Key events
28 min: Arbez, in the England 22, is kicking for touch. For some reason she chooses to direct her effort to the far side of the pitch, to the French right, and predictably perhaps the ball is kept in by and England hand. Then it’s a knock-on by England and France have an attacking scrum.
26 min: France into the England 22 for perhaps the third time. Again they are turned over, this time Ward pouncing. Khalfaoui’s yellow will stay yellow. On BBC commentary Brian Moore questions if it was even should have been yellow card.
Try! 23 min: England 31-7 France (MacDonald)
I think we can safely say that England’s grand slam is secure. There is an indecent amount of space for MacDonald to claim a pass out on the left wing, jink around a half-hearted attempted tackle and touch down.
23 min: Yellow card for France! (Khalfaoui)
A high shot by Khalfaoui on Maud Muir. She is shown a yellow card and it’ll be a bunker review. Khalfaoui is in tears as she sits on the bench.
22 min: Jones flings an expansive pass off her right hand to MacDonald on the left flank. MacDonald pins her ears back and sprints into space. France manage to scramble and arrest her progress (this time, anyway.)
20 min: Vernier is back having passed her HIA. England get the ball in hand again and scorch downfield, straight down the middle, with a tremendous carry by Jones. She kicks ahead but it squirts a little bit long, out of play in the in-goal area.
Try! 17 min: England 24-7 France (Sing)
England now surge down the left wing. MacDonald finds Sing who kicks ahead. Bourdon Sansus clears for the visitors and England have a handy attacking lineout. England construct another powerful driving maul, sucking in defenders, then spin the ball left to right and Sing has another straightforward run-in. She touches down behind the posts and Harrison has an easy conversion.
15 min: France rumble into the England 22 with some more progressive phase play. They are bringing plenty of attacking threat. But Botterman, again, is all over the French possession: Bourgeois goes to ground about five metres out and Botterman is there, competing legally but frantically for the ball. An England penalty is the seemingly inevitable result, and the Bristol Bears prop celebrates passionately. That was class – again.
Try! 12min: England 17-7 England (Atkin-Davies)
That was nailed on once they won the lineout so close to the French line. It’s a textbook driving maul, that Simon Middleton would appreciate, and Atkin-Davies flops over the line. Tricky conversion missed.
11 min: More good work from Botterman, turning over French ball when the visitors were building a momentum again. All of a sudden England win a penalty and have a lineout in the right corner.
Try! 8 min: England 12-7 France (Sing)
Lovely score. Meg Jones creates this with England pushing into the French 22. She darts right to left and takes contact before reaching to neatly offload to Sing. The full-back has a simple task to finish with the defence hopelessly exposed. Harrison converts. Panic over?
Try! 6 min: England 5-7 France (Arbez)
That’s what they can do! There’s a couple of lovely offloads as France work through the phases straight down the middle. The England defenders look a bit taken aback, and there seems to be plenty of space for the fly-half to dance over from close range. Vernier is off for an HIA. Bourgeois converts.
Try! 4 min: England 5-0 France (Dow)
That didn’t take long. It’s great work from Botterman to take the ball aggressively to the line before offloading. That creates a bit of space behind and Harrison sends a grubber diagonally for the right-hand corner. Dow snaffles the excellent kick, skips around the defensive cover and that’s 5-0. Conversion missed.
2 min: Aldcroft claims the kick-off with customary authority. Teani Feleu then knocks on a high England kick around halfway. England have the put-in at the first scrum. The ball is moved right and Sing chucks a poor pass in the direction of Dow. But it’s taken back for another scrum.
First half kick-off!
Allez!
Unfortunately, we also need a quick blast of the relatively plodding “God Save the King.” C’est comme ça.
The teams are out on the Twickenham pitch! Rugby is about to happen, but let’s have a stirring rendition of the La Marseillaise first. There are a few emotional expressions among the French players.
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“A lot of the decisions came down to who’s most consistent in the skill sets that we need,” John Mitchell tells the BBC of today’s selection.
