• Switch Edition
Follow
February 12 down the years
Ashton routs Azzurri
Scrum.com
England wing Chris Ashton claims his fourth try, England v Italy, Six Nations, Twickenham, London, England, February 12, 2011
Chris Ashton scored four tries on this day in 2011 © Getty Images
Enlarge
Related Links
Teams: England | Ireland | Wales

2011
Four tries from winger Chris Ashton powered England to an emphatic 59-13 victory over Italy in a one-sided Six Nations encounter at Twickenham. The Northampton flyer was the star of the show as England outclassed their rivals to make it two wins from two following their opening victory over Wales. Winger Mark Cueto, captain Mike Tindall, flanker James Haskell and replacement scrum-half Danny Care also crossed for tries but it was the dynamic partnership of fly-half Toby Flood and scrum-half Ben Youngs that set the tone for the impressive triumph and allowed Ashton to steal the show. He became the first England player since Ronald Poulton against France in Paris in 1914 to cross four times in a Championship match.

2011
Wales ended their long wait for a victory with a hard-fought 24-6 win over Scotland at Murrayfield. Having tasted defeat in seven of their previous eight Tests, and the ignominy of a home draw against Fiji, Wales dragged themselves across the finishing line thanks to a magnificent defensive performance and an opening 20 minutes that boasted both style and composure. Shane Williams scored either side of half-time for the visitors, who held out for a crucial period just before the break with 13 men following the sin-binnings of lock Bradley Davies and fullback Lee Byrne. James Hook, restored at fly-half for the first time since March 2009, kicked 14 points and created the first try.

2005
Wales successfully negotiated the second leg of a Grand Slam with a straightforward six-try 38-8 win against Italy in Rome. Tom Shanklin, Martyn Williams, Brent Cockbain, Jonathan Thomas and Rob Sidoli all scored, while Shane Williams rounded off a typically brilliant dancing try. Fly-half Luciano Orqera rounded off Italy's try after charging down a Gavin Henson chip.

2006
Scott Murray became the first Scotsman to be sent off in an International Championship match when he harshly got his marching orders from Steve Walsh for retaliation in a match against Wales at Cardiff. The Scots, disrupted by his loss for the last hour, went down 28-18. Ian Gough saw yellow for his part in the incident. Waeslh skipper Gareth Thomas inspired his men with two tries, while Rob Sidoli powered over from close range. The scoring was completed after Scotland's Jason White was forced to concede a penalty try.

1938
England ran up their highest international score between the wars, beating Ireland 36-14 in Dublin with fullback Grahame Parker kicking six conversions and a penalty goal. Despite the win England skipper Peter Cranmer was relieved of the captaincy for their next match.

1972
Veteran Irish centre Kevin Flynn scored a last-minute try, converted by Tom Kiernan, to give Ireland a 16-12 win at Twickenham against England. Unbeaten Ireland were denied further Five Nations success when their games with Scotland and Wales were cancelled owing to "The Troubles."

1966
Bernard Marie became the first Frenchman to take full charge of a Five Nations Championship match, controlling England's game with Ireland at Twickenham. Dick Greenwood, father of future Rugby World Cup-winner Will, scored England's try while Tom Kiernan converted Paddy McGrath's effort to draw the game 6-6

1910
On their first visit to the RFU's new ground at Twickenham Ireland held England to a rare 0-0 draw.

© Scrum.com
Live Scores
Results
Fixtures