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'Everyone is saying it will be an England and France final': How the start to the women's Six Nations is shaping up

By PA
(Photo by PA)

England captain Sarah Hunter is paying no attention to their tag as favourites for the Women’s Six Nations. Defending champions England go into this year’s revamped tournament having not lost a Six Nations match since France beat them in 2018.

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They are expected to reach the final at the very least, but Hunter insisted: “The biggest pressure comes from within ourselves and the standards and expectations we set each other. Not just from a results point of view, but from a performance perspective too.

“We want to be playing well and putting into practice what we are doing in training and that is a really key focus for us. Since the autumn and through January, the girls have been training immensely hard. That has been a big focus going into this Six Nations.

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Ex-Wales scrum-half Mike Phillips guests on the latest RugbyPass Offload with Scotland hero Ryan Wilson

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Ex-Wales scrum-half Mike Phillips guests on the latest RugbyPass Offload with Scotland hero Ryan Wilson

I know everyone is saying it will be an England and France final but we can’t pay attention to that, we have just got to focus on getting the performance right and hopefully that will impact the result, see us top the group and get to the final. That is our goal and the standard we set of one another. When you are in a bubble, you forget the outside world.”

England begin their 2021 campaign against Scotland on Saturday before facing fellow Pool A opponents Italy seven days later. Hunter hopes to face the Italians having been ruled out of the opener as she continues to build her fitness following a hand injury. Emily Scarratt will captain the side in her absence.

Scotland skipper Rachel Malcolm is confident her side can rise to the challenge at Doncaster’s Castle Park. “In previous years I might have thought it was a daunting start against England but this year that’s just not the way we’re thinking,” she said. “We are very excited to come up against one of the world’s best teams and do our absolute best for Scotland.”

The Six Nations was delayed due to the coronavirus pandemic and its format has been reduced. Rather than play each team, countries will be split into two pools and play two group games – one home and one away – before a finals Saturday on April 24.

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mitch 1 hours ago
The Wallabies team Joe Schmidt must pick to win back Bledisloe Cup

Rodda will be a walk up starter at lock. Frost if you analyse his dominance has little impact and he’s a long way from being physical enough, especially when you compare to Rodda and the work he does. He was quite poor at the World Cup in his lack of physicality. Between Rodda and Skelton we would have locks who can dominate the breakdown and in contact. Frost is maybe next but Schmidt might go for a more physical lock who does their core work better like Ryan or LSL. Swain is no chance unless there’s a load of injuries. Pollard hasn’t got the scrum ability yet to be considered. Nasser dominated him when they went toe to toe and really showed him up. Picking Skelton effects who can play 6 and 8. Ideally Valetini would play 6 as that’s his best position and Wilson at 8 but that’s not ideal for lineout success. Cale isn’t physical enough yet in contact and defence but is the best backrow lineout jumper followed by Wright, Hanigan and Swinton so unfortunately Valetini probably will start at 8 with Wright or Hanigan at 6. Wilson on the bench, he’s got too much quality not to be in the squad. Paisami is leading the way at 12 but Hamish Stewart is playing extremely well also and his ball carrying has improved significantly. Beale is also another option based on the weekend. Beale is class but he’s also the best communicator of any Australian backline player and that can’t be underestimated, he’ll be in the mix.

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