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Red Roses

7 Mar 2020 | 5 min |

Red Roses defeat Wales in front of record crowd

The Red Roses made it four wins from four in the Women’s Six Nations after a 66-7 victory over Wales at Twickenham Stoop.

In front of 10,974 fans, a record home Women’s Six Nations ticketed crowd for England, Simon Middleton’s side were dominant throughout the match as they ran in 10 tries and secured the Triple Crown.  

Poppy Cleall powered over from close range in the seventh minute to open the scoring and added a second shortly after she drove in under the posts, before a wonderful individual score from fly half Katy Daley-Mclean as she broke the defensive line and rounded the full back to score.

A driving maul off the back of lineout just before half-time saw Vicky Fleetwood go over as England secured the bonus-point 26-0 lead at the break.

It took three minutes of the second half for England’s fifth as Harriet Millar-Mills hit a excellent line inside the 22 and held off the cover defence to cross, before Cleall then rounded off her hat-trick with another line break and the lock powered over two defenders – her 12th try in 40 Tests.

Cleall then turned provided as her offload out of the tackle saw Amy Cokayne, on her 50th cap, latch onto the ball and saw her momentum carry her over.

After finisher Mia Venner’s clearance was closed down, Wales were awarded a penalty try after Natasha Hunt tackled a Wales player before she reached the ball, which also resulted in Hunt shown a yellow card.

Despite having 14 players, England scored two more tries as Zoe Aldcroft capitalised on a loose ball from a ruck and burrowed over, and then Hannah Botterman went in under the sticks – captain Emily Scarratt converting both as she knocked over eight of her nine kick.

And with minutes remaining Sarah McKenna stretched over for a 10th Red Roses try and England's 19th win in a row on home soil.

HALF CENTURY

It was a milestone match for Red Roses hooker Amy Cokayne who played in her 50th game for England at the age of just 23.

After her second half try, the front row forward has scored 18 tries since her debut at the age of 18, which also took place at Twickenham Stoop, and put in another industrious performance around the park, busy in the loose and consistent when it came to her lineout throwing.

Flanker Harriet Millar-Mills also made her first start for England since the 2017 World Cup having come on as finisher in other games during the Six Nations following 22 months out injured, and capped an excellent day with England's fifth score.

There was also a debut as a finisher for 17-year-old Gloucester-Hartpury Women back Venner after being brought into the squad this week, as she came on at half-time for Emily Scott.

The Red Roses will now await details of their postponed final fixture against Italy, knowing they are just one victory away from sealing a successive Grand Slam title.

REACTION

Head coach SImon Middleton: “It was a great atmosphere and to have nearly 11,000 here was fantastic and then to put on a good performance which I think we did do.

“Zoe Aldcroft has been sensation all tournament with an old head on young shoulders and Poppy Cleall’s form has been so consistent and so high.

“Wales defended the edges really well and were the but it’s about finding different ways to attack and that’s the power outfit we’ve got in our game. It was great we were able to get the crowd on their feet like we did.”

TEAMS

England

15. Emily Scott, 14. Lydia Thompson, 13. Emily Scarratt (C), 12. Amber Reed, 11. Sarah McKenna, 10. Katy Daley-Mclean, 9 Leanne Riley; 1. Vickii Cornborough, 2. Amy Cokayne, 3. Shaunagh Brown, 4. Poppy Cleall, 5. Zoe Aldcroft, 6. Harriet Millar-Mills, 7. Vicky Fleetwood, 8. Sarah Beckett.

Finishers

16. Heather Kerr, 17. Hannah Botterman, 18. Sarah Bern, 19. Sarah Hunter, 20. Amelia Harper, 21. Natasha Hunt, 22. Zoe Harrison, 23. Mia Venner.

Wales

15. Kayleigh Powell 14. Lisa Neumann 13. Hannah Jones 12. Kerin Lake 11. Caitlin Lewis 10. Robyn Wilkins 9. Keira Bevan; 1. Gwenllian Pyrs 2. Kelsey Jones 3. Cerys Hale 4. Georgia Evans 5. Natalia John 6. Alisha Butchers 7. Bethan Lewis 8. Siwan Lillicrap (capt)

Replacements

16. Molly Kelly 17. Cara Hope 18. Ruth Lewis 19. Gwen Crabb 20. Robyn Lock 21. Ffion Lewis 22. Hannah Bluck 23. Lauren Smyth. 

FIXTURES

  • Round one: France Women 13-19 Red Roses
  • Round two: Scotland Women 0-53 Red Roses
  • Round three: Red Roses 27-0 Ireland Women
  • Round four: Red Roses 66-7 Wales Women
  • Round five: Date TBC - Italy Women v Red Roses