
Six Nations predictions 2025: Winners, top try-scorer and players to watch
Here,
Telegraph Sport
experts stare into their respective crystal balls to predict what we will see.
Ireland
France
England
Scotland
Wales
Italy
Saturday, March 8 looks to be the crunch day for the Six Nations title when France travel to Dublin. France go into the championship as many people's favourites, given the stunning performances of the Top 14 sides, but you have to go back to 2022 for their
In the past, French club form has not always transferred to the national side. Ireland's form may have dipped during the autumn but the Leinster-based side were undercooked then. The Irish province have been in menacing form since then and Ireland are seeking what will be a historic third successive Six Nations title.
That France have to also go to Twickenham diminishes their chances, while England's hopes appear to rest on round one. Beat Ireland in Dublin and the frustrations of last year will be buried. Otherwise rounds two and three (France and Scotland both at Twickenham) suddenly look daunting.
Scotland's championship will also be defined by rounds two and three – Ireland at Murrayfield and England. As for Wales, a return of two wins would be regarded as a major success given where they are coming from.
Player of the tournament
Antoine Dupont (France)
It would be a surprise if anyone comes close. A player for the ages.
Top try-scorer
Damian Penaud (France)
France's scoring threats are multi-fold and the wing misses the first outing against Wales, but Penaud is in irresistible form and will return as soon as he is fit
Breakout player
Sam Prendergast (Ireland)
The Ireland rookie fly-half is set to be handed the No 10 jersey, having only made his debut last autumn, sparking an Irish No 10 debate reminiscent of the great tussles between Tony Ward and Ollie Campbell and David Humphreys and Ronan O'Gara. The 21-year-old is regarded as a special talent and, if he blossoms during the championship, could force himself into Lions contention.
Most looking forward to...
Ireland vs France
This game two years ago was one of the Six Nations classics. It will not be for the faint of heart.
France
Ireland
England
Scotland
Italy
Wales
There are three injuries that significantly change the title equation – Sione Tuipulotu for Scotland, Tadhg Furlong for Ireland and Gaël Fickou for France. Tuipulotu, as their captain and talisman, feels the most grievous for Scotland, with the loss of Scott Cummings acting as a secondary hammer blow.
Fickou is France's defensive captain but no player is more integral to their team's prospects than Furlong. His absence is meant to be short term, but he has so little rugby under his belt it is difficult to see him firing on all cylinders.
All this is a long way of saying I think France will be champions but will lose in Dublin. England will be in the mix and desperately need another statement performance.
Player of the tournament
Antoine Dupont (France)
On the basis that France are champions then it is not a giant leap to nominate Dupont, which if we have any luck will set off another tedious debate about whether he is truly the best player in the world (yes, he is, by a distance).
Top try-scorer
Duhan van der Merwe (Scotland)
Is this a Lions year? Yes. Are Scotland playing England? Yes. Then Duhan van der Merwe will be flying high in the try-scoring charts.
Breakout player
Sam Prendergast (Ireland)
There is this little-known French scrum half who I think might turn a few heads this year. I kid, I kid. Prendergast is probably an equally unoriginal answer, but the fifth version of 'the second coming of Johnny Sexton' looks like the real deal this time.
Most looking forward to...
To quote every England player I have spoken to in the last year, I cannot look beyond my next game: Ireland vs England in Dublin will tell us a lot about both teams. Have this Ireland team already peaked? Can England find a new and innovative way to throw the game away at the death?
Ireland
France
England
Scotland
Italy
Wales
Before injuries to Tuipulotu and Cummings, I would have backed Scotland to turn over Ireland at Murrayfield in round two and mount a serious bid for the Championship. As it happens, I think Ireland have enough to edge that encounter and should stave off England and France in Dublin as well. That would land them a third consecutive outright title.
Below that, I expect France to have plenty of hot patches, with Antoine Dupont to the fore. While England need to convince me of their composure and clarity, they should finally take back the Calcutta Cup at home.
Italy have three home fixtures to lean upon and my hopes are not particularly high for Wales.
Player of the tournament
Tadhg Beirne (Ireland)
Having recently turned 33, Beirne is among the elder statesmen of a grizzled Ireland team. But he has been in fine form for Munster of late and blends immensely disruptive, crafty defence with subtle skills in attack.
