England’s Red Roses began their WXV1 title defence with a commanding 61-21 victory over the United States in Vancouver, Canada, on Friday night. However, despite the lopsided scoreline, it was a performance that took time to gather momentum, with coach John Mitchell urging his side to “take the handbrake off” at half-time.
The world’s top-ranked side eventually ran in nine tries, but it was far from a vintage display in their opening match of the tournament. Debutant Bo Westcombe-Evans marked her first cap with a try, while full-back Ellie Kildunne dazzled with two scores, including a sensational solo effort in the first half.
England started slowly, with both sides making errors in the opening exchanges. It wasn’t until the 12th minute that hooker Lark Atkin-Davies broke the deadlock, finishing off a clever lineout move. Sarah Bern wrapped around and found Atkin-Davies, who crossed in the corner. Zoe Harrison, making only her second start since returning from an ACL injury, added the extras with a superb conversion from the touchline.
Kildunne then produced a moment of magic, weaving through the American defence from inside her own half to score under the posts. The electric full-back gathered the ball deep in her own territory, using the presence of debutant Westcombe-Evans to her right as a decoy. She stepped past McKenzie Hawkins and Bulou Mataitoga before straightening her run and beating Hawkins again en route to the try line. Harrison’s conversion extended the lead to 14-0.
The USA, ranked eighth in the world, showed admirable resilience and hit back through centre Alev Kelter, who gathered her own chip kick to score a brilliant individual try. Kelter’s moment of inspiration came on a rare foray into the English 22, as she weighted a perfect chip over the defensive line before racing onto the bouncing ball and evading both Jess Breach and Lucy Packer on her way over the whitewash.
However, England finished the half strongly with two quick tries. First, flanker Georgia Brock pounced on a Kelter fumble to score her first Test try. The opportunistic score came after pressure from scrum-half Lucy Packer forced Kelter to spill the ball on her own try line, allowing Brock to scoop it up and dot down.

VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA – SEPTEMBER 29: Georgia Brock of England scores her team’s third try during the WXV1 Pool match between USA and England at BC Place on September 29, 2024 in Vancouver, British Columbia. (Photo by Rich Lam – World Rugby/World Rugby via Getty Images)
Captain Alex Matthews, leading the side for the first time, then crossed on the stroke of half-time to secure the bonus point. With the clock in the red, England built patiently towards the posts before switching to the right. The ball reached Matthews, who threw a dummy pass to Westcombe-Evans before powering over herself. Harrison’s fourth conversion of the half made it 28-7 at the break.
With the score at 28-7, Mitchell challenged his team to play with more freedom in the second half. The USA responded well after the break, with Kelter grabbing her second try following multiple pick-and-go carries by the American forwards. However, England’s superior fitness and bench strength began to tell.
Westcombe-Evans marked her debut with a sharp finish in the corner after 49 minutes. A well-worked move by the England backs from a scrum just outside the USA 22 saw the ball reach the winger, who finished clinically to score on her first appearance in an England shirt.
USA captain Kate Zackary briefly raised hopes of a comeback with her side’s third try, peeling off from a five-metre lineout to score. However, the Red Roses finished with a flourish, running in four more tries in the final quarter.
Morwenna Talling powered over from close range after sustained pressure from the England pack. Jess Breach, who had been relatively quiet until then, showed her class with a beautifully arcing run off a clever backline move from a lineout, running in untouched for England’s seventh try.
Kildunne capped her outstanding performance with a second try, benefiting from a combination of power, footwork, and slick offloading from her teammates to cross in the corner. The final word went to replacement scrum-half Ella Wyrwas, who intercepted a desperate USA pass in the dying seconds to run in unopposed under the posts.
Harrison’s boot was nearly flawless throughout, as she converted eight of the nine tries to finish with 16 points. Her accuracy from the tee will give Mitchell food for thought as he plans for the tougher challenges ahead.
While the victory extends England’s winning streak to 18 matches, there were enough rough edges to keep Mitchell and his coaching staff busy ahead of tougher tests against New Zealand and hosts Canada. The Red Roses’ scrum dominance and clinical finishing were positives, but their defence was breached more often than they would have liked.
“We were keen to get started, we probably let ourselves down with the basics early in the game and in the middle, but we finished with a lot of satisfaction,” Mitchell said post-match. “At half-time, the message was to continue to build, don’t let it off through poor basics and take the handbrake off. That is where our mindset should be, and we demonstrated that with some good examples towards the end of the performance.”
England will need to find another gear when they face New Zealand next Sunday, in a rematch of their recent clash at Twickenham. For now, though, they can be satisfied with a bonus-point win and a performance that, while not perfect, showed glimpses of their devastating potential.