2009 Six Nations Championship

2009 Six Nations Championship
Ireland win over Scotland on 14 March 2009
Date7 February – 21 March 2009
Countries England
 France
 Ireland
 Italy
 Scotland
 Wales
Tournament statistics
Champions Ireland (11th title)
Grand Slam Ireland (2nd title)
Triple Crown Ireland (10th title)
Matches played15
Attendance981,963 (65,464 per match)
Tries scored56 (3.73 per match)
Top point scorer(s) Ronan O'Gara (51)
Top try scorer(s) Brian O'Driscoll (4)
Riki Flutey (4)
Player of the tournament Brian O'Driscoll
2008 (Previous) (Next) 2010

The 2009 Six Nations Championship, known as the RBS 6 Nations for sponsorship reasons, was the 10th Six Nations Championship, and the 115th international championship, an annual rugby union competition contested by the six major European national teams: England, France, Ireland, Italy, Scotland and Wales. The tournament was held between 7 February and 21 March 2009.

Ireland won the Grand Slam and Triple Crown, only their second Grand Slam, and first since 1948, and first Triple Crown since 2007.[1]

England finished as runners-up, and also won the Calcutta Cup. The tournament featured the first Friday night game in its history, played between France and Wales at the Stade de France.[2]

Summary

The tournament began on 7 February 2009, when England hosted Italy in the earlier of the day's two matches. Ireland played France later that evening, with Scotland versus Wales the following day.

The reigning champions on entering the 2009 tournament were Wales, who won the Grand Slam and Triple Crown in 2008. The winners of both accolades in 2009 were Ireland, with Ronan O'Gara's dropped goal leaving the score in the final match against Wales in Cardiff on 21 March at 17–15.[3] Wales's Stephen Jones then missed a late penalty from just inside the Ireland half to leave Wales in fourth position.[4] Ireland's two tries in that match came when captain Brian O'Driscoll and Tommy Bowe scored in quick succession in the 44th and 46th minutes respectively.[4][5] Paul O'Connell received the Triple Crown and Ireland's captain Brian O'Driscoll lifted the trophy. It was Ireland's first Grand Slam since 1948, 61 years earlier.[4][6] This was achieved in the first Six Nations Championship since Declan Kidney was appointed as manager of the Ireland team, succeeding Eddie O'Sullivan who resigned after the previous tournament.[7]

Twelve tries were scored by Ireland throughout the tournament, and five wins left the team on top of the table at the end of the Championship with ten points. They opened with a 30–21 win over France at home stadium Croke Park on 7 February.[8] On 15 February, Ireland's second match was a 38–9 victory over Italy at the Stadio Flaminio in Rome.[9] On 28 February, Ireland beat England 14–13 at Croke Park and on 14 March, Ireland beat Scotland 22–15 at Murrayfield Stadium.[10][11] Then followed the Grand Slam against Wales on 21 March 2009. That game was attended by the President of Ireland Mary McAleese, who presented the trophy, and Taoiseach Brian Cowen.[12] Following the game there were tributes from politicians.[12] A civic reception for the team took place outside Dublin's Mansion House on 22 March at 16:30,[12] with 18,000 fans attending alongside Taoiseach Brian Cowen and Dublin's Deputy Lord Mayor Emer Costelloe.[13] 2,000 fans had earlier greeted the team upon their arrival at Dublin Airport.[13] Brian O'Driscoll described 21 March as a "sweet, sweet day".[5] The game was watched by 945,000 people in Ireland, the highest rating television programme in the country by that stage of 2009.[14] Former coach Eddie O'Sullivan was said to be "delighted" for the team.[15] Brian O'Driscoll was named player of the tournament, beating Italy's Sergio Parisse and Ireland teammate Paul O'Connell.[16] O'Connell was later named captain of the British and Irish Lions team to tour South Africa and containing fourteen members of the Grand Slam winning Irish team on 21 April 2009, describing it as "a great honour".[17][18]

Italy were the only side to not win a match in the tournament, suffering defeats by twenty points or more against, in addition to Ireland, France (50–8), England (36–11) and Scotland (26–6), while losing 20–15 to Wales. Scotland managed a solitary victory against Italy to finish on 2 points. England, France and Wales all managed to win three of their matches to finish level on six points but England's points difference of +54 granted them second place in the table. Their points tally was boosted by a 36–10 defeat of France and a 26–12 win against Scotland which sealed the Calcutta Cup. Wales' early loss to France and narrow loss to Ireland in the last game of the tournament denied them a second consecutive championship. Although Wales needed to beat Ireland by more than 13 points to win the championship, they could have won the game and the Triple Crown in the last minute of the tournament (as well as denying Ireland the Grand Slam) if Stephen Jones' 50-yard penalty kick had not fallen short.

