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England talisman and Fijian illusionist top Nations Championship stats after round 1

Ben Earl of England. Photo by Johan Rynners - RFU/The RFU Collection via Getty Images
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The 12 best national teams in rugby have been pitted against one another in the new Nations Championship, and while rugby is proudly a team sport, individual credit is always due.

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The stats sheet will only ever reflect so much of rugby’s unique nuances, but it is an unbiased observer of the game and captures some of its key effort areas.

The RugbyPass stats hub is the place to find comprehensive breakdowns of each game and track who is leading the Nations Championship in each major category.

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Tries
2: Will Jordan and Cam Roigard, New Zealand; Jac Morgan, Wales

Wales’ lone British & Irish Lion provided the finishing power for his team in a first-up win over Fiji, while two of New Zealand’s biggest stars were each on hand to help their team to a tight win over France.

With his brace, Will Jordan moved into second on the All Blacks‘ all-time leading try-scorers list, now trailing Doug Howlett by just two tries ahead of round 2’s showdown with Italy.

Four players had multiple try assists in round 1: Wales’ Joe Hawkins, Japan’s Naoto Saito, New Zealand’s Jordie Barrett and Scotland’s Ben White.

Scotland and South Africa shared the highest try count among the teams, with seven apiece.

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Points
17: Takuro Matsunaga, Japan

The Japanese fullback claimed one try, two penalty goals, and three conversions in a famous win over Italy, leading the field in points. Two points behind Matsunaga was Cheslin Kolbe of South Africa, who was responsible for 15 of his team’s 45 points, thanks to a try and five conversions.

Interestingly, only one of the top eight point scorers from round 1 was a flyhalf, underscoring how try-centric the game is in 2026 and that kicking duties are anything but exclusive to those wearing the famous No.10 jersey.

Nations Championship

Northern Hemisphere
P
W
L
D
PF
PA
PD
BP T
BP-7
BP
Total
1
Wales
1
1
0
0
5
2
Scotland
1
1
0
0
5
3
Ireland
1
1
0
0
5
4
France
1
0
1
0
2
5
Italy
1
0
1
0
0
6
England
1
0
1
0
0
Southern Hemisphere
P
W
L
D
PF
PA
PD
BP T
BP-7
BP
Total
1
South Africa
1
1
0
0
5
2
New Zealand
1
1
0
0
5
3
Japan
1
1
0
0
4
4
Australia
1
0
1
0
2
5
Argentina
1
0
1
0
1
6
Fiji
1
0
1
0
0

Defenders Beaten
17: Jiuta Wainiqolo, Fiji

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Fiji’s winger owns the biggest outlier statistic from round 1, more than doubling the defenders-beaten tally of the next-best player, Scotland’s Kyle Rowe, who had eight tackle busts. Wainiqolo was in destructive form against Wales, also leading the field in metres carried (167) and offloads (5) — the latter category was dominated by Flying Fijians in round 1 of the tournament.

The Fijian team beat a total of 39 tackles, the most of any team, but tied England for the most penalties conceded and finished 10th out of 12 in points scored with 24.

Line breaks
5: Kyle Rowe, Scotland

Scotland’s attack was the most effective in round 1, scoring 47 points, and Rowe had his fingerprints all over the performance. Were it not for Wainiqolo’s absurd numbers, Rowe would have led the field in three categories instead of one. The Scotsman’s five line breaks bettered a group of four who made three, with that group consisting of Wainiqolo and fellow Fijian Salesi Rayasi, Wallabies star Max Jorgensen, and France’s resurgent dangerman Damian Penaud.

It was France that led the field in linebreaks as a collective, making 12 breaks against a New Zealand team which was second-best with 11.

Carries
21: Ben Earl, England

Shouldering a heavy load for his team, England’s Ben Earl made 10 more carries than his next-best teammate, George Martin. The No.8 converted those runs into metres, too, leading his side with 58 metres carried.

The top carriers list was dominated by loose forwards in round 1, with Australia’s Rob Valetini carrying 19 times, Italy’s Lorenzo Cannone making 18 carries, South Africa’s Jasper Wiese taking the ball into contact 17 times, and Ireland’s Jack Conan putting his hand up for 16 carries, a tally equalled by Japan captain Warner Dearns.

Fiji (148) carried the ball the most as a team, with New Zealand and France tied for second on 146.

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Tackles
28: Julián Montoya, Argentina

Another big outlier on paper, Argentina’s talismanic hooker completed 28 of 29 attempted tackles in round 1. The tally was 12 more than his next-best teammate, Joaquin Oviedo.

Scotland’s Rory Darge (22) and Australia’s Harry Wilson (21) joined Montoya in the 20-tackle camp, with the Scotsman also guilty of just one miss while Wilson recorded a perfect defensive effort.

At a team level, France made the most stops with 215 in a fast-paced game under Christchurch’s new roof, trailed by Wales (205) and Ireland (204).

Turnovers Won
3: Tamo Mayanavanua, Fiji, and Matt Fagerson, Scotland

Fiji’s imposing lock and Scotland’s fetcher had the busiest hands defensively in round 1, each stealing the ball three times. Five players, all loose forwards, trailed the duo with two turnover wins.

Scotland was the peskiest team, with nine steals in their win over Argentina, followed by Fiji with eight, and Argentina with seven.

Dominant Tackles
5: Yoram Moefana, France

France’s powerful inside centre left his mark on the New Zealand attack in round 1, making a competition-best five dominant tackles in a 17-tackle performance. His opponents weren’t far off, however, with All Blacks lock Sam Darry making four dominant hits and Luke Jacobson joining Argentine winger Mateo Carreras with three dominant tackles.

France was the most physically imposing team of the round, making a total of 16 dominant tackles. Italy followed with 14, and New Zealand was next-best with 13.

Nations Championship

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1 Comment
T
Tom 43 mins ago

Some of the England players actually put in really gutsy performances in what was a pretty abject defeat. I thought Ben Earl was excellent as were George Martin and Fin Smith.

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Nickers 15 minutes ago
This feels like a formidable All Blacks squad but the benchmark is perfection

So what do you suggest we do when we get fast ball against Italy? Kick it away as practice for when we have slow ball? 85% of our rucks were lightning fast against a very good forward pack, it will be the same again this week. Should Rennie instruct players not to attack? Then the same author will have something to say about that too. I find it so frustrating that after 2 years of barely being able to string two phases together and looking completely impotent on attack, and after just 10 days in camp together that people write articles saying - “yeah but what are you going to do in a completely different game in completely different circumstances?” - yes no kidding! If you don’t have fast ball and are getting hammered you will have to play differently. But what’s the alternative? Get super fast ball and have the defence scrambling as we did on Saturday then do a box kick? Engineer a mismatch then don’t use it? Every useless pundit who just repeats what other people say have been criticising Razors team for not playing “heads up” rugby, then after one game (!) when we finally do it they find a way to be negative about that too. You want players to play what they see in front of them, then criticise them when they do it and score 5 tries and leave another couple out there. I don’t know what rugby you have been watching over the past few years but it’s the opposite of what you say. Under Galthie France have built their game around long kicking for territory, counterattacking and off loading, not multiphase. I can’t think of a team that uses multi phase ball in hand play LESS than France. In the red zone, yes obviously, but they favour territory over possession. Ireland under Farrell pretty much pioneered super technical multiphase play and keeping the ball for huge phase counts. Regardless of the details, playing attacking rugby and not just endlessly box kicking requires fast ball. An article that suggests getting fast ball and the using it exactly how you want is bad because you won’t get fast ball all the time is unnecessarily critical. It is pointing out something that is compels evident.

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