The Scottish Mail on Sunday

England see RED as they hold off late Wales surge

Tuilagi blots his copybook as England edge past Welsh to give themselves title chance

- By Nik Simon

ENGLAND’S Six Nations hopes are still alive but, like any good cliffhange­r, no one quite knows what will happen next.

Should France slip up in one of their two remaining games, England will have the chance to claim the title in Rome later this year, at a date yet to be decided.

This game ended in a red mist — with Ellis Genge sin-binned and Manu Tuilagi sent off — but the damage was done during an early power surge.

England were dominant for the most part, but Wales scored 21 second-half points to take the gloss off Eddie Jones’ evening.

Whether the likes of Ben Youngs, George Kruis and Joe Marler will still be around when England’s campaign resumes is still unknown, but they at least ended last night on a winning note.

The tweed army descended on Twickenham’s West Car Park where they speculated how coronaviru­s would affect their next skiing holiday. Some wore dust masks painted with the St George’s cross. Hand sanitiser was left out for public consumptio­n. ‘Don’t pass it on,’ read the pump stations.

But any regard for personal safety was put to one side when Dan Biggar was smoked by Tuilagi and Tom Curry in the opening minute. England have talked up the importance of fast starts and they practised what they preach.

They have an 80-per-cent win rate when they score within the first 10 minutes, so the odds were stacked in their favour when they broke through inside four.

More Tuilagi pressure forced George North to knock on in midfield — before England gained territory with an attacking lineout. Maro Itoje claimed the ball and Youngs drew the eyes of three defenders to create the hole for Anthony Watson to score.

Wales were overpowere­d from the start but English indiscipli­ne allowed them to remain in the fight. Skipper Owen Farrell risked losing the ear of referee Ben O’Keefe with constant protesting, with the No12 conceding a handful of penalties.

The snarling centre shoved North’s face when the Welsh wing knocked on at England’s try line, allowing Leigh Halfpenny to kick Wales’ first points. Marler joined in with the wind-ups, grabbing Wales captain Alun Wyn Jones by the genitals.

England were forced into an early change after Jonny May collided with Halfpenny, leaving Jones sweating over his decision to name just two backs on the bench.

But the introducti­on of Henry Slade added another kicking option to England’s backline and they repeatedly booted the ball into Welsh territory. Any attempt to run it back was met by crunching hits.

Farrell and Halfpenny exchanged further penalties as both teams were guilty of indiscipli­ne, but England found another key breakthrou­gh. With 34 minutes on the clock, Itoje claimed the lineout and England executed another strike move. Youngs sniped before slick hands by Farrell and Ford sent over Elliot Daly on the left wing.

Daly’s try took England’s first-half points tally to 20 points but Biggar struck another penalty just before the break.

Wales came out flying in the second half. Straight from the kick-off, they scored one of the tries of the tournament.

Nick Tompkins claimed the restart, feeding Josh Navidi 85 metres away from England’s try line. Navidi, via Tomos Williams, broke down field to set up Justin Tipuric for a spectacula­r score.

England settled the nerves with two quick penalties. When Tuilagi scored on the left wing to give them a 33-16 lead, the result seemed like it was cast in iron.

The hosts sent on their replacemen­ts but Genge was sinbinned shortly after coming on.

Tuilagi was then shown a red for a shoulder tackle to North’s head with five minutes left. England were suddenly down to 13.

Biggar looped around Hadleigh Parkes to score in the 78th minute and Tipuric grabbed his second in the final play to cut the gap to three, but it was too little too late.

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