Participants

Nation Home stadium City Head coach Captain
 England Twickenham London Martin Johnson[19] Steve Borthwick
 France Stade de France Saint-Denis Marc Lièvremont Lionel Nallet
 Ireland Croke Park Dublin Declan Kidney[7] Brian O'Driscoll[20]
 Italy Stadio Flaminio Rome Nick Mallett Sergio Parisse
 Scotland Murrayfield Edinburgh Frank Hadden Mike Blair
 Wales Millennium Stadium Cardiff Warren Gatland Ryan Jones[21][22]

Squads

Table

Pos Team Pld W D L PF PA PD T Pts
1  Ireland 5 5 0 0 121 73 +48 12 10
2  England 5 3 0 2 124 70 +54 16 6
3  France 5 3 0 2 124 101 +23 14 6
4  Wales 5 3 0 2 100 81 +19 8 6
5  Scotland 5 1 0 4 79 102 −23 4 2
6  Italy 5 0 0 5 49 170 −121 2 0
Source:
Rules for classification: The first tiebreaker is point difference from all matches, the second is tries scored. After these two tiebreakers the championship is shared.[23]

Fixtures

The fixtures for the 2009 Six Nations were released on 17 April 2008.[24] The France v Wales game on 27 February was the first Friday night game in the history of the championship, both under the Five and Six Nations format.[25]

Round 1

7 February 2009
15:00 GMT
England 36–11 Italy
Try: Goode 2' c
Ellis (2) 18' m, 54' c
Flutey 28' c
Cueto 78' c
Con: Goode (4/5)
Pen: Goode (1/3) 36'
ReportTry: Mi. Bergamasco 72' m
Pen: McLean (2/3) 34', 39'
Twickenham Stadium, London
Attendance: 82,000
Referee: Mark Lawrence (South Africa)
FB 15 Delon Armitage
RW 14 Paul Sackey
OC 13 Jamie Noon  73'
IC 12 Riki Flutey  60'
LW 11 Mark Cueto
FH 10 Andy Goode
SH 9 Harry Ellis  60'
N8 8 Nick Easter
OF 7 Steffon Armitage  62'
BF 6 James Haskell  34'
RL 5 Nick Kennedy  73'
LL 4 Steve Borthwick (c)
TP 3 Phil Vickery
HK 2 Lee Mears  55'
LP 1 Andrew Sheridan  60'
Replacements:
HK 16 Dylan Hartley  55'
PR 17 Julian White  60'
LK 18 Tom Croft  73'
FL 19 Joe Worsley  62'
SH 20 Ben Foden  60'
CE 21 Shane Geraghty  63'  60'
CE 22 Mathew Tait  73'
Coach:
Martin Johnson
FB 15 Andrea Masi
RW 14 Kaine Robertson
OC 13 Gonzalo Canale
IC 12 Gonzalo García  55'
LW 11 Mirco Bergamasco
FH 10 Andrea Marcato  29'
SH 9 Mauro Bergamasco  41'
N8 8 Sergio Parisse (c)
OF 7 Alessandro Zanni
BF 6 Josh Sole
RL 5 Marco Bortolami  55'
LL 4 Santiago Dellapè  76'
TP 3 Martin Castrogiovanni
HK 2 Fabio Ongaro  55'
LP 1 Salvatore Perugini  60'
Replacements:
HK 16 Carlo Festuccia  55'
PR 17 Carlos Nieto  60'
LK 18 Tommaso Reato  55'
FL 19 Jean-François Montauriol  76'
SH 20 Giulio Toniolatti  41'
FH 21 Luke McLean  29'
CE 22 Matteo Pratichetti  55'
Coach:
Nick Mallett

7 February 2009
17:00 GMT
Ireland 30–21 France
Try: Heaslip 34' c
O'Driscoll 43' c
D'Arcy 66' c
Con: O'Gara (3/3)
Pen: O'Gara (3/5) 3', 17', 78'
ReportTry: Harinordoquy 15' c
Médard 50' m
Con: Beauxis (1/2)
Pen: Beauxis (1/1) 76'
Drop: Beauxis (2/2) 40+1', 53'
Croke Park, Dublin
Attendance: 79,000
Referee: Nigel Owens (Wales)
FB 15 Rob Kearney  80'
RW 14 Tommy Bowe
OC 13 Brian O'Driscoll (c)
IC 12 Paddy Wallace  63'
LW 11 Luke Fitzgerald
FH 10 Ronan O'Gara
SH 9 Tomás O'Leary
N8 8 Jamie Heaslip
OF 7 David Wallace
BF 6 Stephen Ferris  76'
RL 5 Paul O'Connell
LL 4 Donncha O'Callaghan
TP 3 John Hayes
HK 2 Jerry Flannery  49'
LP 1 Marcus Horan
Replacements:
HK 16 Rory Best  49'
PR 17 Tom Court
LK 18 Malcolm O'Kelly
FL 19 Denis Leamy  76'
SH 20 Peter Stringer
CE 21 Gordon D'Arcy  63'
FB 22 Geordan Murphy  80'
Coach:
Declan Kidney
FB 15 Clément Poitrenaud  79'
RW 14 Julien Malzieu
OC 13 Florian Fritz  80'
IC 12 Yannick Jauzion
LW 11 Maxime Médard
FH 10 Lionel Beauxis
SH 9 Sébastien Tillous-Borde  68'
N8 8 Imanol Harinordoquy  71'
OF 7 Fulgence Ouedraogo
BF 6 Thierry Dusautoir
RL 5 Sébastien Chabal  62'
LL 4 Lionel Nallet (c)
TP 3 Benoît Lecouls  40'
HK 2 Dimitri Szarzewski  58'
LP 1 Lionel Faure
Replacements:
HK 16 Benjamin Kayser  58'
PR 17 Nicolas Mas  40'
LK 18 Romain Millo-Chluski  62'
N8 19 Louis Picamoles  71'
SH 20 Morgan Parra  68'
CE 21 Benoît Baby  80'
WG 22 Cédric Heymans  79'
Coach:
Marc Lièvremont

