
Again it was the former sevens squad members who dominated, Kathy Merchant (4 tries), Charlotte Barras (3) and Sarah Beale (2) scoring nine of England's 12 tries. England already had a comfortable lead of 29-0 at half time, but did not relax and after the break tore Scotland apart. Full RFUW report here.
However, the match of the day was expected to be at the other end of the M4, and so it proved. The contest for second place in the championship was a titanic one, and a highlight was due to be the battle of the kickers - Briggs vs Evans, youth vs experience.

However it was prop Jenny Davies who gave Wales the perfect start with a try in the second minute. Evans converted, and then added a penalty to give Wales a 10-0 lead after only 10 minutes. Ireland had barely visited the Welsh half, but as soon as they did Briggs then showed what she could do with a penalty to reduce the margin to a single score. Ten minutes later Briggs had an identical chance - but crucially missed it - allowing Wales to go in at half-time with the score unchanged at 10-3.
Within eight minutes of the restart Ireland were level with a try from Shannon Houston, but when a sinbinning reduced Ireland to 14 players Wales took advantage with pressure resulting in a penalty for Non Evans which she converted to give Wales a 13-10 lead. Ireland continued to look threatening, but Wales defended well and after a long-range kick from Briggs was missed Wales managed to hold on for another memorable win.
Wales are therefore assured of second place for the third time in four years, and also their first ever Triple Crown. Ireland currently sit in third where they will remain unless France can beat Italy by 36 points or more tomorrow. WRU Match report. IRFU match report.
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