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Wales end Six Nations drought with emphatic victory over Italy

Wales end 1,099-day Six Nations winless run as Aaron Wainwright scores twice in commanding 31-17 victory over Italy at the Principality Stadium.

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Wales’ Dan Edwards scores their fourth try with Eddie James during the 2026 Guinness Six Nations Championship Round 5 game between Wales and Italy in Principality Stadium, Cardiff, Wales, Saturday, March 14, 2026 (Photo by Tom Maher / Inpho)

Wales finally ended their agonising 1,099-day Six Nations winless run with a commanding 31-17 bonus-point victory over Italy at the Principality Stadium, Aaron Wainwright scoring twice in a first-half blitz that left the Azzurri shell-shocked and a crowd of nearly 70,000 delirious.

Key moments

11 mins – PENALTY MISSED Italy: Paolo Garbisi pulls his kick wide from 28 metres after Ellis Mee is penalised for offside — a miss that would prove costly as Wales immediately seized control. (Wales 0–0 Italy)

15 mins – TRY Wales: Aaron Wainwright powers through the Italian defence with a barnstorming carry, bouncing off three would-be tacklers before grounding under the posts. Dan Edwards converts. (Wales 7–0 Italy)

26 mins – TRY Wales: Wainwright doubles his tally, peeling off from the back of a driving maul and burrowing low to score in the corner after Wales win a penalty and go for the lineout. Edwards adds a superb touchline conversion. (Wales 14–0 Italy)

30 mins – TRY Wales: A textbook rolling maul from a lineout sees captain Dewi Lake driven over to score at the back after the Wales forwards, joined by several backs, create an unstoppable surge. Edwards converts from wide on the right. (Wales 21–0 Italy)

37 mins: Tomas Francis departs with injury. Archie Griffin replaces at tighthead prop.

Half-time: Wales 21–0 Italy. A dominant first-half display from Wales, who converted all three entries into the Italy 22 into tries. Wainwright outstanding with two scores, while the home pack’s physicality overwhelmed the Azzurri at the breakdown and in the driving maul.

45 mins – TRY Wales: After 13 phases of patient build-up inside the Italian 22, the ball is shifted right to Dan Edwards who identifies a gaping hole and slices through untouched to score. Edwards converts his own try to secure the bonus point. (Wales 28–0 Italy)

48 mins – DROP GOAL Wales: From an Italy goalline dropout, Edwards catches the ball beyond the Italian ten-metre line and calmly slots a confident drop goal from 45 metres. The crowd erupts. (Wales 31–0 Italy)

52 mins – TRY Italy: Italy’s rolling maul finally gains traction as replacement hooker Tommaso Di Bartolomeo is driven over from close range after Federico Ruzza wins clean lineout ball. Archie Griffin is shown a YELLOW CARD for attempting to bring down the maul illegally. Paolo Garbisi converts. (Wales 31–7 Italy)

69 mins – TRY Italy: Tommaso Menoncello makes a trademark break through midfield and offloads to Tommaso Allan, who is initially held up near the right corner. Italy recycle quickly and shift the ball left, where Garbisi finds Allan in space to dive over. Garbisi’s conversion attempt misses. (Wales 31–12 Italy)

73 mins – TRY DISALLOWED Italy: Monty Ioane appears to score in the corner, but Ellis Mee’s covering tackle forces Ioane’s left foot to graze the touchline before grounding. The TMO rules no try after multiple replays.

77 mins – TRY DISALLOWED Italy: Leonardo Marin stretches for the line after a break from the base of a ruck, but James Botham’s outstretched leg prevents a clean grounding. TMO rules knock-on.

80 mins: Aaron Wainwright named player of the match.

80+1 mins – TRY Italy: Consolation score for Italy as Garbisi finishes a short-side raid from a scrum in the Wales 22, taking Lorenzo Cannone’s offload to dot down in the corner. Garbisi misses the conversion. (Wales 31–17 Italy)

Full-time: Wales 31–17 Italy

Match report

For a crowd that has endured the leanest of times in Welsh rugby history, this was a cathartic afternoon in Cardiff. Steve Tandy’s side, so brutally exposed in opening defeats to England and France where they conceded 102 points and 15 tries, delivered the performance their recent progress against Scotland and Ireland had promised. By the 48th minute, they led 31-0 and the contest was over.

Italy, arriving in Wales having beaten England for the first time in their history just seven days earlier, looked like a side that had played their cup final the week before. Gonzalo Quesada’s men struggled to handle the aggression of the home side from the opening whistle, losing collisions at the breakdown and finding their usually reliable lineout under pressure. Their dream of winning three matches in a single Six Nations campaign for the first time was extinguished long before they mounted a late consolation fightback.

The warning signs came early. Garbisi missed a straightforward penalty in the 11th minute after Mee was penalised for offside, and Wales made them pay almost immediately. A huge relieving kick from Louis Rees-Zammit was chased tenaciously by Mee and flanker Alex Mann, forcing scrum-half Alessandro Fusco into an error that handed Wales a turnover. Edwards kicked to the corner, skipper Lake peeled around the back of the lineout and launched Mee in midfield, and from the next phase Tomos Williams picked out the charging Wainwright. The number eight played skittles with three would-be tacklers, bouncing off each before crashing over at the posts. Edwards converted and the Principality Stadium stirred to life.

