U20 6N: England, Ireland head for decider
Ireland's thrilling win over France in Donnybrook ensured this while England, as expected, hammered Italy in Darlington.
Results
Round 3
England vs Italy, 46-0
Ireland vs France, 27-22
Wales vs Scotland, 65-34
Round 1
Ireland vs Scotland, 20-19
England vs France, 59-17
Wales vs Italy, 27-5
Round 2
Ireland vs Italy, 27-26
England vs Wales, 37-21
France vs Scotland, 36-8
Log after Three Rounds
Bonus points are making a difference all right. England have one from each of their matches, Ireland have none.
1. England – 15 pts
2. Ireland – 12 pts
3. Wales – 9 pts
4. France – 6 pts
5. Italy – 1 pt
6. Scotland – 1 pt
England vs Italy
There is nothing suprising in England's big, eight-try, bonus-point win over Italy at Northern Echo Arena up in cold, miserable Darlington. After all England won World Rugby's World Under-20 Championship recently. At half-time, after three tries, England led 17-0.
In the second half, with over six thousand brave spectators to cheer them on, England scored five tries with two each to Josh Bayliss and Tom Parton.
England have now scored 21 tries in three matches with weak Scotland to follow and then the decider in Ireland.
It started up front, for the England pack was much too strong for the Italians and out back England's speed and strength were too much.
It took both sides a while to get used to the pitch in Darlington but England's forward soon got to grips with the game and their power proved too much for Italy. Two yellow cards made Italy even weaker.
Scorers
For England:
Tries: Blamire, Curry, Mercer, Aspland-Robinson, Bayliss 2, Parton 2
Cons: Umaga 2, Smith
Teams
England: 15 Tom Parton, 14 Sam Aspland-Robinson, 13 Dominic Morris, 12 Max Wright, 11 Gabriel Ibitoye, 10 Jacob Umaga, 9 Alex Mitchell, 8 Zach Mercer (captain), 7 Ben Curry, 6 Jack Nay, 5 Nick Isiekwe, 4 Josh Caulfield, 3 Ciaran Knight, 2 Jamie Blamire, 1 Ollie Dawe
Replacements: 16 Henry Walker, 17 Alex Seville, 18 Marcus Street, 19 Max Davies, 20 Josh Bayliss, 21 Rory Brand, 22 Marcus Smith, 23 Joe Cokanasiga
Italy: 15 Massimo Cioffi, 14 Andrea Bronzini, 13 Ludovico Vaccari, 12 Marco Zanon (captain), 11 Giovanni D'Onofrio, 10 Antonio Rizzi, 9 Charly Trussardi, 8 Giovanni Licata, 7 Lorenzo Masselli, 6 Jacopo Bianchi, 5 Gabriele Venditti, 4 Giordano Baldino, 3 Giosuè Zilocchi, 2 Massimo Ceciliani, 1 Daniele Rimpelli
Replacements: 16 Alberto Rollero, 17 Danilo Fischetti, 18 Michele Mancini Parri, 19 Edoardo Iachizzi, 20 Nardo Casolari, 21 Emilio Fusco, 22 Michelangelo Biondelli, 23 Roberto dal Zilio
Referee: Sam Grove-White (Scotland)
Assistant referees: Mike Adamson (Scotland), Finlay Brown (Scotland)
Television match official: Jim Yuille (Scotland)
Assessor: Michael Carroll (Ireland)
Ireland vs France
Ireland maintained their unbeaten record in this year's Six Nations with their most comfortable win so far. After all, a five-point victory is more comfortable than the two one-pointers.
Ireland led 21-10 at half time in this high-tempo match and it was their grit that won through in the end as they lost the second half 12-6.
Ireland scored three tries in the first half, none in the second. France scored one in the first half and two, including a penalty try, in the second.
Down 21-3 and then, in the second half, 24-0 France fought their way back to 24-22 before Bill Johnston goaled his second penalty with six minutes to play.
