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Chariot on fire as Ireland torch England's Six Nations chances in Twickenham

By PA
Jamison Gibson-Park of Ireland celebrates with teammates after scoring his team's first try during the Guinness Six Nations 2026 match between England and Ireland at Allianz Stadium on February 21, 2026 in London, England. (Photo by David Rogers/Getty Images)

England’s Guinness Six Nations unravelled spectacularly as they were brutally removed from title contention following a 42-21 rout by Ireland at Allianz Stadium.

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A week after their Murrayfield jinx had struck again, Steve Borthwick’s men leaked 22 unanswered points in a dramatic opening half hour with Luke Cowan-Dickie and Freddie Steward hooked before the interval.

And the misery continued into the second-half as broken England hardly fired a shot in their first defeat at Twickenham since November 2024.

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All of the flaws exposed by Scotland resurfaced with interest in a self-destructive error count, a lack of physicality in all areas but particularly in defence, senior players not performing and an absence of leadership.

George Ford drawing ironic cheers when he found touch summed up his afternoon and it was a grim way for England captain Maro Itoje to mark his 100th cap on a day when Twickenham sounded more like the Aviva Stadium.

22m Entries

Avg. Points Scored
1.7
12
Entries
Avg. Points Scored
4.3
9
Entries

Ireland were outstanding at capitalising on the favourites’ weaknesses as they registered their sixth victory in seven meetings between the rivals, producing an upset to invigorate their Six Nations after stumbling through the opening two rounds.

Jamison Gibson-Park ran the show in style with Stuart McCloskey and Caelan Doris among those playing strong supporting roles in a win that has relieved the pressure that was building on head coach Andy Farrell.

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Both teams began the afternoon knowing another defeat would remove them from the title race – and it was Ireland who rose to the occasion.

Six Nations
Henry Pollock is tackled – PA

In a sign of their nerves, England began by making a series of basic errors headlined by Ford’s kicking jitters as he failed to find touch with one penalty and then sent a second one dead.

A loss of concentration then allowed Gibson-Park to dart over from a quick tap penalty after Ireland had broken from deep and they again showed their opportunism by pouncing on yet another English error, this time at a line-out.

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Alex Mitchell limped off and the hosts’ woes continued when McCloskey easily brushed aside Ollie Lawrence and one phase later Robert Baloucoune was over in the right corner.

To make matters worse, Freddie Steward was sin-binned for playing Gibson-Park without the ball.

Six Nations
Ireland huddle – PA

Ireland looked like world beaters as they stormed over for their third try through a mixture of their ingenuity and the hosts’ crumbling defence with Tommy O’Brien finishing a slick move down the left.

Stirred on by their desperation, England finished a period of frantic pressure with a Fraser Dingwall try but just seconds after the interval Henry Pollock was sin-binned for not releasing and Dan Sheehan dived over for a simple finish.

Lawrence strolled over to round off a pleasing attack but successive penalties by Jack Crowley extended Ireland’s lead to 21 points.

England were completely rudderless and their defence parted for a fifth time with Jamie Osborne rounding off waves of attacks, but although they had the final word when Sam Underhill scored there was no mistaking the beating they had taken.

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Comments

3 Comments
G
Guy 59 mins ago

This team alone concentrates all the flaws of English rugby (which also has real qualities). The main thing is that when it comes to getting out of the game plan, they always do it too late.

u
unknown 1 hr ago

Credit to Ireland but England were so poor and off the pace it’s hard to know how good Ireland were. Too many handling errors, poor discipline, lack of desire, thought and leadership, panicked substitutions and general malaise. Not good enough and serious questions need to be asked of the England setup to arrest the rapid decline

E
Eric Elwood 1 hr ago

After we didn’t get a chance to play at all in Paris, I thought this match was too early and this performance might come against Wales or Scotland

Ireland had a lot of near line breaks against Italy. A mighty performance in attack and defence today.

If there was any space anywhere Ireland attacked only kicking when right. JGP was MoM but McCloskey was immense. If we get our scrum together and kick all our kickables we will be in good shape.

Solid chance to finish second now.

Really interested to see Italy versus France. Italy are a lot better than they look.

I also just wonder if the boys saw that incredible performance by the U20s yesterday evening. I was hoping they did because it was inspirational.


Note** Just to temper the result with the fact that both England and Scotland had big hangovers from last week. If you have consecutive hard matches on week 2 and 3 now it is significant.

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