Wales went to the corner again 11 minutes later after Italy were penalised at the breakdown. This time the driving maul did the damage. Ben Carter won the lineout at the front, Italy contested the throw but were brushed aside as a ferocious Welsh drive rumbled towards the line. Wainwright picked from the base with the maul halted a metre short and burrowed low to force his way over for his second. Edwards’ touchline conversion was nerveless and Wales led 14-0.

The Principality Stadium was rocking now, and Wales were not finished. Another turnover — this time Rhys Carre winning the jackal and celebrating harder than he had after his wonder try against Ireland the previous week — provided field position. Another penalty, another kick to the corner, another driving maul. This time the backs joined the forwards to create an unstoppable surge, and captain Lake plunged over at the back. Edwards converted again. Three entries into the Italy 22, three tries. Clinical, ruthless, professional.

Wales lost tighthead prop Tomas Francis to injury before the break, but that was the only blemish on a remarkable half. They had smashed Italy up front, won the breakdown battle decisively, and been precise in execution. The hosts led 21-0 at the interval and Hymns and Arias rang around the ground with a gusto not heard in Cardiff for years.

Any hope Italy harboured of mounting a second-half comeback evaporated within seven minutes of the restart. Wales worked through 13 phases inside the Italian 22, the heavy artillery of Wainwright, Lake and Carre making hard yards and dragging in defenders. Williams gave the ball quick tempo, and when it was finally shifted right, Edwards spotted a gaping hole in the Italian defensive line and glided through untouched. He dived jubilantly over the line, converted his own try, and Wales had the bonus point.

Then came the moment that encapsulated Edwards’ growing confidence. From an Italy goalline dropout that the visitors had been forced to take, Edwards caught the ball beyond the Italian ten-metre line and calmly dropped a goal from 45 metres. It was audacious, it was brilliant, and it was 31-0. “You’re probably thinking ‘what are you doing?’ And then he absolutely buries it,” Tandy admitted afterwards. The Ospreys fly-half finished with 16 points — his best performance in a Wales shirt by some considerable distance.

Italy finally showed some pride in the final quarter. Di Bartolomeo was driven over from a rolling maul in the 52nd minute after Ruzza won clean lineout ball, with Griffin sin-binned for cynically attempting to collapse the maul. Garbisi converted and the Azzurri had something to cling to.

But Wales’ improved defensive work — so evident in Dublin the previous week, where they had pushed Ireland to the wire — held firm during Griffin’s absence. Carre and Botham made huge hits, Mee and Botham combined to hold up an Italy attacker over the line, and when Menoncello looked certain to score, Josh Adams produced a wonderfully defiant tap tackle to deny him.

Allan eventually crossed in the 69th minute after another break by the dangerous Menoncello, but it was mere consolation. Ioane thought he had scored moments later, only for Mee’s desperate scrambling tackle to force the wing’s foot into touch before grounding — it was so close it required numerous replays, but it was that sort of day for Italy. Marin was also denied by the TMO after Botham’s outstretched leg prevented a clean grounding.

Garbisi did cross in the final act to make it 31-17, finishing a short-side raid after Cannone’s offload, but by then the result had long been secured. The final whistle was greeted with scenes of jubilation rarely witnessed at the Principality Stadium in recent years.

Wales still finish bottom of the table for a third consecutive year, but this felt different. The wooden spoon comes without the whitewash, and the upward trajectory throughout the tournament has been unmistakable. They have found emerging talents in Edwards and centre Eddie James, rediscovered leaders in Lake and Wainwright, and shown a physicality that had been painfully absent in the opening rounds.

For Italy, the dream of their greatest-ever Six Nations fell short at the final hurdle. Two wins against Scotland and England represent genuine progress, but Quesada will know his side were outmuscled and outfought when it mattered most. They finish fourth, their highest placing since 2013, but Cardiff provided a sobering reminder of the work still to be done.

As the final whistle blew and the crowd celebrated, it was hard not to feel this was a day about more than just one result. Welsh rugby remains in turmoil off the field, with governance battles and regional uncertainty continuing to rage. But for one afternoon at least, the Principality Stadium rocked again. Cardiff is singing once more.

What they said

Steve Tandy was emotional afterwards: “It was a massively emotional day. A win in the Six Nations has been a long time coming and I am overwhelmed with pride by what this group delivered. I’ve always said it’s never been a question of desire, physicality or work ethic in this group. It’s just getting them to understand how far they can go. England was a massive lesson for us — we didn’t impose anything of what we wanted to do and panicked with our discipline. Since then the boys have grown every week, have got a bit of confidence and had a bit of cohesion as a team.”

Captain Dewi Lake, who has endured countless difficult post-match interviews, finally had happier reflections: “We hope we have restored some faith in the jersey and into what this group can do. I am overjoyed for the boys because of how hard they have worked. This group has gone through a lot of emotionally tough things recently, on and off the field. The scoreline was similar to half-time against Scotland and to come out and score first, to never give up on the moment, to stay switched on and stay in every play — that shows how we have learned.”

