This is it: Wales v England
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We have the finale the neutral was hoping for. Wales are set to host England with a Six Nations Championship title up for grabs in Cardiff on Saturday.
Not since 2003 - via a 42-6 win in Dublin - has England claimed the ultimate accolade in northern hemisphere Test rugby. Do not expect anything near that scoreline this weekend as the English, who have a six-point cushion to lean on in the match, face a Welsh XV that has improved since losing to Ireland.
Despite being one step away from the clean sweep, it's somewhat surprising though that England are the bookmakers' favourites to win, especially with that aforementioned points difference in their pocket - a subplot that's set to play a major role in how the game plays out at the Millennium Stadium.
Twelve months ago it was Wales on the verge of the Grand Slam after claiming a Triple Crown in the opening rounds before Italy and France were defeated. It says something about the calibre of this outfit playing under interim coach Rob Howley that they are in the mix despite not firing on all cylinders.
If we cast our mind back to last year's meeting between these two, it was one of new beginnings for England as the likes of Owen Farrell, Geoff Parling and Ben Morgan proved they were Test players. That was an English side low on caps but oozing in potential as Stuart Lancaster's refreshing ethos was born.
Wales meanwhile were a side back from an impressive World Cup and looking set to become one of the favourites for the 2015 event following an expected dominant epoch in the north. They had talent by the bucket-load and a nucleus that included Sam Warburton, Dan Lydiate and Jamie Roberts.
The rest is history as they say as Scott Williams was the try-scoring hero at Twickenham.
So how do we expect things to play out this time around? Many aren't expecting a great deal, if any, tries at the Millennium Stadium due to the rather worrying fact for English fans that they have just one try in their last three games while Wales haven't conceded a single five-pointer since Round One. Add in the tension that accompanies a Championship decider means goal-kicking, combined with who best keeps their discipline, will be pivotal on the day.
Wales, to the delight of some, have this weekend been forced to employ the Warburton-Justin Tipuric double act due to the absence of Lydiate and Ryan Jones. Aaron Shingler was initially the man to fill the void left by the injured Lydiate before Jones stepped up admirably and will be sorely missed.
It's coincidental that blindside has also been England's recent Achilles heel as Tom Wood (now eight), James Haskell, Courtney Lawes and then Haskell again have worn number six in 2013. This week we see Tom Croft earn a start as Lancaster makes a bold call due to the healing Tiger's lack of minutes.
Farrell returns to the team after shaking off a quad injury but Ben Morgan remains out, with his strong running having been missed in an attacking sense. Chris Robshaw has been England's main forward threat with ball in hand while his offloading game and completed tackles are in the leading trio.
Dan Cole meanwhile is in something of a personal duel with Adam Jones. And with Lions coach Warren Gatland telling The Telegraph in midweek that "for some players in some positions there are key match-ups that could weigh up the [selection] decision one way or another", one feels that tighthead prop is under the microscope going into the tour. Of course, Cole and Jones are all but assured plane tickets but their battle is more about the Tests.
Neither player - or for that matter teams - will be thinking further ahead than the 80 minutes in front of us in Cardiff, however, and despite expected commentator and sideline analysts bringing up the L word, Saturday is all about Six Nations rugby. England have been in this nervy position seven times previously since 1990 and lost out in five of those and despite their points cushion, Friday will be a restless night's sleep ahead of this huge finale.
Ones to watch:
For Wales: Much will rest on the shoulders of Leigh Halfpenny on Saturday. With guru Neil Jenkins living every kick behind him, Halfpenny must take all chances created for him by his team-mates. Should he do so then Wales will chip away at that English advantage. Of course it will be worth monitoring how Justin Tipuric and Sam Warburton combine in the back-row while the decision-making of captain Gethin Jenkins is also key.
For England: It is worth noting that Dan Cole has been England's turnover king this Six Nations, leading the way with four in the overall standings. It's a real boost to England that he has this extra string to his bow. Consequently his performance along with that Lions side-note we have discussed makes him a key player this weekend. It will also be worth watching the unique quality Tom Croft adds to the party and Owen Farrell's return.
Head-to-head: The battle at outside centre excites as Jonathan Davies and Manu Tuilagi face off outside of two brick walls in the shape of Jamie Roberts and Brad Barritt. Davies and Tuilagi's battle will be one to watch, as will the lock scrap between Ian Evans, Alun-Wyn Jones, Geoff Parling and Joe Launchbury. Evans has been an unsung hero for the Welsh while the English lock duo's consistency has also been noted.
Recent results:
2012: Wales won 19-12 in London
2011: Wales won 19-9 in Cardiff
2011: England won 23-19 in London
2011: England won 26-19 in Cardiff
2010: England won 30-17 in London
2009: Wales won 23-15 in Cardiff
2008: Wales won 26-19 in London
2007: England won 62-5 in London
2007: Wales won 27-18 in Cardiff
2006: England won 47-13 in London
Prediction: Let's go for it going down to the wire. Wales by 6!
The teams:
Wales: 15 Leigh Halfpenny, 14 Alex Cuthbert, 13 Jonathan Davies, 12 Jamie Roberts, 11 George North, 10 Dan Biggar, 9 Mike Phillips, 8 Toby Faletau, 7 Justin Tipuric, 6 Sam Warburton, 5 Ian Evans, 4 Alun-Wyn Jones, 3 Adam Jones, 2 Richard Hibbard, 1 Gethin Jenkins.
Replacements: 16 Ken Owens, 17 Paul James, 18 Scott Andrews, 19 Andrew Coombs, 20 Aaron Shingler, 21 Lloyd Williams, 22 James Hook, 23 Scott Williams.
