France won back-to-back Six Nations titles after beating England 48-46 on a last-second penalty-kick by Thomas Ramos in a thriller for the ages on Saturday.
England scored their seventh try in the 77th minute and converted for 46-45. If the score held for a few more minutes, Ireland would have been crowned the champion.
But France pressed yet again with 14 men, lost possession, regained it, and earned two simultaneous penalties after the fulltime siren. Captain Antoine Dupont debated with referee Nika Amashukeli where the penalty spots were. Ramos, who did not miss a goal-kick all night, finally lined up his seventh shot from more than 40 meters out.
Photo: AFP
The fullback sent it straight down the middle in the 83rd and leaped into the arms of teammates, celebrating as back-to-back champions for the first time in 19 years.
“It’s in my top three, and not just third. I love moments like that,” Ramos said. “This title rewards our very strong start to the tournament. I’m very happy. It would have been so tough, when you think about the scenario, to lose it at home in the 76th minute.”
In a bewildering and breathless match including 13 tries and six lead changes, Ramos was the difference as France scored only six tries, four of them by winger Louis Bielle-Biarrey.
England put up their highest ever score against France on French soil on the 120th anniversary of Le Crunch but suffered a fourth loss in a single championship for the first time in 50 years.
“We are disappointed to lose but we showed the spirit of this team,” England captain Maro Itoje said. “You don’t want to go through what we have in the last four games but I truly believe we are going places and will be better for it. We knew we had to attack the game more, our conversion of territory into points had to get better and it paid dividends.”
Ireland beat Scotland 43-21 to move to the top of the standings earlier on Saturday, leaving the championship closer at the Stade de France as the title decider.
England came into the game under fire for their kick-heavy approach, but ran hard at France and was constantly rewarded.
Bielle-Biarrey connected with grubber kicks by Ramos and Matthieu Jalibert to get France away to 14-5. England drew level on 17 after tries by their wingers, Tom Roebuck and Cadan Murley, and Chessum’s first of the match.
England then led after an Alex Coles try, converted with a drop-kick by Fin Smith with players charging after the ball fell off the tee.
England scored four tries in the first half but suffered a major turning point right on halftime while leading 27-17.
Prop Ellis Genge was sin-binned for collapsing a maul — England’s eighth yellow card in the tournament — and France were awarded a penalty try. While Genge was off the field, France rallied from 27-17 down to lead 38-27.
England came back with tries by standout lock Ollie Chessum from an intercept and replacement back Marcus Smith for 39-38.
Then Bielle-Biarrey scored his fourth try of the match, his ninth in the tournament, breaking his own record of eight last year. They extended his own record try-scoring streak in the championship to 10 matches.
While leading 45-39, France prop Demba Bamba was sin-binned and the defense cracked when center Tommy Freeman finished a counterattack from a goalline dropout. Marcus Smith converted for 46-45 after replacing Fin Smith, who slotted only three of his six goalkicks.
Just over two minutes were left and France did not hold back, just as they did not at the start.
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