Player of the match Aaron Wainwright, who has been Wales’ standout performer throughout the tournament, struck a measured tone: “When you look at our first 20 minutes against England and France, that really let us down — yellow cards and penalties. Since then our discipline has been on point, we’ve been more accurate with the ball in hand. In the first half today everything fell into place. It’s not ideal to finish bottom of the table, but the growth is there.”

Full-back Louis Rees-Zammit spoke of the culture Tandy has instilled: “It’s unbelievable. We’ve trusted each other, trusted the system and the coaches. It takes time, but credit to the players, we’ve bought into every training session. We’ve got better in every game. We have an amazing culture now.”

Italy head coach Gonzalo Quesada offered no excuses: “Not scoring early when it was 0-0 — with Menoncello’s break and then missing the penalty — conditioned the start of the game. They had great intensity in the first half and that made the difference. We played a real match in the second half but Wales were very strong and deserved the victory. No alibis — Wales did what they needed to do to win today.”

Italy captain Michele Lamaro was frustrated but philosophical: “They were maybe more courageous than us in the first half and that made the difference. We had an opportunity to complete our objective of having the best Six Nations ever for Italy, and we let it slip through some shortcomings. In a few weeks I’ll realise what a great Six Nations we’ve had — beating a great Scotland and an England who came in with twelve high-level wins in 2025 — but today I’m struggling not to be disappointed.”

Match details

Wales 31 (Tries: Wainwright 15, 26, Lake 30, Edwards 45; Conversions: Edwards 4/4; Drop goal: Edwards 48)
Italy 17 (Tries: Di Bartolomeo 52, Allan 69, Garbisi 80+1; Conversions: Garbisi 1/3)
Half-time: 21–0

Wales: 15 Louis Rees-Zammit, 14 Ellis Mee (Murray 78), 13 Eddie James, 12 Joe Hawkins, 11 Josh Adams, 10 Dan Edwards (Evans 68), 9 Tomos Williams (Hardy 78), 1 Rhys Carre (Smith 51), 2 Dewi Lake (capt, Elias 45), 3 Tomas Francis (Griffin 38), 4 Dafydd Jenkins, 5 Ben Carter (Beard 64), 6 Alex Mann (Cracknell 71), 7 James Botham, 8 Aaron Wainwright.
Yellow card: Griffin 52

Italy: 15 Lorenzo Pani (Allan 63), 14 Louis Lynagh, 13 Juan Ignacio Brex (Marin 70), 12 Tommaso Menoncello, 11 Monty Ioane, 10 Paolo Garbisi, 9 Alessandro Fusco (Varney 54), 1 Danilo Fischetti (Spagnolo 45, Fischetti 78), 2 Giacomo Nicotera (Di Bartolomeo 45, Nicotera 62), 3 Muhamed Hasa (Zilocchi 45), 4 Niccolò Cannone (Favretto 70), 5 Federico Ruzza, 6 Michele Lamaro (capt), 7 Manuel Zuliani, 8 Lorenzo Cannone (Odiase 63).

Venue: Principality Stadium, Cardiff
Attendance: 69,775
Referee: Christophe Ridley (RFU)
Assistant referees: Matthew Carley (RFU), Eoghan Cross (IRFU)
TMO: Mike Adamson (SRU)
Bunker: Eric Gauzins (FFR)
Player of the match: Aaron Wainwright (Wales)

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Six Nations

Bielle-Biarrey crowned Six Nations Player of the Championship

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Bielle-Biarrey crowned Six Nations Player of the Championship
France’s Louis Bielle-Biarrey after being Voted 2026 Guinness Men’s Six Nations Player of the Championship in Bordeaux, France, Thursday, April 2, 2026 (Photo by Tom Maher / Inpho)

France’s record-breaking winger Louis Bielle-Biarrey has been named the 2026 Guinness Men’s Six Nations Player of the Championship, becoming only the fourth player in the award’s history to claim the accolade in consecutive years.

The 22-year-old secured 44 per cent of the fan vote in a record ballot that saw 151,525 supporters cast their verdict over a one-week voting period. Ireland centre Stuart McCloskey, Italy’s Tommaso Menoncello and Scotland wing Kyle Steyn were also shortlisted after standout campaigns of their own.

Bielle-Biarrey’s coronation caps a remarkable championship in which he scored nine tries across five matches, breaking his own record of eight set in 2025. That tally included a stunning four-try haul in the decisive final-round victory over England at the Stade de France, a performance that secured back-to-back titles for Fabien Galthié’s side.

“I’m just really happy, honestly,” Bielle-Biarrey said upon receiving his award in Bordeaux. “It’s yet another reward for the team’s hard work throughout the tournament. We were able to defend our title. Winning the tournament two years in a row is no small feat. We’re very happy to have done it.”

Following in Dupont’s footsteps

The Bordeaux Bègles wing joins an elite group of multiple winners that includes Brian O’Driscoll, Stuart Hogg and his France teammate Antoine Dupont, who achieved the same back-to-back feat in 2022 and 2023. Indeed, over the past five Six Nations editions, only Italy’s Menoncello in 2024 has broken French dominance of the individual award.