8 February 2009
15:00 GMT
Scotland 13–26 Wales
Try: M. Evans 69' c
Con: Paterson (1/1)
Pen: Paterson (2/2) 32', 51'
ReportTry: Shanklin 22' m
A. W. Jones 29' m
Halfpenny 41' m
S. Williams 58' m
Pen: S. Jones (2/3) 13', 40+1'
Murrayfield Stadium, Edinburgh
Attendance: 63,000
Referee: Alain Rolland (Ireland)
FB 15 Hugo Southwell
RW 14 Simon Webster  21'
OC 13 Ben Cairns  52'
IC 12 Graeme Morrison
LW 11 Sean Lamont
FH 10 Phil Godman
SH 9 Mike Blair (c)  62'
N8 8 Simon Taylor
OF 7 John Barclay  56'
BF 6 Ally Hogg  73'
RL 5 Jim Hamilton
LL 4 Jason White
TP 3 Geoff Cross  20'  31'
HK 2 Ross Ford  62'
LP 1 Allan Jacobsen
Replacements:
HK 16 Dougie Hall  62'
PR 17 Alasdair Dickinson  31'
LK 18 Kelly Brown  73'
FL 19 Scott Gray  56'
SH 20 Chris Cusiter  62'
WG 21 Chris Paterson  21'
CE 22 Max Evans  52'
Coach:
Frank Hadden
FB 15 Lee Byrne
RW 14 Leigh Halfpenny
OC 13 Tom Shanklin
IC 12 Jamie Roberts  60'
LW 11 Shane Williams  72'
FH 10 Stephen Jones  63'
SH 9 Mike Phillips  60'
N8 8 Andy Powell
OF 7 Martyn Williams (c)  66'
BF 6 Dafydd Jones
RL 5 Alun Wyn Jones
LL 4 Ian Gough  63'
TP 3 Adam Jones
HK 2 Matthew Rees  63'
LP 1 Gethin Jenkins  63'
Replacements:
HK 16 Huw Bennett  63'
PR 17 John Yapp  63'
LK 18 Luke Charteris  63'
FL 19 Bradley Davies  72'
SH 20 Dwayne Peel  60'
FH 21 James Hook  63'
CE 22 Andrew Bishop  60'
Coach:
Warren Gatland

Round 2

14 February 2009
16:00 CET
France 22–13 Scotland
Try: Ouedraogo 46' c
Con: Beauxis (1/1)
Pen: Beauxis (5/7) 23', 38', 53', 60', 73'
ReportTry: T. Evans 69' c
Con: Paterson (1/1)
Pen: Godman (2/3) 35', 49'
Stade de France, Saint-Denis
Attendance: 79,600
Referee: George Clancy (Ireland)
FB 15 Clément Poitrenaud
RW 14 Maxime Médard
OC 13 Benoît Baby  59'
IC 12 Yannick Jauzion
LW 11 Cédric Heymans
FH 10 Lionel Beauxis
SH 9 Sébastien Tillous-Borde  67'
N8 8 Imanol Harinordoquy  70'
OF 7 Fulgence Ouedraogo
BF 6 Thierry Dusautoir
RL 5 Lionel Nallet (c)
LL 4 Romain Millo-Chluski  59'
TP 3 Nicolas Mas  41'
HK 2 Dimitri Szarzewski  55'
LP 1 Fabien Barcella
Replacements:
HK 16 Benjamin Kayser  55'
PR 17 Renaud Boyoud  41'
LK 18 Sébastien Chabal  59'
N8 19 Louis Picamoles  70'
SH 20 Morgan Parra  67'
CE 21 Maxime Mermoz  59'
WG 22 Julien Malzieu
Coach:
Marc Lièvremont
FB 15 Hugo Southwell
RW 14 Simon Danielli  66'
OC 13 Max Evans
IC 12 Graeme Morrison  73'
LW 11 Thom Evans
FH 10 Phil Godman
SH 9 Mike Blair (c)  73'
N8 8 Simon Taylor
OF 7 John Barclay
BF 6 Alasdair Strokosch
RL 5 Jim Hamilton  18'
LL 4 Jason White
TP 3 Alasdair Dickinson  46'
HK 2 Ross Ford  66'
LP 1 Allan Jacobsen
Replacements:
HK 16 Dougie Hall  66'
PR 17 Moray Low  46'
LK 18 Kelly Brown  18'
FL 19 Scott Gray
SH 20 Chris Cusiter  73'
WG 21 Chris Paterson  66'
CE 22 Nick De Luca  73'
Coach:
Frank Hadden