England: 15 Alex Goode, 14 Chris Ashton, 13 Manu Tuilagi, 12 Brad Barritt, 11 Mike Brown, 10 Owen Farrell, 9 Ben Youngs, 8 Tom Wood, 7 Chris Robshaw (c), 6 Tom Croft, 5 Geoff Parling, 4 Joe Launchbury, 3 Dan Cole, 2 Tom Youngs, 1 Joe Marler.
Replacements: 16 Dylan Hartley, 17 David Wilson, 18 Mako Vunipola, 19 Courtney Lawes, 20 James Haskell, 21 Danny Care, 22 Toby Flood, 23 Billy Twelvetrees.
Date: Saturday, March 16
Kick-off: 17:00 GMT
Venue: Millennium Stadium
Referee: Steve Walsh (Australia)
Assistant referees: Craig Joubert (South Africa), John Lacey (Ireland)
Television match official: Marshall Kilgore (Ireland)
By Adam Kyriacou








Comments
rugbylover says...
This time it is my head as well as my heart.
England.
Also, @ rugby_rockstar:- not so, it's poetic - Shakespeare might have penned it. 'We are one' is perfectly acceptable.
Posted 11:53 15th March 2013
rugby_rockstar says...
Tut, its I am one, not we are one. You can have we are many, or we are few, but mixing the singular and the plural up is just bad English.
Kinda explains the bad grammar on your road signs though.
Posted 11:33 15th March 2013
mayhem says...
@rugby rockstar,
Adam Jones a cheat? Im guessing any successful welsh player is too? and love him or hate him, Steve Walsh was only ref to emerge last weekend with any credibility.
@propmelsey, you are dreaming
Wales by 9
Posted 11:27 15th March 2013
Haldir says...
I agree with the PR prediction; the Welsh will edge it based on silly penalties the English pack is capable of making. Morgan would've made a huge difference to the English go forward. The centres will be fun to watch, as long as Wales actually move the ball around this time. The back row is where this'll be won.
Posted 11:18 15th March 2013
Heathy says...
England by 9 and will run away with it in last quarter as subs play a big part. You heard it here first lol.
Posted 10:51 15th March 2013
carpelone says...
Wales vs England??
Halfpenny vs Farrell instead.
England have a possibility since their discipline is slightly better than Wales.
Choosing a cynical / uninspiring attitude could prove to be wrong for Wales.
Posted 10:50 15th March 2013
rugby_rockstar says...
Whenever I think about this match I have a sense of foreboding that its going to be a right mess and a bit of an embarrassment for the IRB. Why do we have a light weight joker like steve walsh reffing the biggest game of the Six Nations? This match should have a NH referee who knows the players and who has experienced the tricks of the northern hemishere trade. I'm wincing already at the throught of Steve Walsh calling the first scrum. Its not going to be a contest, its going to be embarrising. Anyone with any experience of adam jones knows how he's grown into the scrummager he's regarded as today. you may say his canny technique is what makes him one of the favourites for lions tight head but one things for sure, he is where he is by sidestepping the scrum contest rather than honestly taking on the opposition. It's the cheater culture of rugby union, something that wins you IRB player of the year awards. It also screws up rugby matches. Then you throw in the england backline. To be honest england will lose if they try anything other than ten man rugby. Alex Goode!?! Mike Brown!?! turnstyle tackler Chris Ashton!?! Compare that Back 3to the NZ AUS ARG FRA WAL SCO SA IRE Back 3's and lets face it. It's sub-standard. Brown isn't fast enough to play on the wing. Goode IS EVEN SLOWER!!! Ashton is making Ugo Monye's finishing look good and that isn't a compliment. The irony is that the roof will be closed in the blind faith that the ball will be moved through the hands in dry conditions... no chance. if england are to win this match it willl be by getting possession in the welsh 22 and passing the ball to Manu Tuilagi. A part of me hopes england loses because the lesson learned make us infinatley more dangerous come RWC 2015. The other part wants to smash wales in their own back yard and show up their own one dimensional crash bag wallop attacking game.
Posted 10:50 15th March 2013
Welshy says...
I BELIEVE!!
WE ARE ONE!!!
Posted 10:46 15th March 2013
Propmelsey says...
England by 10 or more ...... Ashton over for first try ......
Posted 10:23 15th March 2013
Chinstan says...
Not sure why it's surprising that England are the bookies favourites? We had a bad day at the office last week but that does not a bad team make! This is going to be a very tight afair and think either side could have been labeled favourites, and lets face it thats all it is a label. Also everyone keeps banging on about Wales only conceeding one try which is a great effort but we've only conceeded 2 so not sure how that's a good reflection on anything?
This game is going to come down to who can deal with the pressure better and who wants it more. I just hope that, for once, we can have more passion than our Celtic cousins as history is not on our side for these occasions! Feel more nervous already than I did on my wedding day.
Posted 10:15 15th March 2013
ArmchairGeneral says...
Who ever applies a new secret strategy called "run AND pass" will win. And someone needs to tell the 12s if they have the ball in hand they do not still need to tackle their opponent.
Posted 09:37 15th March 2013
LondonWasp says...
every one in england is very worried about this game...
c'mon england!!!!!!!
PR, Guscott and Dawson all say that wales will win. pull out all the stops and give the welsh what for chaps!!!!
Posted 09:22 15th March 2013
jontheref says...
PR trying to please everyone, Wales win, but England get championship!
Posted 09:22 15th March 2013
dodgyrog says...
expect england to kick all day, and defend like there lives counted on it?. should be a great game.
Posted 09:16 15th March 2013
munkian says...
Cymru Am Byth
Posted 09:05 15th March 2013