Six Nations 2022: England's poor attack, Ireland's pace and a marriage proposal
With one round left to go in the 2022 Six Nations, only two sides remain in the hunt for the title.
France would seal a first Grand Slam and title since 2010 with victory against England — but should they fail, Ireland are also in with a chance as they host Scotland earlier on Saturday.
As another Super Saturday approaches, BBC Radio 5 Live's Rugby Union Daily pundits Danny Cipriani, Ugo Monye and Sam Warburton share what they learned from round four.
Much of the focus after England's defeat by Ireland was on the hosts' bravery for staying in the game for so long with 14 men.
Now that the dust has settled, the same issues that have been plaguing England since the 2019 World Cup have returned to the spotlight.
Former England fly-half Cipriani says the side was «outcoached» in attack against a slick Irish team.
Discounting their comfortable win against Italy, Eddie Jones' side have scored two tries across three games in the tournament and are unlikely to win in France unless this statistic gets a boost.
«England's set-piece, kicking game and defence are part of their identity,» Cipriani said.
«What has the attacking identity looked like? You can say how great we were at the set-piece and we made good decisions.
»But Ireland constantly put England under pressure, their attack was cohesive. To do that, you need to have good direction as a coach and a system you can fall back on 90% of the time.
«The talent pool that England have, if you can't put a good system in place to execute in attack, then what are you doing as a coach?»
In contrast to England, Ireland delivered a sharp attack at Twickenham.
Player of the match Jamison Gibson-Park pushed the pace of play to a speed England struggled to cope with and, were it not for handling