England’s young team plundered three tries and held off a furious France fightback to seal a dramatic 24-22 Six Nations victory in Paris on Sunday.
England stunned their hosts with early tries by Manu Tuilagi and Ben Foden to lead 14-9 at halftime, and France got to within two points before flanker Tom Croft ripped through their defense for the decisive score.
France center Wesley Fofana crossed in the corner with five minutes left to set up a grandstand finish, but England held on to secure their third away win of the tournament and condemn the World Cup runners-up to their first defeat.
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Stuart Lancaster’s inexperienced England still have a slim chance of retaining the championship if they beat Ireland at Twickenham next weekend and France overcome leaders Wales in Cardiff.
“It’s absolutely massive, the boys really dug in at times,” Croft told BBC television. “[It is] another great step for this side. We’ve only been together for this tournament, we’ve come on leaps and bounds.”
France were kept afloat by the kicking of Julien Dupuy, Lionel Beauxis and Morgan Parra, before Fofana’s late try.
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“It’s hard to come back against the English after such a bad start,” France No. 8 Imanol Harinordoquy said.
France manager Philippe Saint-Andre had changed his scrumhalf and flyhalf, with Dupuy and Beauxis taking over from Parra and Francois Trinh-Duc, in a bid to strengthen their kicking game.
The hosts had their first chance when Dylan Hartley was penalized for standing up in the scrum, but Dupuy’s penalty attempt went just wide.
England took full advantage of a pass by Dimitri Szarzewski that was intercepted by flyhalf Owen Farrell, who found Tuilagi, and the powerful center sprinted 50m to cross in the right corner.
Beauxis reduced the arrears with a 45m penalty, but the relief was short-lived as England won the ball from the restart and No. 8 Ben Morgan burst through the defense and offloaded to Foden, who had the pace to reach the line.
Farrell then missed a routine penalty that would have put the visitors 17-3 in front and instead, France narrowed the gap to eight points when Dupuy converted a penalty awarded by referee Alain Rolland after Chris Ashton grabbed Aurelien Rougerie, who had tackled Foden after he had called for the mark.
Amazingly, France were only five points down at halftime after another Beauxis penalty awarded against England for diving into the ruck.
Farrell restored an eight-point advantage with a 30m penalty after a Fofana knock-on was harshly ruled intentional 10 minutes into the second half.
Saint-Andre added fresh blood when he replaced Dupuy with Parra, Jean-Baptiste Poux with Vincent Debaty and Szarzewski with William Servat.
England were down to 14 men when Charlie Sharples was shown a yellow card for a deliberate knock-down.
Center Fofana, who had scored a try in each of his first three appearances, powered through the defense, but he failed to get the ball to the unmarked Parra 5m from the line.
Parra added three points after England were ruled to have wheeled the scrum and Beauxis kicked another long-range penalty to restore French hopes, but the hosts were stunned when flanker Croft popped up in the England backline 30m from the line and shredded the defense with a devastating burst of pace, before touching down.
Fofana’s try gave France hope and they went close to snatching victory when Trinh-Duc’s attempted drop-goal fell short of the posts.
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