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England Men

26 Feb 2021 | 8 min |

Wales v England preview: facts, stats and teams

Ahead of England's final Autumn Nations Cup pool A game against Wales, we round up everything you need to know.

Eddie Jones has opted for George Ford at fly half with captain Owen Farrell moving to inside centre and Henry Slade shifting out one position into the 13 shirt.

England's pack remains the same as the one that started the 18-7 win over Ireland, with two new finishers added in Luke Cowan-Dickie and Anthony Watson after returning to the squad this week. Jack Willis will look to win his second cap as finisher as he returns to the matchday 23.

Wales have made eight changes to the side that beat Georgia including the return of influential captain Alun Wyn Jones.

Scrum half Lloyd Jones will make his first start for his country in four years as he partners Dan Biggar at fly half, with wing Louis Rees-Zammit, centre Johnny Williams and flanker James Botham also coming in.

England sit first in Pool A and win in Llanelli will secure top spot and a match against the winners of Pool B next Sunday at Twickenham Stadium to decide who wins the Autumn Nations Cup.

  • When? Saturday, 28 November                       
  • Kick-off? 1600 GMT
  • Where? Parc y Scarlets, Llanelli
  • Coverage? Live on Amazon Prime and S4C, BBC Radio 5 live, match centre on EnglandRugby.com 

Views from the camp

England head coach Eddie Jones: “We’re expecting another tough match, and at the home of Welsh Rugby where the heart and soul of their game is.

"12 months ago, Wales were Grand Slam champions and three points from a World Cup final, so we know what they are capable of. "

“We’ve picked the best 23 players for the battle and we’re looking forward to it greatly.”

England captain Owen Farrell: "It’s always a massive test. We’re looking to improve and a massively tough battle is a good one to throw ourselves into. It’s always a tough game and we’re excited for it.

"Obviously we’d have liked to have had a bit more territory in the last game to be able to attack from but at the same time we’ll be looking to deal with whatever is presented to us.

[On defence] "I don’t think turning up trying to get the same thing will get you anywhere near that level of intensity, I think you’ve got to try and push past it and get the emotion right in the build-up to the game. That’s everybody’s job as an individual and as a collective to drag people with you.

“They’re a fantastic team and it’s always a really tough battle between us and them, it’s always a fantastic Test match. I’m sure they’ll come looking to bring the best version of themselves and we’ll look to do the same.”

Wales head coach Wayne Pivac: “Saturday is another great opportunity for us and for this squad.

“It is another chance for us to take what we have been doing in training and take that into matchday and we are looking forward it.

“We know what we need to do and we are focused on that for Saturday.”

Previous meetings

2016 - England 25-21 Wales, Twickenham Stadium (Six Nations)
2016 - England 27-13 Wales, Twickenham Stadium (Quilter Cup)
2017 - Wales 16-21 England, Principality Stadium (Six Nations)
2018 - England 12-6 Wales, Twickenham Stadium (Six Nations)
2019 - Wales 21-13 England, Principality Stadium (Six Nations)
2019 - England 33-19 Wales, Twickenham Stadium (World Cup warm-up)
2019 - Wales 13-6 England, Principality Stadium (World Cup warm-up)
2020 - England 33-30 Wales, Twickenham Stadium (Six Nations) 

Key stats

  • Wales have lost eight of their last 11 Tests against England (W3), however they have won the last two times they’ve hosted this fixture.
  • Wales have won their last two home games against England and will be aiming to win three in a row at home against England for the first time since 2005 to 2009.
  • England have won their last two away games, they’ve not won three in a row since June 2017 to February 2018 when they won a series in Argentina before defeating Italy in Rome in the Six Nations (excl. matches at neutral venues).
  • Wales come into this match after an 18-0 victory over Georgia in their last outing, the second time they’ve kept their opposition scoreless in a match so far in 2020 (42-0 v Italy), this after managing it just twice previously in the professional era (98-0 v Japan in Nov 2004, 66-0 v Fiji in Oct 2011).
  • England and Wales have met 10 times previously outside of the Home/Five/Six Nations since it began, England have won six of those 10 clashes (L4) but lost their most recent such fixture (17th August 2019).
  • England have the best tackle success rate (93%) of any side in the 2020 Autumn Nations Cup, Wales are the only other side to have a success rate above 90%.
  • England have the best lineout success rate (97%, 34/35) of any side in the 2020 Autumn Nations Cup, meanwhile Wales have the lowest rate (71%, 20/28).
  • After his brace against Ireland last week, Jonny May now has 31 tries for England, only Rory Underwood has more (49, Will Greenwood and Ben Cohen also have 31 each); May has scored three tries in seven games against Wales but all of those tries have come at Twickenham
  • England’s Billy Vunipola has made 34 tackles in the 2020 Autumn Nations Cup, more than any other player from any side, he’s also made a team high 21 carries for England.

