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Tomos Williams is the most important man in Wales' attack as he ends any debate

For 50-odd minutes at Twickenham, Wales struggled to get any attacking purchase out of England.

Having gone to west London with a team that, on paper at least, looked set up to negate the ‘new England’ that Eddie Jones has built up in the press, they found themselves 17-0 down shortly after the break.

Wales hadn’t landed a punch, but then it was questionable if they’d even thrown one.

The latest Six Nations headlines are here.

There had been the odd counter-attack here, a few phases behind the gain line there - but nothing of note.

Of course, the importance of the breakdown played its part. It’s tiring to point out week after week just how vital a part winning collisions and clearouts is to Wales setting up any sort of attacking shape, but it cannot be understated.

For the best part of this match, Wales got nothing at the breakdown.

Part of this was down to referee Mike Adamson, who, when it comes to breakdown interpretation, largely allows the attacking team to bring a gun to a knife fight.

But the bigger issue is that Wales know this. You know, as the defensive team, you won’t get much and you work to it. The fact that Wales got little either side of the ball points to flaws bigger than Adamson.

If the clearout was better and the carries were more dominant, you don’t leave matters up to interpretation. Simple as that.

It took a while - and a lot of chat from Dan Biggar - but Wales finally got to that point where they weren’t reliant on the toss of a breakdown coin in the second-half.

Why it clicked, it’s hard to say. At times, it felt like Wales were channeling their frustration into England and it worked. Biggar spoke afterwards how they were almost forced into a possession-based game.

Whatever the reason, Wales

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