Six Nations’ team of the tournament: Wales and England dominate best XV from freemexy's blog
Six Nations’ team of the tournament: Wales and England dominate best XV
Alun Wyn Jones was arguably the pick of the bunch as grand slam winners
Wales and England dominate our columnist’s list.Find the more sport news from SHINE.
15 Liam Williams, Wales
A big part of what Saracens do well and
exactly the same with Wales, Williams has been brilliant throughout and
his ability to play on the wing has been key, as seen against Ireland.
In the England game he had an answer for everything and, while Elliot
Daly may be a more dangerous runner in open spaces, Williams has not put
a foot wrong.
14 Josh Adams, Wales
Defensively really impressive. He is safe, strong and abrasive; he has
been given his opportunity and taken it. He works particularly well with
Jonathan Davies, communicating well and Wales did not concede much down
his wing at all. He came up with a try against England, too – all in
all a really good tournament.
13 Henry Slade, England
Davies has been incredibly solid for
Wales but, looking at outside-centre with my attack coach’s hat on, I’ve
loved watching Slade play. When he is given some freedom, when he gets
the ball in wide areas, he has shown his brilliance. He has an ability
to ghost through gaps, makes good decisions and is a left-footed kicking
option. If I were with the All Blacks, he’s the kind of player I would
be keeping an eye on.
12 Hadleigh Parkes, Wales
Reasonably quiet at times but just such a solid player and he was superb
against Ireland. His covering tackle on Jacob Stockdale was the tipping
point of that game and he was on hand to score Wales’s try. He is a
good outlet for whichever fly‑half is playing for Wales, a really good
communicator and incredibly strong defensively.
11 Jonny May, England
Jonny goes from strength to strength in an
England jersey. He knows the way to the try-line with 14 in his past 15
matches but what has impressed me most is his aerial skills, whether
being kicked to or chasing Ben Youngs’ box kicks. He commands the air,
wins the space between himself and the receiver and on top of that is
England’s strike weapon.
10 Owen Farrell, England
In terms of influence and importance you cannot look past him. People
will nitpick over his leadership and he has things to work on such as
his tackle height but he is still a world-class player and the best No
10 in the northern hemisphere at the moment. My only concern would be
just how reliant England are on him.
9 Ben Youngs, England
A tough one because I don’t really think
any of the No 9s have had fantastic tournaments but, in terms of
consistency, Youngs gets the nod. Tito Tebaldi has been industrious for
Italy, Antoine Dupont has looked good in flashes, but Youngs has been
the best across the tournament and his kicking was a key part of why
England beat Ireland.
1 Rob Evans, Wales
One of a number of Welshmen in the pack but that really was where they
won their matches. The front row is not my area of expertise but the
Welsh front five have been brilliant. Against Ireland the pressure was
really on up front but from what I was seeing the Welsh scrum was
dominant.
2 Ken Owens, Wales
Ken has had a fantastic tournament – the lineout may have wobbled a bit
but he brings a lot of character to this Wales side and he shows up
around the field, too. For a team who have struggled for fluency but won
the grand slam, it says a lot about the leadership and Ken is a big
part of that.
3 Kyle Sinckler, England
He has carried well, worked hard around
the field, is maturing and the more experience he gets at Test level the
better he will become. I coach him at Harlequins, of course, and it
impresses me how he is often talking about phase play and playing out
the back. I still don’t like the way he screams every time there is a
half-decent tackle but I suppose you’ve just got to embrace it!
4 Alun Wyn Jones, Wales
Brodie Retallick is often described as the most influential lock in the
world but I look at Jones’s leadership and presence during the Six
Nations and I would put him up there. He is the first name on this
teamsheet without question and to top it off we saw the image of him
giving his jacket to the mascot, who was shivering, during the anthems.
That just epitomises him.
5 Félix Lambey, France
He has been one of the better and more consistent players in a team that
has fluctuated and gone up and down like a yo-yo, almost minute to
minute. He is a big fella, he has carried hard, made his tackles and
deserves a bit of recognition for his performances.
6 Tom Curry, England
England’s best player of the tournament by
quite some distance. He gets over the ball and has the ability to link
the play as well. He looks as if he hasn’t missed a beat making the step
up from club rugby to Test level. He is big, strong and has excellent
technique.
7 Justin Tipuric, Wales
A big part of Wales’s success this year has been their back row, so
Tipuric is one of two in this team. He makes his impacts in the wide
channels but can put pressure on the ball at the breakdown as well. It
is just his reading of the game and his support lines – an ability to
know exactly where the ball is going.
8 Josh Navidi, Wales
He has an amazing engine, getting around the
field all day long. He probably links up the play a little bit more in
attack than Curry and he is also very skilled at putting pressure on the
ball at the breakdown. I’ve picked three traditional sevens but they
all bring something a little bit different to this team.
The Wall