The symmetry with Dupont is particularly striking. Both players developed through France’s youth pathways before bursting onto the senior stage, and both have now received the ultimate individual recognition in consecutive campaigns. Galthié acknowledged as much after France’s title-clinching victory.

“He is following in Antoine’s footsteps,” the France head coach said. “The players inspire one another. It’s hard to find the right adjectives to talk about him right now, and last year too. He will surely become the top scorer of the tournament, I think.”

Record upon record

The statistics behind Bielle-Biarrey’s championship defy comprehension. His nine tries represent a single-tournament record for the Six Nations era, surpassing the mark of eight he shared with Cyril Lowe (1914) and Ian Smith (1925) after last year’s campaign.

More remarkably, the winger has now scored in ten consecutive Six Nations matches, another record he holds alone. Only Chris Ashton, with his four tries against Italy in 2011, had previously matched the four-try performance Bielle-Biarrey delivered against England.

With 18 tries in just 14 Six Nations appearances, he is already the highest-scoring French player in the championship’s modern era, having overtaken Damian Penaud despite playing in roughly half the number of fixtures. He sits fifth on the all-time scorers list and, at 22, has O’Driscoll’s record of 26 tries firmly in his sights.

Beyond the try-scoring, his attacking numbers were equally impressive: 311 metres gained, 13 defenders beaten, eight clean breaks and four try assists across the championship.

From Grenoble to greatness

Bielle-Biarrey’s trajectory reads like a rugby fairytale. Born in La Tronche in the Isère department with Réunionese heritage through his mother and Toulon roots through his father, he began playing rugby at five years old in Seyssins, a small commune near Grenoble with a population of just 8,000.

His early career saw him deployed at fly-half before coaches identified his devastating pace and moved him to the wing. That speed, clocked at 38 kilometres per hour when he famously beat former European 100m champion Christophe Lemaitre in a sprint earlier this year, has become his calling card.

His first senior start for Bordeaux Bègles in January 2022, at just 18 years old, was immediately marked by a hat-trick against the Scarlets. By August 2023, he had earned his first cap against Scotland, and within weeks he became the youngest French player to score a try at a Rugby World Cup during the tournament on home soil.

The red scrum cap, given to him by his father at age eight, has since become his trademark, instantly recognisable as he accelerates past defenders.

A championship to remember

Bielle-Biarrey’s award arrives after a Six Nations widely heralded as the greatest edition since the championship expanded to six teams in 2000. A record 111 tries were scored across the tournament, with the title ultimately decided by Thomas Ramos’s penalty in the dying seconds of the final match.

The French public certainly responded. Broadcast across France Télévisions and TF1, the 2026 championship attracted over 35.5 million average viewers throughout the five rounds, with 9.5 million tuning in for the title decider against England.

For Bielle-Biarrey, the individual recognition is secondary to collective success. But in a championship of extraordinary moments, his contribution stood apart.

“My parents signed me up for rugby when I was five years old,” he has previously reflected. “Straight away, I really liked it. It is a childhood dream today to be able to live my passion.”

At 22, with two Player of the Championship awards, a cabinet of try-scoring records and the trajectory to become France’s all-time leading scorer, Louis Bielle-Biarrey is living that dream in spectacular fashion.

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Two former winners in shortlist for Player of Six Nations award

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Two former winners in shortlist for Player of Six Nations award
France's Louis Bielle-Biarrey runs in his side's second try during the 2026 Guinness Six Nations Championship Round 5 game between France and England in Stade de France, Paris, France, Saturday, March 14, 2026 (Photo by Dan Sheridan / Inpho)

The shortlist for the 2026 Guinness Men’s Six Nations Player of the Championship has been announced, with four players recognised for performances that defined what was widely described as one of the most compelling tournaments in recent memory. Louis Bielle-Biarrey (France), Stuart McCloskey (Ireland), Kyle Steyn (Scotland) and Tommaso Menoncello (Italy) make up a quartet selected from those who topped the performance statistics charts and drew the highest share of fan votes in the Team of the Championship poll.

Voting is now open at sixnationsrugby.com and closes on Thursday 26 March at 09:00 GMT.

Key Points

  • Louis Bielle-Biarrey (France) and Tommaso Menoncello (Italy) are the two former winners on the shortlist, having claimed the award in 2025 and 2024 respectively
  • Bielle-Biarrey scored a record nine tries in five matches, breaking his own all-time Championship record set just twelve months earlier
  • Menoncello is nominated for a third successive year, becoming only the third player — alongside Brian O’Driscoll and Antoine Dupont — to achieve three consecutive nominations
  • Ireland’s Stuart McCloskey, 33, leads the tournament’s Oval Insights rankings with a score of 8.6/10, despite not scoring a single try
  • Scotland’s Kyle Steyn equalled the all-time Championship record for defenders beaten, with 26 across the tournament
  • McCloskey would become Ireland’s first winner since Jacob Stockdale in 2018 if he takes the award
  • Steyn’s nomination is the first for a Glasgow Warriors player since 2017
  • The winner is decided entirely by public vote, with fans able to vote at sixnationsrugby.com until 09:00 GMT on Thursday 26 March

Louis Bielle-Biarrey

If there is a frontrunner, it is hard to argue against the 22-year-old Bordeaux-Bègles and France wing. Bielle-Biarrey claimed the Player of the Championship award in 2025 and delivered an encore that left statisticians scrambling for superlatives. His nine tries across five matches broke his own all-time Championship record — he had set the previous mark of eight just twelve months earlier — and makes him the most prolific try-scorer in the history of the competition.

