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75 mins. It’s a task of containment now for England, which they execute with aggression. Meg Jones wins another breakdown penalty, this one on the French 22, by clamping on an exposed ball.
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TRY! France 17 – 28 England (Nassira Konde)
72 mins. France find themselves back in the 22 with driving carries being repelled in the 5m zone. The ball is flung long and left and after one bounce finds Konde for her second of the match.
The conversion is missed. Each of the French tries have been scored out wide which has stymied their chances to add to their total.
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KTG emails “If England goes on to win this match, I’d be more than a little worried by a Canadian team that demolished the most successful team in World Cup history. England have looked far from world beaters this day.”
They haven’t looked great, but their quality has been enough, and may continue to be.
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TRY! France 12 – 28 England (Ellie Kildunne)
69 mins. Harrison puts a grubber kick through which Menager attempts to play with her foot but it rebounds back to Kildunne who sets off on a run, steps one defender and sidewinders her way across the field to score.
Harrison converts. Game very much over.
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67 mins. France have more ball but they look increasingly tired and frustrated by England’s increasing tenacity in defence. The result is not much go forward and a lot of sloppy attempts at offloads that inevitably lead to a knock-on.
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65 mins. Harrrison finds touch and France struggle to secure good possession from the lineout, which again allows England to relieve the pressure with kick clear.
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63 mins. More possession for England from a lineout in French territory. They settle into the punishing short carries that inch them forward but they allow a gap at the breakdown that France pounce on. The ball is booted miles back into the English half.
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59 mins. The lead up to that try summed up the issues France have in the final quarter of the game. They are underpowered compared to England when the benches come into play, are two scores behind so have to score, while also preventing the Red Roses from doing the same. It’s hard to see them pulling it off.
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TRY! France 12 – 21 England (Abbie Ward)
58 mins. The ball is moved back to the middle of the field where England forwards replacements drop the hammer with their power carrying, eventually giving Ward the chance to crash over.
Harrison adds two.
Abbie Ward goes over for England’s third try. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The GuardianWhich causes celebration for her England teammates … Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The GuardianAnd the try scorer herself. Photograph: Andrew Matthews/PAShare
Updated at 12.08 EDT
56 mins. The benches are emptying and the scrum after this has France conceding their fourth scrum penalty of the match. Harrison kicks the ball to touch on halfway and England are soon into the 22 via a strong Dow run.
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54 mins. France’s confidence is raised, demonstrated by their running and handling as they take the game to England from the restart. They certainly won’t be dying with the music in them. They win a penalty and put it into touch on the England 22, but new hooker Riffonneau chucks it in on the diagonal to ruin the well-earned platform.
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TRY! France 12 – 14 England (Kelly Arbey)
52 mins. More short carries from the tap then the ball is moved left to the impressive Arbey who races and dives into the corner.
Bourgeois hammers a glorious conversion over from the touchline. What a kick!
France’s Kelly Arbey celebrates scoring their second try with teammates. Photograph: Peter Cziborra/Action Images/ReutersShare
Updated at 12.00 EDT
51 mins. From the lineout in the England 22 a maul is formed before Bourdon Sansus releases the ball. There are repeat short carries from the forwards in the five metre line which the white defence repel before drifting offside. France tap and go again.
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49 mins. The next period is vital for France’s chances here as they must hold a slowly resurgent England back and score next. The Red Roses help them out by dropping the restart and then compounding it by conceding a breakdown penalty.
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TRY! France 5 – 14 England (Amy Cockayne)
47 mins. Aldcroft claims a towering lineout on the French 22 that is quickly formed into a rumbling, terrifying maul. France scramble with little effect as it moves inexorably towards the line for Cockayne to do the honours.
Harrison adds two.
England’s Amy Cokayne goes over to extend England’s lead. Photograph: Andrew Matthews/PAThen celebrates. Photograph: Andrew Boyers/Action Images/ReutersShare
Updated at 12.00 EDT
45 mins. Recovering from that scare, France start moving the ball around halfway. It’s a similar story to the first half with the hands neat and tidy without a huge amount of go forward. Unlike the first half though they don’t keep flogging it to death, instead Arbez puts a sensible kick in to force Kildunne to kick to touch.
However, France lose their own lineout and England boom it clear.
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42 mins. England get at it quickly with Muir busting the line to pop the ball to Botterman to have run of her own. The platform in the France half is used quickly with the ball fizzed to Dow whose diving finish is excellent in the right corner. But celebrations are cut short as the ref calls the pass forward.
England’s Abby Dow touches down but after receiving a forward pass, so no try. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The GuardianShare
Updated at 11.53 EDT
Second Half!
