France 48-46 England: Thomas Ramos' last-gasp penalty snatches Six Nations title win after 13-try thriller
England denied stunning win in Paris after Thomas Ramos' late penalty secures back-to-back Six Nations titles for France; England outscored France by seven tries to six but fall to fourth successive defeat in tournament for first time; England finish fifth in Six Nations table
by Tony Tighe · Sky SportsEngland fell agonisingly short of a famous victory in Paris as Thomas Ramos' last-gasp penalty saw France snatch a stunning 48-46 victory to retain their Six Nations title.
Ramos nailed a long-range penalty with the clock in the red to settle a 13-try thriller which England looked to have won when Tommy Freeman crossed with four minutes remaining.
An England win would have handed the championship to Ireland, who had overtaken France at the summit following their win over Scotland, but Les Bleus had the final say of an gripping final day to clinch a third title in five years.
- Ireland 43-21 Scotland
- Wales 31-17 Italy
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It took Ramos' kick to decide a try-filled epic, with Louis Bielle-Biarrey scoring two tries in each half and Ollie Chessum bagging a double, including a stunning intercept try.
England had recovered from two early sucker-punches by Bielle-Biarrey to dominate an end-to-end first half. They at one stage led by 10 points but a late penalty try, coupled with the sin-binning of Ellie Genge, saw it shaved to 27-24 at the interval and France made their man advantage count after the restart with two further tries.
The lead continued to change hands, with Marcus Smith coming off the bench to mark his 50th England cap with a try. It was easily England's best performance of the championship, a far cry from the insipid display against Italy, but it ultimately ended in a gut-wrenching defeat.
2026 Six Nations: Final standings
| P | W | D | L | PD | B | Pts | |
| France | 5 | 4 | 0 | 1 | 81 | 4 | 20 |
| Ireland | 5 | 4 | 0 | 1 | 38 | 3 | 19 |
| Scotland | 5 | 3 | 0 | 2 | -1 | 4 | 16 |
| Italy | 5 | 2 | 0 | 3 | -38 | 1 | 9 |
| England | 5 | 1 | 0 | 4 | 2 | 4 | 8 |
| Wales | 5 | 1 | 0 | 4 | -82 | 2 | 6 |
Steve Borthwick's side finish fifth in the Six Nations table having lost four games for the first time, yet with reasons for optimism heading into their summer Tests against South Africa, Fiji and Argentina.
France sported a light blue kit to celebrate 120 years of this fixture and they got off to a dream start when Ramos grubbered up the wing and Bielle-Biarrey beat Cadan Murley to the bouncing ball and scored.
Ramos converted but England's response was also immediate. Their half-backs dictated a sustained attacking spell which resulted in Elliot Daly sending Tom Roebuck over in the corner.
France 48-46 England - Score summary
- France – Tries: Bielle-Biarrey (7, 13, 42, 66), penalty try (40), Attissogbe (49); Conversions: Ramos (8,14,43,50,66); Penalties: Ramos (23, 80)
- England – Tries: Roebuck (10), Murley (19), Chessum (26, 51), Coles (34), Smith (57), Freeman (77); Conversions: Fin Smith (27, 35), Marcus Smith (58, 78); Penalties: Fin Smith (38)
England quickly undid their good work by switching off in defence as Mathieu Jalibert's lovely left-footed kick put Bielle-Biarrey in, but they hit back once again through Murley who pounced after Theo Attisogbe failed to gather Ben Spencer's kick in behind.
Murley rescued England at the other end by preventing Jalibert from latching onto his own chip and chase, but France extended their lead to 17-10 through a Ramos penalty.
England were crashing over the gainline with regularity and they began to dominate at the set-piece, with a powerful driving maul carving out a try for Chessum, with Fin Smith's conversion making it 17-17.
It was rinse and repeat for England fourth try on 33 minutes as they took the lead for the first time. A catch and drive earned them penalty advantage before Spencer looped a pass out wide to Chessum, who fed inside to Alex Coles. Smith's drop-kick conversion put them 24-17 ahead.
A rattled France coughed up another offside penalty, which Smith kicked to extend England's lead to 10, but there was further drama in the final play of a breathless first half.
Back-to-back penalties gifted France access to the opposition 22 and Genge was yellow-carded for dragging down an advancing French maul. Penalty try and England's half-time advantage cut to three.
France further punished the sin-binning after the restart. Antoine Dupont teed Bielle-Biarrey up for his hat-trick before a quick tap penalty from the scrum-half sent Attissogbe over in the other corner, Ramos converting both to give France an 11-point advantage.
But just when France looked to be racing to victory, up popped Chessum with a stunning intercept try, the flanker galloping clear from deep inside his own half.
England suddenly found themselves back in front when Marcus Smith marked his introduction with a wonderfully taken try, which he converted to make it 39-38.
Bielle-Biarrey's fourth try, from a Dupont kick downfield off a turnover, stung England but they hit back again after France had prop Demba Bamba sin-binned.
Marcus Smith took his time with the conversion but it wasn't enough, as Ramos held his nerve for the most dramatic of victories.
Borthwick questions 'debatable' Genge binning
England head coach Steve Borthwick speaking to ITV:
"Yellow cards have hurt us in this tournament - but I think it was a very debatable yellow card, like Henry Arundell's against Scotland.
"Luck has gone against us but we have to be better."
Borthwick added: "It was an excellent game against a formidable opponent so huge congratulations to France. Two very good sides went head to head.
"This performance came from training and working on the relationships in the team.
"We were disappointed by the last few weeks and wanted to put on a performance for our fans. We didn't win but I hope they can be proud."
Itoje: This England team is going places
England captain Maro Itoje speaking to ITV:
"We had a tough couple of games. We are disappointed to lose this one but showed the spirit of this team.
"In sport you often don't want to go through the experiences we went through in the last few games but I truly believe we are going places.
"We will learn from our experiences and be better for them."
Edwards: France's passion gives them an edge
France defence coach Shaun Edwards speaking to ITV:
"We had to dig in. We have very talented players and amazing athletes but they also love the game. It gives them that edge.
"I had a feeling the goal kicking would be the difference today.
"A great game for the spectators. Rugby at the moment, particularly in the Six Nations, is just phenomenal.
"England have an excellent defensive system and conceded more than us. [Shipping points] is frustrating at times but it's the way rugby is going."