Scorers:
For Ireland:
Tries: McElroy, O'Brien, Dowling
Cons: Johnston 3
Pens: Johnston 2
For France:
Tries: Fortass 2, penalty try
Cons: Ntamack 2
Pen: Ntamack
Teams
Ireland: 15 Rob Lyttle, 14 Jordan Larmour, 13 Tommy O'Brien, 12 Ciaran Frawley, 11 Calvin Nash (captain), 10 Bill Johnston, 9 Jonny Stewart, 8 Caelan Doris, 7 l Boyle, 6 Marcus Rea, 5 Oisin Dowling, 4 Jack Regan, 3 Charlie Connolly, 2 Tadgh McElroy, 1 Joey Conway
Replacements: 16 Ronan Kelleher, 17 Rory Mulvihill, 18 Peter Cooper, 19 Gavin Coombes, 20 Sean Masterson, 21 Jack Lyons, 22 Conor Fitzgerald, 23 Alex McHenry.
France: 15 Romain Buros, 14 Faraj Fartass, 13 Pierre-Louis Barassi, 12 Théo Dachary, 11 William Iraguha, 10 Romain Ntamack, 9 Arthur Retière, 8 Alexandre Roumat, 7 Julien Ruaud, 6 Dylan Cretin, 5 Mickaël Capelli, 4 Florian Verhaeghe (captain), 3 Thomas Laclayat, 2 Etienne Fourcade, 1 Kévin Tougne
Replacements: 16 Léo Aouf, 17 Florian Dufour, 18 George-Henri Colombe, 19 Killian Geraci, 20 Baptiste Couilloud, 21 Cameron Woki, 22 Anthony Fuertes, 23 Théo Millet
Referee: Tom Foley (England)
Assistant Referees: Phil Watters (England), Hamish Smales (England)
Television match official: Stuart Terheege (England)
Wales vs Scotland
Up in cold Cumbernauld with rain dropping straight down and high heaps of snow on the touch lines, Wales and Scotland played a generous 99-point, 14-try match, Wales winning by 31 points, eight tries to six. For Wales it was the first time they had gone past 50 points in a Six Nations Under-20 match.
The two teams obviously decided that running was the best antidote to the cold.
Wales got off to a great start, surging 27-0 ahead before Scotland came back with two tries of their own to make it 27-12 at half-time.
That was 39 points for the half. There would be another 60 in the second half, but Wales led throughout.
Scorers:
For Wales:
Tries: Lewis, Baldwin, Kieran Williams 2, Rhys Williams, Carre, Botham, Morris
Cons: Ben Jones 8
Pens: Ben Jones 3
For Scotland:
Tries: Dodd, Renwick, Nairn 2, Hunter-Hill, Simmers
Cons: Josh Henderson 2
Teams
Scotland: 15 Stafford McDowall, 14 Ross McCann, 13 Craig Pringle, 12 Cameron Hutchison, 11 Darcy Graham, 10 Josh Henderson, 9 Charlie Shiel, 8 Tom Dodd, 7 Luke Crosbie, 6 Alex Craig, 5 Callum Hunter-Hill (captain), 4 Hamish Bain, 3 Adam Nicol, 2 Fraser Renwick, 1 Fergus Bradbury
Replacements: 16 Robbie Smith, 17 Daniel Winning, 18 George Thornton, 19 Bruce Flockhart, 20 Jamie Ure, 21 Andrew Simmers, 22 Cameron Hutchison, 23 Robbie Nairn
Wales: 15 Rhun Williams, 14 Corey Baldwin, 13 Cameron Lewis, 12 Kieran Williams, 11 Ryan Conbeer, 10 Ben Jones, 9 Dane Blacker, 8 Aled Ward, 7 Will Jones (captain), 6 James Botham, 5 Alex Dombrandt, 4 Sean Moore, 3 Keiron Assiratti, 2 Corrie Tarrant, 1 Rhys Carre
Replacements: 16 Owen Hughes, 17 Steff Thomas, 18 Chris Coleman, 19 Max Williams, 20 Morgan Morris (Hartpury), 21 Reuben Morgan-Williams, 22 Arwel Robson, 23 Phil Jones
Referee: Thomas Charabas (France)
Assistant referees: Cédric Marchat (France), Sébastien Minery (France)
Television match official: Arnaud Blondel (France)
Timekeeper: John McLaughlin (Scotland)