Angus Fontaine 

England defy Canada to secure 20th straight win and clinch WXV 1 title

England defeated Canada 21-12 in the WXV 1 final in Vancouver with the Red Roses extending their winning streak to 20 with a three-try comeback victory
  
  


England secured back-to-back WXV1 titles with a classy 21-12 comeback victory against Canada. It was a 20th successive win for the Red Roses and confirmed them as the hot favourites for the 2025 Rugby World Cup in August. In a tightly fought contest, England outlasted the home side with three tries and stout defence.

Canada pushed England in the 2022 World Cup semi‑finals, and defeated New Zealand to win the Pacific Four Series this year. With big WXV victories against France and Ireland, they entered this showdown as world No 2. If anyone could beat England it was Canada, and if it was ever to happen, it was now.

England, though, were on a march of their own. After an adjustment period in the Six Nations and an easy win against USA in the first round, everything clicked for John ­Mitchell’s side last Sunday as Jess Breach, Abby Dow and Ellie Kildunne ran riot with a combined seven tries in an ­exhilarating WXV1 win against their old rivals and the 2022 world champions, New Zealand.

Yet Canada dominated early, winning a penalty within 20 seconds of kick‑off and laid siege to England’s line. Despite six successive victories, the home side had lost their past 12 against the Red Roses so showed their intent by spurning three points to chase five. After three furious ­minutes of mauling, Justine ­Pelletier’s snipe from a metre out secured a 5-0 lead.

England bit back in the ninth minute when the prop Maud Muir ­finished a strong charge downfield by Alex Matthews and Helena ­Rowland slotted the conversion to give England a 7-5 lead. As the game settled, the teams traded attacking thrusts and fatigue became a factor, mistakes keeping both sides’ scoring in check.

Despite England’s 73% possession, Canada’s relentless offloading kept them alive. The Vancouver crowd roared as their team assailed England’s line late in the half. But too often they took an inside channel when overlaps existed out wide and each time England’s last line of defence held up would-be try scorers over the line.

Canada carried their ­momentum into the second half and when England’s Kildunne was shown a ­yellow card for a cynical offside play to kill another break, the Red Roses were in ­trouble. ­Canada used the advantage to rip through the middle with fast passes and runners and the captain, Alex ­Tessier, finished a brilliant movement in the 51st minute by slicing inside and scoring under the posts to restore a 12-7 lead.

England had won 49 of their previous 50 Tests, including 19 consecutive victories since their defeat by New Zealand at the 2022 World Cup final. Canada sniffed the upset and the crowd sensed it, too. A torrent of red jerseys poured into England territory and, as Kildunne returned, Bo Westcombe-Evans departed for a deliberate knock-on.

Canada continued to stretch England and when they finally won a lineout, having lost six in the opening hour, a try seemed certain. But another forward final pass under pressure squandered what might have been a 10-point lead. England cashed in on the reprieve, rumbling up the middle to send Sarah Burn over from a low drive.

At 14-12 with 10 minutes to play, Canada’s errors were mounting and England were taking control. A daring 50-22 kick got Canada out of trouble and back on attack but a rush of blood by Tessier to kick crossfield for her wing scuppered the opportunity and Canada’s frustrating inability to win lineouts helped the Red Roses to close it out.

Ultimately, the lock Zoe Aldcroft killed the party for the home crowd by crossing for England’s third try in the 80th minute. The 2021 World Rugby player of the year was later named player of the match. The eyes of the 16 best women’s rugby teams now turn to the 2025 World Cup, the draw for which will be released next week.

 

Leave a Comment

Required fields are marked *

*

*