The highlight reel moment of his tournament came against England in a match that immediately entered rugby folklore. Bielle-Biarrey crossed for four tries in the Crunch, becoming only the second player ever to score a quadruple in a single Six Nations match, after Chris Ashton’s effort against Italy in 2011. He also scored in each of France’s five games, an achievement managed by only three other players since the tournament expanded to six nations in 2000.

His numbers elsewhere were just as striking. He led the Championship in clean breaks (19), initial breaks (14) and supported breaks (5), while his 366 metres carried ranked third overall. The Oval Insights algorithm placed him second in its rankings with a score of 8.5 out of 10. His efforts were central to France retaining the Championship title for a second successive year.

Key stats: 9 tries (Championship record), 19 clean breaks (1st), 366 metres carried (3rd), 8.5/10 Oval Insights (2nd)


Stuart McCloskey

At 33, Stuart McCloskey’s 2026 Six Nations campaign reads like a statement of defiance against the passage of time. The Ulster centre was one of only two Irish players — alongside captain Caelan Doris — to play every minute of Ireland’s five matches, and he did so while producing numbers that led not just his team but the entire tournament in several categories.

He did not score a try, yet his fingerprints were on Ireland’s attack at every turn. His six try assists tied for the joint-highest in the Championship, with multiple offloads producing scores for team-mates. He led the tournament in dominant contacts (18, at a remarkable 31% rate), turnovers won among backs (eight, joint-first overall) and tackle attempts among backs (79). His 20 defenders beaten ranked joint-second in the Championship.

The Oval Insights system placed McCloskey first among all players, awarding him 8.6 out of 10. His performances were instrumental in Ireland securing the Triple Crown and finishing as runners-up in the overall standings. Should he win, McCloskey would become Ireland’s first Player of the Championship since Jacob Stockdale in 2018.

Key stats: 6 try assists (joint 1st), 18 dominant contacts (1st), 8 turnovers won (joint 1st), 8.6/10 Oval Insights (1st)


Kyle Steyn

Kyle Steyn’s inclusion in the shortlist may owe more to moments of brilliance than the volume of a Bielle-Biarrey or the relentless consistency of a McCloskey, but few players left as large an impression on individual matches. The 32-year-old Glasgow Warriors winger was awarded Player of the Match twice during the tournament — against England and France — and was at the heart of two results that will be remembered long after the final standings are forgotten.

His 26 defenders beaten across the Championship ranked first in the competition, equalling the all-time record for the category. He scored three tries and covered 316 metres with ball in hand, ranking sixth overall. His Oval Insights score of 8.1 placed him seventh. Scotland’s two standout victories — a thumping win over England and the extraordinary 50-40 defeat of France at Murrayfield — each had Steyn’s footprints running through them.

It would be the first nomination for a Glasgow Warriors player since 2017. Hamish Watson was the last Scotsman to claim the award, in 2021.

Key stats: 26 defenders beaten (1st, joint record), 3 tries, 316 metres (6th), 8.1/10 Oval Insights (7th)


Tommaso Menoncello

At just 23 years old, Tommaso Menoncello is already becoming a fixture on this shortlist. This is his third consecutive nomination, and he arrives having won the award in 2024 before finishing runner-up to Bielle-Biarrey in 2025. His continued presence at the top of the tournament standings speaks to a player who has rapidly established himself as one of the finest centres in world rugby.

This year, Menoncello was central to Italy’s most memorable results — victories over Scotland and England — and was named Player of the Match in the latter. His 14 clean breaks ranked third in the Championship, his 363 metres carried ranked fourth, and his 11 initial breaks placed joint-third. He also matched McCloskey’s joint-second ranking for defenders beaten with 20, and his 36.7% dominant carry rate — 11 dominant carries from 42 attempts — underlined the physical impact he carries into contact.

Only Andrea Masi has previously won the Player of the Championship award as an Italian, making Menoncello’s repeated presence at the summit of the conversation a remarkable achievement for a player still in his early twenties.

Key stats: 14 clean breaks (3rd), 363 metres carried (4th), 20 defenders beaten (joint 2nd), 7.9/10 Oval Insights (8th)


The verdict

On pure statistics, the case for Bielle-Biarrey is compelling — nine tries, a broken record and a Championship winners’ medal make him the obvious choice for many. But with the award decided by public vote, McCloskey’s all-action, selfless game and the passionate Irish fanbase could prove decisive. Steyn’s two Player of the Match awards demonstrate his impact in the biggest moments, while Menoncello’s third successive nomination reinforces just how consistently brilliant he has been.

Fans have until Thursday 26 March at 09:00 GMT to have their say at sixnationsrugby.com.