14 February 2009
17:30 GMT
Wales 23–15 England
Try: Halfpenny 44' m
Pen: S. Jones (5/5) 4', 16', 43', 54', 72'
Halfpenny 22' (1/2)
ReportTry: Sackey 24' m
D. Armitage 57' c
Con: Flood (1/1)
Drop: Goode (1/1) 30'
Millennium Stadium, Cardiff
Attendance: 73,000
Referee: Jonathan Kaplan (South Africa)
FB 15 Lee Byrne
RW 14 Leigh Halfpenny
OC 13 Tom Shanklin
IC 12 Jamie Roberts
LW 11 Mark Jones
FH 10 Stephen Jones
SH 9 Mike Phillips  73'
N8 8 Andy Powell  60'
OF 7 Martyn Williams
BF 6 Ryan Jones (c)
RL 5 Alun Wyn Jones
LL 4 Ian Gough
TP 3 Adam Jones
HK 2 Matthew Rees  66'
LP 1 Gethin Jenkins
Replacements:
HK 16 Huw Bennett  66'
PR 17 John Yapp
LK 18 Luke Charteris
FL 19 Dafydd Jones  60'
SH 20 Dwayne Peel  73'
FH 21 James Hook
CE 22 Andrew Bishop
Coach:
Warren Gatland
FB 15 Delon Armitage
RW 14 Paul Sackey  65'
OC 13 Mike Tindall  14'
IC 12 Riki Flutey
LW 11 Mark Cueto
FH 10 Andy Goode  41'  53'
SH 9 Harry Ellis
N8 8 Nick Easter
OF 7 Joe Worsley
BF 6 James Haskell  54'
RL 5 Nick Kennedy  55'
LL 4 Steve Borthwick (c)
TP 3 Phil Vickery  65'
HK 2 Lee Mears  65'
LP 1 Andrew Sheridan
Replacements:
HK 16 Dylan Hartley  65'
PR 17 Julian White  65'
LK 18 Tom Croft  55'
FL 19 Luke Narraway  54'
SH 20 Paul Hodgson
FH 21 Toby Flood  53'
CE 22 Mathew Tait  65'
Coach:
Martin Johnson

15 February 2009
15:30 CET
Italy 9–38 Ireland
Pen: McLean (3/4) 5', 16', 24'ReportTry: Bowe 19' c
Fitzgerald (2) 40' c, 76' c
D. Wallace 48' c
O'Driscoll 78' c
Con: O'Gara (4/4)
Kearney (1/1)
Pen: O'Gara (1/1) 50'
Stadio Flaminio, Rome
Attendance: 30,000
Referee: Chris White (England)
FB 15 Andrea Masi  1'
RW 14 Kaine Robertson  20'
OC 13 Gonzalo Canale  48'
IC 12 Mirco Bergamasco
LW 11 Matteo Pratichetti
FH 10 Luke McLean  72'
SH 9 Paul Griffen
N8 8 Sergio Parisse (c)
OF 7 Mauro Bergamasco
BF 6 Alessandro Zanni
RL 5 Tommaso Reato  48'
LL 4 Santiago Dellapè  48'
TP 3 Martin Castrogiovanni  33'
HK 2 Fabio Ongaro  41'
LP 1 Salvatore Perugini  36'
Replacements:
HK 16 Carlo Festuccia  41'
PR 17 Carlos Nieto  33'
LK 18 Carlo Del Fava  48'
FL 19 Josh Sole  48'
SH 20 Giulio Toniolatti  72'
FH 21 Gonzalo García  48'
CE 22 Andrea Bacchetti  20'
Coach:
Nick Mallett
FB 15 Rob Kearney
RW 14 Tommy Bowe
OC 13 Brian O'Driscoll (c)
IC 12 Paddy Wallace  41'
LW 11 Luke Fitzgerald
FH 10 Ronan O'Gara  32'
SH 9 Tomás O'Leary  72'
N8 8 Jamie Heaslip
OF 7 David Wallace
BF 6 Stephen Ferris  62'
RL 5 Paul O'Connell  77'
LL 4 Donncha O'Callaghan
TP 3 John Hayes
HK 2 Jerry Flannery  60'
LP 1 Marcus Horan  55'
Replacements:
HK 16 Rory Best  60'
PR 17 Tom Court  55'
LK 18 Malcolm O'Kelly  77'
FL 19 Denis Leamy  62'
SH 20 Peter Stringer  72'
CE 21 Gordon D'Arcy  41'
FB 22 Geordan Murphy
Coach:
Declan Kidney