France received the ball to get the final forty underway
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Let’s talk turkey, shall we? France should be two scores up at least given the territory and number of 22 entries, and they are hammering England out wide.
Aside from the opportunism for the Kildunne try, England have done pretty much nothing with the ball other than drop it while in a dreadful attacking shape. If it wasn’t for Meg Jones and Hannah Botterman’s breakdown efforts it would be much worse.
Having said that, the Red Roses are ahead and their wrecking ball bench will come into play soon.
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Updated at 11.29 EDT
Half Time! France 5 – 7 England
40 mins. England win the scrum and Harrison bunts the ball to touch to end the half.
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39 mins. Champon wins a jackal pen for her team that allows Arbez to find a good touch in the English 22. The lineout goes to the back but it’s knocked on by France.
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37 mins. Stop me if you’ve heard this one before, but France are up to the 22 and waste the territory; this time it’s via Botterman getting over the ball to win a jackal penalty.
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35 mins. Back come France and they are on the 22 in the middle of the park. Bourgeois looks right and sees Menager in a french farmer’s square kilometre of space and flings a MISS-THREE (?!) pass that she catches and runs in. But it’s forward! It just needed to go through hands as well! Another wasted opportunity which will no doubt be very important to the overall dramatic arc of the match.
France’s Marine Menager goes over but after receiving a forward pass, so no try. Photograph: Andrew Boyers/Action Images/ReutersShare
Updated at 11.31 EDT
33 mins. Menager gathers a fabulous box kick from Bourdon Sansus in the England half that creates the opportunity for an inside offload to Bourgeois to have a clear run to the line. But the winger delays the pass a little too long and ends up lobbing it forward under the pressure of a Kindunne tackle.
That was a 24 carat, massive block of gold of a chance for Les Bleues. Butchered.
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31 mins. England mince the French scrum to win a penalty and from the resulting lineout the Red Roses start the punishing carries. The blue defence holds them and eventually turn it over for Bourdon Sansus to boot clear.
Kildunne runs it back but more imprecision in attack from the home team has them losing the ball and ruining their own possession.
England have been pretty poor with the ball, it has to be said.
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28 mins. England form a maul of hideous portent for the French defence. It moves ominously forward in the 22 and the ball is released into midfield for Heard to juggle it before gathering and running over the line to ground. It looked like a knock on from someone and the ref checks it and agrees. No try, the ball was forward off Vernier then Heard.
France will have to defend a scrum on their own 5m line.
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TRY! France 5 – 7 England (Nassira Konde)
23 mins. Arbey, who has been one of France’s best players is away up the left touchline and into the England half. After the tackle is made the ball is worked all the way back to the right where Menager throws a one handed offload over her head to Vernier who is stopped inches short. For a moment, it looks like France have ruined the chance as the their forward huff and puff around the ruck, before the ball is finally released to the back for Konde to dive in.
Bourgeois pulls the conversion left of the posts.
France’s Nassira Konde scores their first try. Photograph: Andrew Boyers/Action Images/ReutersThen celebrates with her teammates. Photograph: Alastair Grant/APShare
Updated at 11.21 EDT
21 mins. A good kick from Arbez has France in a good attacking position that they work up to the 22. Arbez has a strong run up to the five metre line but Meg Jones is in once more to rip the ball away and it’s cleared to touch.
France win the lineout, but the ball won’t come out of the maul they form and England are awarded a relieving scrum. It offers even more relief when France have a penalty awarded against their front row.
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The officials for today’s match, by the way:
Referee Maggie Cogger-Orr
Assistant Referee 1 Clara Munarini
Assistant Referee 2 Kat Roche
TV Match Official Rachel Horton
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Updated at 11.00 EDT
16 mins. Meg Jones does some marvellous work and the breakdown to clamp on after another lateral attacking attempt from France. THe penalty is awarded, but in what has been the story of the half so far, the ball is knocked on by the Red Roses, this time in the lineout.
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14 mins. France settle into a period of possession, which sees them execute multiple phases that are contained easily by the English defence. There is a sniff of space on the right that Menager moves through, but as the covering tackle hits her the ball spills forward from her hands.
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12 mins. A smorgasbord of knock-ons from both sides means very little gets moving. We’re largely stuck in the middle third of the field.
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10 mins. A sequence of scrum resets has the ref having a word with both front rows to sort it out. Eventually, the ball is won and out from France, but they lose it one phase later.
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8 mins. France will comfort themselves that the try was something of a upstart counter attack rather than reflective of the early pattern of the game. On their next attack, Bourdon Sansus is caught high in the tackle around halfway and they opt to take a scrum rather than kick to touch. Bold.