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Six Nations

Six things we learned from round 5 of the Guinness Six Nations

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Six things we learned from round 5 of the Guinness Six Nations
France’s Antoine Dupont’s lifts the Men's Six Nations Trophy after the 2026 Guinness Six Nations Championship Round 5 game between France and England in Stade de France, Paris, France, Saturday, March 14, 2026 (Photo by Dan Sheridan / Inpho)

Super Saturday 2026 delivered one of the greatest days in Six Nations history. France retained their championship with a last-gasp 48-46 victory over England in a Paris thriller that will be replayed for generations, as Thomas Ramos held his nerve with the final kick to break Irish and English hearts. Earlier in Dublin, Ireland secured their fourth Triple Crown in five years with a commanding 43-21 win over Scotland, while Wales ended 1,099 days of Six Nations misery by beating Italy 31-17 in Cardiff. Louis Bielle-Biarrey scored four tries to take his tournament tally to nine – a new record – while the championship produced 111 tries, the most since Italy joined the competition. England’s seven tries weren’t enough. Ireland’s six tries secured the Triple Crown but not the title. And Wales finally, mercifully, tasted victory again. Here are six things we learned from a finale that had absolutely everything.

France are deserved champions

Forget the script. Tear up the predictions. This wasn’t supposed to happen. England, who had lost four consecutive matches coming into Paris, weren’t meant to score 46 points and seven tries against the defending champions. France weren’t supposed to concede that many points and still win. And yet here we are, trying to process what might just be the greatest Six Nations match ever played. The 48-46 scoreline tells only part of the story of a game that swung violently from one team to the other across 82 breathless minutes. England led 27-17 at half-time despite Ellis Genge’s yellow card and a penalty try for France. They fell behind 38-27 early in the second half as Louis Bielle-Biarrey completed his hat-trick. They stormed back to lead 46-45 with three minutes remaining after Tommy Freeman’s brilliant finish. And then came the final twist. With the clock in the red, Trevor Davison and Maro Itoje were penalised at a ruck, giving Thomas Ramos a long-range penalty from 47 metres to win the championship. The Stade de France held its breath. Ramos, France’s nerveless full-back who had already become his country’s all-time leading points scorer earlier in the tournament, stepped up and bisected the posts. France were champions. England were heartbroken. Ireland, watching in Dublin, saw their title hopes evaporate with that single kick. “We’re very lucky that we have maybe the best kicker around,” said Fabien Galthié afterwards, and nobody could argue. Bielle-Biarrey’s four tries – taking him to nine for the championship, smashing the previous record – showcased France’s attacking brilliance. The 21-year-old now has 29 tries in just 27 Tests, an astonishing strike rate that surpasses even Damian Penaud. But it was Ramos’s composure under ultimate pressure that won the title. France finished with 30 tries across five matches, equalling their own record from 2025, and scored four-try bonus points in four of their five games. Their only defeat came against England at Twickenham in round two, but they bounced back with three consecutive bonus-point victories. This is back-to-back titles for the first time since 2006-07, and France’s eighth championship triumph since 2000 – more than any other nation in that period. “We’re very proud of our performance today and the spirit we showed,” said François Cros. “We had a tough first half where Scotland put us under pressure, but we came through that and in the second half, we were able to unleash our game.” The attacking rugby France have played throughout this tournament has set new standards. They are deserved champions, winners of the greatest Six Nations finale ever witnessed.

England regain pride but is that enough?

Where has this England been? Steve Borthwick’s side scored seven tries in Paris, ran France ragged for long periods, led at half-time despite playing 10 minutes with 14 men, and came within 90 seconds of one of the great Six Nations upsets. And yet they still lost. They still finish fifth in the table with just one win from five matches. They still have suffered their worst championship campaign in 50 years. The 48-46 defeat completes England’s most disappointing Six Nations since 1976, when they last lost four matches in a single campaign. The performance was everything Borthwick had demanded – attacking ambition, forward dominance, clinical finishing from Tom Roebuck, Cadan Murley, Ollie Chessum (twice), Alex Coles, Marcus Smith and Tommy Freeman. But the result tells the real story. England’s discipline, which has plagued them all championship, cost them again. Genge’s yellow card for collapsing a maul on the stroke of half-time, coupled with a penalty try for France, turned a 27-17 lead into 24-27 at the break. France then scored 14 more points while England were down to 14 men. That’s 21 points conceded in that crucial period. “When we keep 15 men on the field we look a very good team,” admitted Borthwick afterwards, and the statistics bear him out. England have received nine yellow cards across five matches – equalling Italy’s unwanted record from 2002 – and have conceded 63 points while a player off the pitch. Borthwick questioned referee Nika Amashukeli’s communication over the penalty advantage before Bielle-Biarrey’s fourth try, insisting “the players on the pitch were told it was a penalty advantage” when it had been changed to a knock-on advantage by the TMO. But complaints about refereeing cannot mask the bigger picture. England have lost to Scotland, Ireland and Italy in this championship. They beat Wales and pushed France to the wire, but consistency remains their biggest problem. “I believe I’m the right man to lead the team forward,” insisted Borthwick when asked about his future, and this performance in Paris – despite the heartbreaking defeat – might just have earned him more time. England showed character, attacking ambition and forward power that had been missing for much of the season. “I truly believe this team is going places,” insisted captain Itoje. “We showed the spirit of this team. In sport, you don’t want to go through the experiences that we went through over the last four games. But I truly believe this team’s going places.” Pride has been restored. The performance in Paris proved England can compete with the world’s best when they get their game right. But is that enough? Fifth place, four defeats, and another summer of questions about Borthwick’s methods suggest not.