Round 3

27 February 2009
21:00 CET
France 21–16 Wales
Try: Dusautoir 40' c
Heymans 53' m
Con: Parra (1/2)
Pen: Parra (3/5) 6', 35', 70'
ReportTry: Byrne 24' c
Con: S. Jones (1/1)
Pen: S. Jones (2/2) 3', 9'
Hook (1/1) 73'
Stade de France, Saint-Denis
Attendance: 80,000
Referee: Mark Lawrence (South Africa)
FB 15 Maxime Médard
RW 14 Julien Malzieu
OC 13 Mathieu Bastareaud
IC 12 Yannick Jauzion
LW 11 Cédric Heymans
FH 10 Benoît Baby  37'
SH 9 Morgan Parra  72'
N8 8 Imanol Harinordoquy
OF 7 Fulgence Ouedraogo
BF 6 Thierry Dusautoir
RL 5 Sébastien Chabal  57'
LL 4 Lionel Nallet (c)
TP 3 Sylvain Marconnet  57'
HK 2 Dimitri Szarzewski  65'
LP 1 Fabien Barcella
Replacements:
HK 16 Benjamin Kayser  65'
PR 17 Thomas Domingo  57'
LK 18 Romain Millo-Chluski  57'
N8 19 Louis Picamoles
SH 20 Sébastien Tillous-Borde  72'
FH 21 François Trinh-Duc  37'
FB 22 Clément Poitrenaud
Coach:
Marc Lièvremont
FB 15 Lee Byrne
RW 14 Leigh Halfpenny
OC 13 Tom Shanklin
IC 12 Jamie Roberts  55'
LW 11 Shane Williams
FH 10 Stephen Jones  70'
SH 9 Mike Phillips  55'
N8 8 Andy Powell  62'
OF 7 Martyn Williams
BF 6 Ryan Jones (c)
RL 5 Alun Wyn Jones
LL 4 Ian Gough  71'
TP 3 Adam Jones
HK 2 Matthew Rees  55'
LP 1 Gethin Jenkins
Replacements:
HK 16 Huw Bennett  55'
PR 17 John Yapp
LK 18 Luke Charteris  71'
FL 19 Dafydd Jones  62'
SH 20 Dwayne Peel  55'
FH 21 James Hook  70'
CE 22 Gavin Henson  55'
Coach:
Warren Gatland

28 February 2009
15:00 GMT
Scotland 26–6 Italy
Try: Danielli 35' c
Gray 64' c
Con: Godman (1/1)
Paterson (1/1)
Pen: Paterson (3/3) 5', 13', 68'
Godman (1/2) 31'
ReportPen: McLean (1/1) 55'
Drop: Parisse (1/1) 22'
Murrayfield Stadium, Edinburgh
Attendance: 65,000
Referee: Nigel Owens (Wales)
FB 15 Hugo Southwell  47'
RW 14 Simon Danielli
OC 13 Max Evans
IC 12 Graeme Morrison  67'
LW 11 Thom Evans
FH 10 Phil Godman
SH 9 Mike Blair (c)  55'
N8 8 Simon Taylor
OF 7 John Barclay  56'
BF 6 Alasdair Strokosch
RL 5 Alastair Kellock
LL 4 Jason White
TP 3 Euan Murray  67'
HK 2 Ross Ford  53'
LP 1 Allan Jacobsen  68'
Replacements:
HK 16 Dougie Hall  53'
PR 17 Alasdair Dickinson  67'
LK 18 Kelly Brown  68'
FL 19 Scott Gray  56'
SH 20 Chris Cusiter  55'
WG 21 Chris Paterson  47'
CE 22 Nick De Luca  67'
Coach:
Frank Hadden
FB 15 Andrea Marcato  47'
RW 14 Mirco Bergamasco
OC 13 Gonzalo Canale
IC 12 Gonzalo García  3'
LW 11 Matteo Pratichetti
FH 10 Luke McLean
SH 9 Paul Griffen  55'
N8 8 Sergio Parisse (c)
OF 7 Mauro Bergamasco
BF 6 Alessandro Zanni
RL 5 Marco Bortolami  77'
LL 4 Santiago Dellapè  57'
TP 3 Martin Castrogiovanni  58'
HK 2 Leonardo Ghiraldini  58'
LP 1 Salvatore Perugini
Replacements:
HK 16 Franco Sbaraglini  58'
PR 17 Carlos Nieto  58'
LK 18 Carlo Del Fava  57'
FL 19 Josh Sole  77'
SH 20 Pablo Canavosio  55'
CE 21 Andrea Bacchetti  3'
WG 22 Giulio Rubini  47'
Coach:
Nick Mallett