Teams

15. Elliot Daly (Saracens, 45 caps)
14. Jonathan Joseph (Bath Rugby, 53 caps)
13. Henry Slade (Exeter Chiefs, 32 caps)
12. Owen Farrell (Saracens, 86 caps)
11. Jonny May (Gloucester Rugby, 59 caps)
10. George Ford (Leicester Tigers, 70 caps)
9. Ben Youngs (Leicester Tigers, 102 caps)
1. Mako Vunipola (Saracens, 62 caps)
2. Jamie George (Saracens, 52 caps)
3. Kyle Sinckler (Bristol Bears, 38 caps)
4. Maro Itoje (Saracens, 41 caps)
5. Joe Launchbury (Wasps, 67 caps)
6. Tom Curry (Sale Sharks, 26 caps)
7. Sam Underhill (Bath Rugby, 20 caps)
8. Billy Vunipola (Saracens, 54 caps)

Finishers

16. Luke Cowan-Dickie (Exeter Chiefs, 24 caps)
17. Ellis Genge (Leicester Tigers, 21 caps)
18. Will Stuart (Bath Rugby, 6 caps)
19. Jonny Hill (Exeter Chiefs, 2 caps)
20. Ben Earl (Bristol Bears, 6 caps)
21. Jack Willis (Wasps, 1 cap)
22. Dan Robson (Wasps, 5 caps)
23. Anthony Watson (Bath Rugby, 44 caps)

Wales

15. Leigh Halfpenny (Scarlets) (92 caps)
14. Louis Rees-Zammit (Gloucester) (2 caps)
13. Nick Tompkins (Dragons) (7 caps)
12. Johnny Williams (Scarlets) (1 cap)
11. Josh Adams (Cardiff Blues) (28 caps)
10. Dan Biggar (Northampton Saints) (86 caps)
9. Lloyd Williams (Cardiff Blues) (30 caps)
1. Wyn Jones (Scarlets) (28 caps)
2. Ryan Elias (Scarlets) (16 caps)
3. Samson Lee (Scarlets) (44 caps)
4. Jake Ball (Scarlets) (48 caps)
5. Alun Wyn Jones (Ospreys) (141 caps)
6. Shane Lewis-Hughes (Cardiff Blues) (2 caps)
7. James Botham (Cardiff Blues) (1 cap)
8. Taulupe Faletau (Bath) (79 caps) 

Replacements

16. Elliot Dee (Dragons) (31 caps)
17. Rhys Carre (Cardiff Blues) (11 caps)
18. Tomas Francis (Exeter Chiefs) (50 caps)
19. Will Rowlands (Wasps) (3 caps)
20. Aaron Wainwright (Dragons) (25 caps)
21. Rhys Webb (Ospreys) (35 caps)
22. Callum Sheedy (Bristol Bears) (2 caps)
23. Owen Watkin (Ospreys) (24 caps) 

How to watch on Amazon Prime

  • Existing and new Prime members can watch live Autumn Nations Cup Rugby Union on hundreds of devices using the Prime Video app, across mobile, Fire TV, games consoles, Virgin’s V6 TV Box, BT TV, TalkTalk TV, Apple TV, Chromecast, online and many more. For a list of all compatible devices visit: www.amazon.co.uk/watchlivesport
  • New customers will be able to join Amazon Prime for £7.99 per month, or £79 for the year
  • Non-Prime members can also start a 30-day free trial of Amazon Prime to experience the Autumn Nations Cup on Prime Video
  • Whilst using the Prime Video app, customers can click on ‘Autumn Nations Cup’ to view the tournament schedule and choose between a main coverage stream or individual matches.