Ireland have found their edge

The Fields of Athenry rang around the Aviva Stadium. Caelan Doris lifted the Triple Crown trophy. Six tries, 43 points, a 12th consecutive victory over Scotland. Everything about Ireland’s final-day performance screamed champions. Everything except the result in Paris that mattered most. Andy Farrell’s side did everything asked of them, delivering their best performance of the championship against a Scotland side who arrived in Dublin dreaming of their own title glory. Jamie Osborne’s fourth-minute try – his fourth of the championship – set the tone for a commanding display built on set-piece dominance and ruthless finishing. Dan Sheehan’s maul try, Robert Baloucoune’s searing pace, Darragh Murray’s bonus-point score on his Six Nations debut, and Tommy O’Brien’s late brace sealed a performance that had Farrell “proud as punch.” The statistics were extraordinary: 42.9 minutes of ball-in-play time in a game for the ages, Ireland’s red zone efficiency at 4.7 points per entry, and Stuart McCloskey delivering a fifth consecutive high-quality display that puts him “in the mix for player of the tournament.” “We had a ruthless edge to us in how we defended and converted in the 22,” said Farrell. “That was the story of the game really.” Ireland finish second, three points behind France, their three-year title reign over. The opening-night defeat in Paris – when Farrell publicly questioned his team’s “intent” – proved decisive. But the response has been remarkable. From the wreckage of that 36-14 hammering, Ireland have rebuilt themselves, winning four consecutive matches with increasing conviction. The 42-21 destruction of England at Twickenham was followed by grittier wins over Italy and Wales, before this commanding display against Scotland. Ireland used 35 players across this championship – more than any previous Farrell campaign – and the depth chart has been tested extensively. Tom O’Toole’s remarkable conversion to loosehead prop, where he delivered 20 tackles in 65 minutes against Scotland, was “amazing” according to Farrell. McCloskey’s consistency has been a revelation. Robert Baloucoune was named the tournament’s Rising Player despite being 28 years old. The Triple Crown – Ireland’s 15th, and ninth of the Six Nations era – represents their fourth in five years, a remarkable achievement. “It’s unique as an Irishman to be cheering them on,” Doris had said of supporting England in Paris, and the strangeness of that moment captured everything about Ireland’s championship. The title may have gone to France, but Ireland have rediscovered the edge, the hunger, and the ruthless efficiency that makes them one of world rugby’s most dangerous sides. The 18-month journey to the 2027 World Cup is officially on track.

Same old story for Scotland

Twelve years. Twelve consecutive defeats to Ireland. Twelve times Scotland have travelled to Dublin dreaming of glory, only to return home empty-handed and heartbroken. The 43-21 defeat wasn’t a hammering – Darcy Graham, Finn Russell and Rory Darge all scored tries – but it was comprehensive enough to end any lingering title hopes and expose the familiar failings that have haunted Gregor Townsend’s tenure. Scotland haven’t won in Dublin since 2010, when Dan Parks nailed a touchline penalty at Croke Park to scuttle Ireland’s Triple Crown voyage. They haven’t beaten Ireland anywhere since 2017. And on this evidence, the wait will continue. Ireland dominated the collisions, winning the breakdown battle and establishing set-piece superiority that Scotland couldn’t match. Jamie Osborne, Dan Sheehan and Robert Baloucoune scored in a devastating first 20 minutes that established a 19-7 half-time lead. Scotland fought back in the third quarter – Russell’s brilliant solo try and Rory Darge’s finish bringing them within five points at 26-21 – but Ireland’s response was ruthless. Darragh Murray’s bonus-point try, created by the bench’s immediate impact after Andy Farrell made six changes simultaneously, restored control before Tommy O’Brien’s late brace sealed the win. “Ireland played well – they always seem to play well against us,” said Townsend afterwards, and that admission tells you everything. The statistics told the story: Ireland made 232 tackles to Scotland’s significantly fewer, controlled territory for long periods, and converted their 22-metre entries with clinical efficiency. “We’d close the gap, and then we’d let them back in through mistackles or mistakes off the kick-off. They’re all our doings,” admitted captain Sione Tuipulotu. Scotland’s attacking rugby was often brilliant – that 19-phase move for Graham’s try showcased their ambition – but they couldn’t sustain it for 80 minutes. They finish third in the table with three wins from five, which represents progress from previous campaigns. But Townsend’s record in Dublin now stands at zero wins from 11 attempts, and Scotland’s inability to beat Ireland home or away remains one of rugby’s great puzzles. “I’m proud of how we stepped up in the second half,” said Tuipulotu. “But I’m gutted. We really set our sights on coming here and getting a result, but Ireland were too good today. Ireland are deserved winners today.” Former Scotland prop Peter Wright touched on deeper issues: “Physically we compete against England and France, but for some reason, we cannot against Ireland.” The same old story continues. Scotland can beat anyone on their day – witness that stunning 50-40 victory over France last week – but they cannot beat Ireland anywhere, anytime. Until that changes, title challenges will remain dreams rather than reality.