“[Number] seven has obviously got to follow the ball … You’ll see us tighten up France a bit at lineout time in the attacking half … we’ll try and get there quick, and go to the edge.
“It’s pretty certain who’s going to be around [for the World Cup]. We’ve created healthy competition. It’s just creating a demand on everyone to be consistent on what they deliver … I have to make some hard decisions, but these girls will continue to fight.”
Then he signs off with: “Attacking defence wins titles. We’ll see what we get.”
(I think he said “attacking defence” and not “attack and defence”. Makes sense to me anyway.)
A quarter of an hour or so until kick-off. Why not read Sarah Rendell’s report from England’s crushing win against Scotland last week?
The BBC’s Sonja McLaughlan tells us that France’s XV have 373 caps among them, while England have 682.
Katy Daley-McLean, on pundit duty, believes an England victory is not in doubt today. Confidence.

Andy Bull
There are two games to think about at Twickenham on Saturday, the one the Red Roses will play in, and the one they want to play in. The first is their grand slam decider against France, which kicks off at 4.45pm. The second – at the same venue, five months and one day later – is the World Cup final which, if everything goes as the team hopes at the Stadium of Light, Franklin’s Gardens, Ashton Gate and the other grounds they will visit between now and then, will be the next game they play at the home of English rugby.
Mitchell makes nine changes. The women’s world player of the year, Ellie Kildunne, is ruled out by injury so Gloucester-Hartpury’s Emma Sing will start at full-back.
Hannah Botterman and Maud Muir come back into the front row and Morwenna Talling returns at lock. Maddie Feaunati switches to No 7 with Alex Matthews slotting back in at No 8.
Natasha Hunt and Zoe Harrison are the half-backs, at No 9 and No 10 respectively, with Tatyana Heard also back in the centres.
France make two changes from the side that (relatively speaking) edged past Italy last weekend. Lea Champon starts for the first time in this championship, at No 7, while Charlotte Escudero returns on the blindside.
England: Sing; Dow, Jones, Heard, MacDonald; Harrison, Hunt; Botterman, Atkin-Davies, Muir, Talling, Ward, Aldcroft (capt.), Feaunati, Matthews. Replacements: Cokayne, Clifford, Bern, Galligan, Burton, Packer, Aitchison, Rowland.
France: Bourgeois; Grisez, Menager (co-capt.), Vernier, Arbey; Arbez, Bourdon Sansus; Teani Feleu, Champon, Escudero, Fall Raclot, Manaé Feleu (co-capt.), Khalfaoui, Bigot, Brosseau. Replacements: Riffoneau, Mwayembe, Bernadou, Zago, Berthoumieu, Maka, Chambon, Queyroi.
On Thursday, Mitchell insisted that Kildunne’s injury presents to concerns for the World Cup:
Sarah Rendell’s big match preview:
“England are on the hunt for their seventh consecutive Women’s Six Nations title on Saturday but their toughest opponent yet in France stand in their way, who are also targeting their own grand slam success.
“France have been the runner-up to England in the past five Six Nations and the Red Roses have beaten their rivals in their last 14 meetings across all competitions. Twickenham will witness something special whoever wins.”
Preamble
Pressure is a privilege, so they say, and there is pressure on England at Twickenham today no matter how dominant they seem to be. The Red Roses may have won 24 matches in a row, and 33 consecutively in the Women’s Six Nations, but France have won four out of four in this campaign and Les Bleues now stand in the way of a seventh straight title, plus a grand slam, for John Mitchell’s side.
England ran in nine tries last weekend as they brushed Scotland aside – the wing Claudia MacDonald had a particularly impressive day with two tries, and collectively everything fell into place for this richly talented squad. But Mitchell has heavily rotated the lineup through the tournament and not everything has come easily in England’s four wins. Italy and Ireland presented problems and now France will be expected to provide the toughest examination yet.
It is World Cup year too, so there is an opportunity for individuals to cement their place in Mitchell’s tournament plans – or play their way out of contention if things don’t go as smoothly as home fans will hope. Team news and more coming up.
Kick-off at 4.45pm UK time.