28 February 2009
17:30 GMT
Ireland 14–13 England
Try: O'Driscoll 57' m
Pen: O'Gara (2/5) 27', 71'
Drop: O'Driscoll (1/2) 46'
ReportTry: D. Armitage 78' c
Con: Goode (1/1)
Pen: Flood (1/1) 38'
D. Armitage (1/1) 64'
Croke Park, Dublin
Attendance: 82,000
Referee: Craig Joubert (South Africa)
FB 15 Rob Kearney
RW 14 Tommy Bowe
OC 13 Brian O'Driscoll (c)
IC 12 Paddy Wallace
LW 11 Luke Fitzgerald
FH 10 Ronan O'Gara
SH 9 Tomás O'Leary  65'
N8 8 Jamie Heaslip  68'
OF 7 David Wallace
BF 6 Stephen Ferris
RL 5 Paul O'Connell
LL 4 Donncha O'Callaghan
TP 3 John Hayes
HK 2 Jerry Flannery  68'
LP 1 Marcus Horan
Replacements:
HK 16 Rory Best  68'
PR 17 Tom Court
LK 18 Mick O'Driscoll
FL 19 Denis Leamy  68'
SH 20 Peter Stringer  65'
CE 21 Gordon D'Arcy
FB 22 Geordan Murphy
Coach:
Declan Kidney
FB 15 Delon Armitage
RW 14 Paul Sackey  57'
OC 13 Mike Tindall
IC 12 Riki Flutey
LW 11 Mark Cueto
FH 10 Toby Flood  66'
SH 9 Harry Ellis  58'
N8 8 Nick Easter  76'
OF 7 Joe Worsley
BF 6 James Haskell
RL 5 Nick Kennedy  69'
LL 4 Steve Borthwick (c)
TP 3 Phil Vickery  55'
HK 2 Lee Mears  66'
LP 1 Andrew Sheridan  77'
Replacements:
HK 16 Dylan Hartley  66'
PR 17 Julian White  77'
LK 18 Tom Croft  69'
FL 19 Luke Narraway  76'
SH 20 Danny Care  69'  58'
FH 21 Andy Goode  66'
CE 22 Mathew Tait  57'
Coach:
Martin Johnson

Notes:

Round 4

14 March 2009
16:00 CET
Italy 15–20 Wales
Pen: Marcato (5/5) 5', 31', 34', 57', 70'ReportTry: S. Williams 25' c
Shanklin 71' c
Con: Hook (2/2)
Pen: Hook (2/3) 59', 63'
Stadio Flaminio, Rome
Referee: Alan Lewis (Ireland)
FB 15 Andrea Marcato  75'
RW 14 Giulio Rubini
OC 13 Gonzalo Canale
IC 12 Mirco Bergamasco
LW 11 Matteo Pratichetti
FH 10 Luke McLean
SH 9 Paul Griffen  66'
N8 8 Sergio Parisse (c)
OF 7 Mauro Bergamasco
BF 6 Alessandro Zanni
RL 5 Marco Bortolami  64'
LL 4 Santiago Dellapè  50'
TP 3 Carlos Nieto  50'
HK 2 Leonardo Ghiraldini
LP 1 Salvatore Perugini
Replacements:
HK 16 Franco Sbaraglini
PR 17 Martin Castrogiovanni  50'
LK 18 Carlo Del Fava  50'
FL 19 Josh Sole  64'
SH 20 Pablo Canavosio  66'
FH 21 Luciano Orquera  75'
CE 22 Roberto Quartaroli
Coach:
Nick Mallett
FB 15 Lee Byrne  68'
RW 14 Mark Jones
OC 13 Jamie Roberts
IC 12 Gavin Henson
LW 11 Shane Williams
FH 10 James Hook  75'
SH 9 Mike Phillips
N8 8 Andy Powell
OF 7 Dafydd Jones
BF 6 Jonathan Thomas  57'
RL 5 Alun Wyn Jones (c)
LL 4 Luke Charteris  66'
TP 3 Rhys M. Thomas  57'
HK 2 Huw Bennett  57'
LP 1 John Yapp
Replacements:
HK 16 Matthew Rees  57'
PR 17 Gethin Jenkins  57'
LK 18 Bradley Davies  66'
FL 19 Ryan Jones  57'
SH 20 Warren Fury
FH 21 Stephen Jones  75'
CE 22 Tom Shanklin  68'
Coach:
Warren Gatland

14 March 2009
17:00 GMT
Scotland 15–22 Ireland
Pen: Paterson (5/5) 5', 13', 21', 31', 60'ReportTry: Heaslip 51' c
Con: O'Gara (1/1)
Pen: O'Gara (4/5) 11', 27', 33', 70'
Drop: O'Gara (1/1) 57'
Murrayfield Stadium, Edinburgh
Referee: Jonathan Kaplan (South Africa)
FB 15 Chris Paterson
RW 14 Simon Danielli
OC 13 Max Evans
IC 12 Graeme Morrison  70'
LW 11 Thom Evans
FH 10 Phil Godman
SH 9 Mike Blair (c)  51'
N8 8 Simon Taylor
OF 7 John Barclay  67'
BF 6 Alasdair Strokosch
RL 5 Jim Hamilton
LL 4 Jason White  50'
TP 3 Euan Murray
HK 2 Ross Ford  57'
LP 1 Alasdair Dickinson
Replacements:
HK 16 Dougie Hall  57'
PR 17 Moray Low
LK 18 Nathan Hines  50'
FL 19 Scott Gray  67'
SH 20 Chris Cusiter  51'
CE 21 Nick De Luca  70'
FB 22 Hugo Southwell
Coach:
Frank Hadden
FB 15 Rob Kearney  75'
RW 14 Tommy Bowe
OC 13 Brian O'Driscoll (c)
IC 12 Gordon D'Arcy
LW 11 Luke Fitzgerald
FH 10 Ronan O'Gara
SH 9 Peter Stringer  65'
N8 8 Denis Leamy  30'
OF 7 David Wallace
BF 6 Stephen Ferris
RL 5 Paul O'Connell
LL 4 Donncha O'Callaghan
TP 3 John Hayes
HK 2 Rory Best  61'
LP 1 Marcus Horan
Replacements:
HK 16 Jerry Flannery  61'
PR 17 Tom Court
LK 18 Mick O'Driscoll
FL 19 Jamie Heaslip  30'
SH 20 Tomás O'Leary  65'
CE 21 Paddy Wallace
FB 22 Geordan Murphy  75'
Coach:
Declan Kidney