Welsh fans can dare to dream

The wait is over. After 1,099 days, 15 consecutive Six Nations defeats, and a three-year journey through rugby’s darkest valleys, Wales finally tasted victory again. The 31-17 triumph over Italy wasn’t just a win – it was a cathartic release of three years’ worth of frustration, disappointment and pain. Aaron Wainwright’s two tries, Dewi Lake’s score from a driving maul, and Dan Edwards’s brilliant 16-point haul (including a try and an audacious drop goal) gave Wales a 31-0 lead that had the Principality Stadium shaking with joy. “It’s everything for us,” said captain Lake afterwards, his voice hoarse with emotion, and you believed every word. This was Wales’s first Six Nations home win since February 2022 – 1,491 days ago – when they beat Scotland. It was their first championship victory of any kind since beating Italy in Rome on 11 March 2023. The relief was palpable. “We hope that we have restored some faith in the jersey and into what this group can do,” added Lake, and the performance suggested genuine progress under Steve Tandy’s guidance. The defensive intensity that had been building through narrow defeats to Scotland and Ireland was maintained throughout. The set-piece dominance – three tries from driving lineouts in the first half – showcased growing power and precision. Edwards, who had been dropped after the France game for Sam Costelow, responded with his finest performance in a Wales shirt, darting through a gaping hole for the bonus-point try before landing that stunning drop goal from 40 metres. “You’re probably thinking ‘what are you doing?’ And then he absolutely buries it,” laughed Tandy afterwards. “I am overwhelmed with pride by what this group delivered,” said Tandy, visibly emotional. “I’ve always said it’s never been a question of desire, physicality or work ethic in this group. It’s just getting them to understand how far they can go with the work ethic and physically they’ve got.” Italy fought back with tries from Tommaso Di Bartolomeo, Tommaso Allan and Paolo Garbisi, but Wales held firm, defending with the hunger and hardness that had been missing in those opening hammerings by England and France. They still finish with the wooden spoon – their third consecutive bottom-placed finish. But unlike the whitewashes of previous years, this campaign ended with a win, with pride restored, and with belief returning. “This group has gone through a lot of emotionally tough things recently, whether that is on the field or off it,” reflected Lake, and that context makes this victory all the more significant. Welsh rugby remains in crisis off the field, with the WRU facing an extraordinary general meeting and existential questions about professional structures. But on the field, Tandy has given Wales something to build on. The foundations are there. The forward pack dominated Italy physically. Young players like Eddie James and Ellis Mee have emerged as genuine Test-quality performers. The 1,099-day nightmare is over. Welsh fans can dare to dream again.

A match too far for Italy

Italy arrived in Cardiff seeking to create history. Victories over Scotland and England had put them on the brink of something never achieved before – three wins in a single Six Nations campaign. But the brave Azzurri, who had given everything to shock England seven days earlier, simply had nothing left in the tank. The 31-17 defeat was comprehensive, painful, and perhaps inevitable after the emotional and physical toll of their historic win in Rome. Gonzalo Quesada’s side looked flat from the opening exchanges, making mistakes in defence they hadn’t made all tournament, losing collisions they’d been winning for weeks, and struggling to find the rhythm that had made them such compelling viewing. Wales raced to a 21-0 half-time lead through Wainwright’s brace and Lake’s try, all from dominant set-piece play. By the time Edwards scored early in the second half to make it 31-0, Italy’s dreams were dust. “Their heart and physicality was bigger than ours in the first half,” admitted Quesada afterwards. “We saw a big improvement from Wales against Ireland and we knew they had the opportunity to put everything out there to get victory. It was a big game from Wales and they never gave up.” Italy did fight back with three second-half tries – and had two more ruled out by the TMO – but the damage had been done. The day of recovery advantage Wales enjoyed proved significant, but there were deeper issues at play. “We used many energies in a long tournament,” reflected captain Michele Lamaro. “The meta that hurts most is the one at the start of the second half because it made our hopes of getting back into the match vacillate.” The defeat means Italy finish fourth in the table with two wins from five, equalling their best-ever championship performance but falling short of the unprecedented third victory that would have represented genuine progress. Still, this was a tournament that exceeded expectations. Victories over Scotland and England – particularly that first-ever triumph against the English in Rome – represented seismic moments for Italian rugby. Tommaso Menoncello, Paolo Garbisi and Ange Capuozzo all showed flashes of world-class ability. But consistency remains the challenge. Italy were brilliant against England, poor against Wales, and somewhere in between against everyone else. “We are a good squad, in a true process of growth,” said Quesada. “We must do attention to what we say, to how we communicate: Wales has a beautiful squad, a quality staff, and all matches in the Six Nations are tough.” For Italy, one match too far. But also, a championship that showed how far they’ve come – and how far they still have to go. Sonnet 4.5Claude is AI and can make mistakes. Please double-check responses.

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