Home Rugby England women’s rugby: Unbeatable Red Roses in ideal World Cup shape

England women’s rugby: Unbeatable Red Roses in ideal World Cup shape

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One player who stole the spotlight and perhaps inked their name on the cast list for opening night is fly-half Zoe Harrison.

One of four players to keep their starting spot from the win over Spain, Harrison did not let seeing her first conversion rebound off the posts to put her off.

A large part of England’s success in France came through kicking for the corner, dominating the line-out then rolling a maul over the tryline. Harrison’s kicking was pinpoint and lengthy, allowing the plan to function.

Holly Aitchison has been the main rival for the 10 shirt in recent years, but Harrison has definitely put her best foot forward in the run up to the World Cup.

Other spots are uncertain. Only one of the six tries was scored by a back – centre Megan Jones. Given their wealth of riches in that area, they should produce more.

And of course we have been here before. During the last World Cup England were on a long winning run and reliant on tries scored via power, they will need to find other routes in August and September.

There are players to return. Wing Claudia Moloney-MacDonald and Aitchison, contenders for starting spots in a first-choice backline, are still managing knocks, as is veteran centre Emily Scarratt, who suffered a head injury before her fifth World Cup.

Mitchell may be asking for daily medical updates on those three.

Among the forwards, it was all positive in the south of France. Following such a dominant display and some standout moments from open-side Sadia Kabeya, it will be fascinating to see if Marlie Packer returns to the back row.

The 35-year-old flanker is a Red Roses legend, but was not missed amid a suspension because of her red card against Spain.

As far as headaches go, these are fairly mild for Mitchell. A few things to tidy up, with a mind on those painful final losses to New Zealand, but these are minor script tweaks, not a full rewrite.

“It wasn’t all perfect, but you always felt England were in total control,” Rachael Burford – part of the only England side to win the World Cup in 2014 – told the BBC.

“England had to be patient, they used their kicking game at times.

“But coming out on top against a good French side – they were really physically challenged today – it puts them in a good position for the start of their World Cup campaign.”

When the 2025 World Cup final comes around on 27 September in Twickenham there is every reason for England fans to hope and expect their team will be there – and can extend their winning streak to 1,050 days.

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