Notes:


15 March 2009
15:00 GMT
England 34–10 France
Try: Cueto 1' c
Flutey (2) 22' c, 41' m
D. Armitage 37' c
Worsley 39' m
Con: Flood (3/3)
Pen: Flood (1/1) 18'
ReportTry: Szarzewski 56' m
Malzieu 64' m
Twickenham Stadium, London
Referee: Stuart Dickinson (Australia)
FB 15 Delon Armitage
RW 14 Mark Cueto
OC 13 Mike Tindall
IC 12 Riki Flutey
LW 11 Ugo Monye  72'
FH 10 Toby Flood  40'
SH 9 Harry Ellis  55'
N8 8 Nick Easter
OF 7 Joe Worsley  68'
BF 6 Tom Croft
RL 5 Simon Shaw  57'
LL 4 Steve Borthwick (c)
TP 3 Phil Vickery
HK 2 Lee Mears  57'
LP 1 Andrew Sheridan  66'
Replacements:
HK 16 Dylan Hartley  57'
PR 17 Julian White  66'
LK 18 Nick Kennedy  68'
FL 19 James Haskell  57'
SH 20 Danny Care  55'
FH 21 Andy Goode  40'
CE 22 Mathew Tait  72'
Coach:
Martin Johnson
FB 15 Maxime Médard
RW 14 Julien Malzieu
OC 13 Mathieu Bastareaud  46'
IC 12 Yannick Jauzion
LW 11 Cédric Heymans
FH 10 François Trinh-Duc  46'
SH 9 Morgan Parra  59'
N8 8 Imanol Harinordoquy  68'
OF 7 Sébastien Chabal
BF 6 Thierry Dusautoir
RL 5 Jérôme Thion  46'
LL 4 Lionel Nallet (c)
TP 3 Sylvain Marconnet
HK 2 Dimitri Szarzewski  59'
LP 1 Lionel Faure  51'
Replacements:
HK 16 Benjamin Kayser  59'
PR 17 Thomas Domingo  51'
N8 18 Louis Picamoles  68'
FL 19 Julien Bonnaire  46'
SH 20 Sébastien Tillous-Borde  59'
CE 21 Florian Fritz  46'
CE 22 Damien Traille  46'
Coach:
Marc Lièvremont

Round 5

21 March 2009
14:15 CET
Italy 8–50 France
Try: Parisse 57' m
Pen: Marcato (1/2) 23'
ReportTry: Chabal 25' c
Trinh-Duc 29' m
Médard (2) 31' c, 70' m
Heymans 42' c
Domingo 55' m
Malzieu 76' m
Con: Parra (3/4)
Pen: Parra (3/3) 7', 15', 48'
Stadio Flaminio, Rome
Attendance: 27,650
Referee: Alain Rolland (Ireland)
FB 15 Andrea Marcato
RW 14 Giulio Rubini
OC 13 Gonzalo Canale
IC 12 Mirco Bergamasco
LW 11 Matteo Pratichetti  48'
FH 10 Luke McLean  72'
SH 9 Paul Griffen  66'
N8 8 Sergio Parisse (c)
OF 7 Mauro Bergamasco
BF 6 Alessandro Zanni
RL 5 Marco Bortolami  68'
LL 4 Santiago Dellapè  54'
TP 3 Carlos Nieto  58'
HK 2 Leonardo Ghiraldini
LP 1 Salvatore Perugini
Replacements:
HK 16 Franco Sbaraglini
PR 17 Martin Castrogiovanni  58'
LK 18 Carlo Del Fava  54'
FL 19 Josh Sole  68'
SH 20 Pablo Canavosio  66'
FH 21 Luciano Orquera  72'
CE 22 Roberto Quartaroli  48'
Coach:
Nick Mallett
FB 15 Damien Traille
RW 14 Maxime Médard
OC 13 Florian Fritz  60'
IC 12 Yannick Jauzion
LW 11 Cédric Heymans  71'
FH 10 François Trinh-Duc
SH 9 Morgan Parra  52'
N8 8 Imanol Harinordoquy  63'
OF 7 Julien Bonnaire
BF 6 Thierry Dusautoir
RL 5 Sébastien Chabal
LL 4 Lionel Nallet (c)  71'
TP 3 Sylvain Marconnet  50'
HK 2 Dimitri Szarzewski  52'
LP 1 Fabien Barcella
Replacements:
HK 16 William Servat  52'
PR 17 Thomas Domingo  50'
LK 18 Jérôme Thion  71'
N8 19 Louis Picamoles  63'
FH 20 Frédéric Michalak  52'
CE 21 Mathieu Bastareaud  60'
WG 22 Julien Malzieu  71'
Coach:
Marc Lièvremont