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TRY! France 0 – 7 England (Ellie Kildunne)
5 mins. Bourdon Sansus puts a sensible angled kick long into the England 22. Or at least it would be sensible of it wasn’t Kildunne running it back, who steps off her left foot three times, each time beating a French defender. The ball is lost, but Les Bleues are untidy in a ruck around halfway and the England backs grab it and work quickly left through hands to Kildunne again, this time on the left touchline, who puts on the gas and races in from forty metres.
Harrison converts.
England fans roar on Ellie Kildunne as she breaks through … Photograph: Ben Whitley/PAKildunne celebrates as she crosses the line … Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The GuardianAnd then dives down to ground the ball and score her team’s first try. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The GuardianWhich pleases the England fans. Photograph: Andrew Boyers/Action Images/ReutersShare
Updated at 11.05 EDT
2 mins. The ball floats towards mid-way in the England half, but the gather is fumbled forward to give France an early scrum in opposition territory. There is nudge on from the blues and Feleu scoops the ball out and sets off on a big run up to the 22. They move it left to Arbey who busts into the red zone, but France are pinged for entering the ruck from the side.
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Kick Off!
Carla Arbez drop-kicks us into action
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Richard in Bath emails, “I know England should walk this but the hubristic BBC build up is really setting them up to blow it.”
There has been a lot of talk even from England’s usual rivals that this team is a likeable bunch. It’s this type of coverage that is slowly moving them towards the usual “Anyone But England” spot in people’s sporting sentiments.
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The teams are on their way out. England in their white tracksuit tops and France in just their shirt sleeves. Les Bleues are ready for business early.
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It’s a wet old day in Bristol, and it’s interesting to consider what that means for the game. England put on a damp conditions display for the ages in their walloping of Scotland in the quarters and their territorial tactics could make it even more tricky task for France in the rain.
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Pre-match reading
Ugo Monye gives us his take on the pressure England face as favourites
and read all about how Canada swept aside the Black Ferns in the other semi
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Don’t leave me here alone, send all your reflections, thoughts and rants on the email and I’ll have a good read.
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Teams
The Red Roses welcome back from injury the incomparable Ellie Kildunne at fullback and Hannah Botterman in the front row.
France are without co-captain Manaé Feleu and flanker Axelle Berthoumieu due to suspensions, and fly-half Carla Arbez steps in for the concussed Lina Queyroi.
England
Ellie Kildunne; Abby Dow, Megan Jones, Tatyana Heard, Jess Breach; Zoe Harrison, Natasha Hunt; Hannah Botterman, Amy Cokayne, Maud Muir; Morwenna Talling, Abbie Ward; Zoe Aldcroft, Sadia Kabeya, Alex Matthews.
Replacements: Lark Atkin-Davies, Kelsey Clifford, Sarah Bern, Rosie Galligan, Maddie Feaunati, Lucy Packer, Holly Aitchison, Helena Rowland.
France
Morgane Bourgeois; Kelly Arbey, Nassira Konde, Gabrielle Vernier, Marine Ménager; Carla Arbez, Pauline Bourdon-Sansus; Yllana Brosseau, Agathe Gerin, Rose Bernadou; Madoussou Fall Raclot, Hina Ikahehegi; Charlotte Escudero, Léa Champon, Teani Feleu.
Replacements: Elisa Riffonneau, Annaëlle Deshaye, Assia Khalfaoui, Taina Maka, Séraphine Okemba, Alexandra Chambon, Lina Tuy, Émilie Boulard.
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Preamble
Welcome to Ashton Gate for the second semi-final of the Rugby World Cup 2025 in which France and England will have a ding-dong to determine who will play Canada in next week’s final.
Roger Angell, the fabled baseball essayist wrote, “perfection is admirable but a trifle inhuman and that a stumbling kind of semi-success can be much more warming… there is more Met than Yankee in every one of us.”
No team has come as close to perfection as England’s Red Roses. The myriad stats speaks for themselves, none more so than their current 31 match winning streak stretching back to the previous World Cup final; and they haven’t lost to today’s opponents in 18 matches consecutive matches between the two.
Upsets are the lifeblood of sport. This is what really keeps us all coming the back; that notion and hope that you can never really be certain of the outcome, even when it’s pretty much as certain are eggs are eggs. A glimmer of that hope arises from the almighty scare Les Bleues gave the favourites in the final round of the Six Nations in April.
France may somehow stumble towards semi-success today to reach their first ever final, and this will bring a toasty glow to their fans and neutrals alike. England will consider an extension of their perfection plenty warming enough, thank you very much.
It is true that there is more Met than Yankee is each of us. The Yankees (or their equivalent) usually win, regardless.
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Updated at 11.33 EDT
