus France

England versus France

England versus France

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