Notes:


21 March 2009
15:30 GMT
England 26–12 Scotland
Try: Monye 22' m
Flutey 28' c
Tait 77' m
Con: Flood (1/2)
Pen: Flood (2/2) 40', 41'
Drop: Care 72'
ReportPen: Paterson (3/3) 9', 44', 66'
Godman (1/2) 51'
Twickenham Stadium, London
Attendance: 80,688
Referee: Marius Jonker (South Africa)
FB 15 Delon Armitage
RW 14 Mark Cueto
OC 13 Mike Tindall
IC 12 Riki Flutey
LW 11 Ugo Monye  48'
FH 10 Toby Flood  73'
SH 9 Harry Ellis  16'
N8 8 Nick Easter
OF 7 Joe Worsley
BF 6 Tom Croft  73'
RL 5 Simon Shaw  57'
LL 4 Steve Borthwick (c)
TP 3 Phil Vickery  14'
HK 2 Lee Mears  73'
LP 1 Andrew Sheridan
Replacements:
HK 16 Dylan Hartley  73'
PR 17 Julian White  14'
LK 18 Nick Kennedy  57'
FL 19 James Haskell  73'
SH 20 Danny Care  16'
FH 21 Andy Goode  73'
CE 22 Mathew Tait  48'
Coach:
Martin Johnson
FB 15 Chris Paterson
RW 14 Simon Danielli  75'
OC 13 Max Evans
IC 12 Graeme Morrison
LW 11 Thom Evans  44'
FH 10 Phil Godman
SH 9 Mike Blair (c)  68'
N8 8 Simon Taylor  41'
OF 7 Scott Gray
BF 6 Alasdair Strokosch
RL 5 Jim Hamilton
LL 4 Jason White  57'
TP 3 Euan Murray
HK 2 Ross Ford  67'
LP 1 Alasdair Dickinson  75'
Replacements:
HK 16 Dougie Hall  67'
PR 17 Moray Low  75'
LK 18 Nathan Hines  57'
FL 19 Kelly Brown  41'
SH 20 Chris Cusiter  68'
CE 21 Nick De Luca  44'
FB 22 Hugo Southwell  75'
Coach:
Frank Hadden

Notes:


21 March 2009
17:30 GMT
Wales 15–17 Ireland
Pen: S. Jones (4/5) 33', 39', 51', 56'
Drop: S. Jones (1/1) 76'
ReportTry: O'Driscoll 44' c
Bowe 46' c
Con: O'Gara (2/2)
Drop: O'Gara (1/1) 78'
Millennium Stadium, Cardiff
Attendance: 74,625
Referee: Wayne Barnes (England)
FB 15 Lee Byrne  30'
RW 14 Mark Jones
OC 13 Tom Shanklin
IC 12 Gavin Henson
LW 11 Shane Williams
FH 10 Stephen Jones
SH 9 Mike Phillips
N8 8 Ryan Jones (c)
OF 7 Martyn Williams
BF 6 Dafydd Jones
RL 5 Alun Wyn Jones
LL 4 Ian Gough  55'
TP 3 Adam Jones
HK 2 Matthew Rees  55'
LP 1 Gethin Jenkins
Replacements:
HK 16 Huw Bennett  55'
PR 17 John Yapp
LK 18 Luke Charteris  55'
FL 19 Jonathan Thomas
SH 20 Warren Fury
FH 21 James Hook
CE 22 Jamie Roberts  30'
Coach:
Warren Gatland
FB 15 Rob Kearney  66'
RW 14 Tommy Bowe
OC 13 Brian O'Driscoll (c)
IC 12 Gordon D'Arcy
LW 11 Luke Fitzgerald  76'
FH 10 Ronan O'Gara
SH 9 Tomás O'Leary  69'
N8 8 Jamie Heaslip
OF 7 David Wallace
BF 6 Stephen Ferris  7'
RL 5 Paul O'Connell
LL 4 Donncha O'Callaghan
TP 3 John Hayes  23'  27'
HK 2 Jerry Flannery  68'
LP 1 Marcus Horan
Replacements:
HK 16 Rory Best  68'
PR 17 Tom Court  23'  27'
LK 18 Mick O'Driscoll
FL 19 Denis Leamy  7'
SH 20 Peter Stringer  69'
CE 21 Paddy Wallace  76'
FB 22 Geordan Murphy  66'
Coach:
Declan Kidney

Notes:

Scorers

References

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