The Women's Six Nations is faster and smarter - but is it better?

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The Women's Six Nations is faster and smarter - but is it better?

The women's Six Nations has evolved with coaches and players working harder and playing smarter

The Women's Six Nations is faster and smarter - but is it better?

The women's Six Nations has evolved with coaches and players working harder and playing smarter

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The first 40 minutes of the Women's Six Nations was, at best, a half for the purists.

Estelle Sartini, a PE teacher from Caen, kicked the only points as France, one of the favourites for the inaugural title, headed for the dressing rooms with a 3-0 lead over Spain, who contested the first five editions before being replaced by Italy in 2007.

This year will be the 25th staging of the competition. And the game has changed. But has it been for the better?

Does increased athleticism and tactical nous risk losing the distinctive character of the women's game?

Simon Middleton, who was England's head coach for eight years before standing down after the 2023 Six Nations, saw the change firsthand.

"The women's game doesn't want to be the men's game - and that's how it should be," he said.

The 2025 Women's Six Nations was the highest scoring ever, with an average of 55.9 points per game. It is part of trend, rather than an anomaly.

The five highest-scoring tournaments have all taken place since 2019.

After two rounds of this season's tournament, the average stands at 58 points a game - on track for another record.

Is it simply the fact that England, world champions and seven-time defending champions, are running amok and pushing up the average?

The Red Roses have certainly been dominant. They racked up winning margins of 55 and 52 points against Wales and Scotland respectively last year.

So far in this year's tournament they have seen off Ireland by 21 points and Scotland by a whopping 77-point margin.

But even if you remove England's results from the calculations, teams are scoring more.

Take the Red Roses' fixtures out of consideration and there was still a record average of 51.2 points per match in 2025, matching the high set for the same metric in 2021.

The growth in points has outstripped the rise in the winning margin as well.

The average number of points per match in 2007, when Italy first joined the tournament, was just shy of 30, nearly half of what it was in 2025.

The average winning margin meanwhile has risen, but only slightly, from 19.5 points to 25.4 over the same period.

In this year's tournament the average winning margin is currently higher than usual at 34 points, but an incomplete fixture list make it an imperfect comparison.

That record high in points being scored has come despite teams keeping the ball in hand less.

Over the past five years, the ball has been kicked more than ever in the Women's Six Nations, with a steady and consistent rise from an average of 26.1 kicks per game in 2021 to 44.7 in 2025.

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