Top try-scorer
Darcy Graham (Scotland)
Picking one of the France fliers is the obvious choice, but Graham is such a livewire who goes looking for touches. Watch out for him close to breakdowns, aiming to capitalise on the new laws protecting scrum-halves – or acting scrum-halves.
Breakout player
Asher Opoku-Fordjour (England)
Renowned by fellow professionals as a supremely strong athlete, Opoku-Fordjour possesses a sense of swagger and seems refreshingly obsessive about scrummaging. He may have to oust Joe Heyes to earn England game time, but more caps are surely coming.
Most looking forward to...
New regulations
How the crackdowns on 'escorting' and box-kick blockers, as well as countdown clocks for scrums and line-outs, open up Test matches. The most innovative coaches will adapt quickly.
France
Ireland
England
Scotland
Italy
Wales
France to win the championship without a Grand Slam, with Ireland winning that mouth-watering meeting in Dublin. Should England defeat the Irish on the opening weekend – and stranger things have happened – then they might have a shot, but I do not see a way past
Les Bleus
at Twickenham, especially with the ghosts of the 2023 obliteration still lingering. Steve Borthwick's side should win their other two home games and victory in Cardiff will secure third place. Italy to defeat Wales in Rome and, unfortunately, leave Warren Gatland's side with back-to-back wooden spoons.
Player of the tournament
Antoine Dupont (France)
At this stage, it is a case of 'who else?' I have backed France for the title and so it makes sense to predict that their captain and talisman, the world's greatest, will be at the helm.
Top try-scorer
Louis Bielle-Biarrey (France)
Again, if France are my victors, then it would be foolish to not pick one of their wondrous back three as top try-scorer. Bielle-Biarrey, in two years, has exploded from a promising under-20 to a World XV shoo-in at senior level. His blend of explosive acceleration, devilish instinct and raw pace has been a sight to behold at club level for Bordeaux this season. Teams will think twice about giving him the chance of a foot race, too, after what he did to the All Blacks in the autumn.
Breakout player
Pierre-Louis Barassi (France)
With injuries to Gael Fickou and Jonathan Danty, Barassi, the 26-year-old Toulouse centre, will line up alongside Yoram Moefana in the French midfield. OK, Barassi already has three caps so perhaps it might be a little disrespectful to label him a potential 'breakout', but he has certainly never made a starting spot his own with
Les Bleus
, with his last appearance coming on the 2021 tour of Australia. But Barassi has made a spot with Toulouse, who I believe to be the sport's greatest club side, his own and his mix of pace and power, along with the way he connects with his clubmates at international level, means he could spend the championship troubling defences and making quite the name for himself.
Most looking forward to...
Ireland vs France
A probable title decider and the scene of one of the Six Nations' greatest games two years ago, where Ireland's fluid and fiery synchronicity triumphed over the individual splendour of Dupont – that tackle on Mack Hansen seems only yesterday – and Damian Penaud, who scored the try of the championship on the Aviva turf.
Ireland
France
Scotland
England
Italy
Wales
This Rugby Football Union target for England to pick up four wins out of five in the Six Nations just feels unhinged, because going into the tournament three sides are clearly in a better position, even Scotland without the excellent Sione Tuipulotu. As has often been the case in recent years, it all hinges on France's trip to Dublin which is a bit of a coin flip, leading you to side with Ireland at home. One massive caveat; Antoine Dupont and Romain Ntamack together can do a lot of crazy things and it would not shock me if they blow that above table up.
Player of the tournament
Andrew Porter (Ireland)
Partly because we need to stop overlooking props for top awards, and partly because Porter is excellent at the day job up front and everything else around the field, too.
Top try-scorer
Louis Bielle-Biarrey (France)
What's that, Damian Penaud is set to miss out against Wales? Good job France have another ridiculous wing who is possibly faster. Ten tries in 14 Tests so far.
Breakout player
Freddie Thomas (Wales)
The fact that Wales have gone for Freddie Thomas on the bench in Paris over Teddy Williams, the top tackler in the United Rugby Championship, shows how highly Wales must rate the young Gloucester lock. He can slot in the back row and showed great athleticism for a try against Bristol earlier in the season, and is now a key cog in the Cherry and Whites pack.
Most looking forward to…
Wales in Rome
The magnitude of it is starting to dawn on everybody. If Wales do not win there, when do they? The
Azzurri
are a treat to watch.
France (Grand Slam)
England
Ireland
Scotland
Italy
Wales
As painfully piecemeal as England's progress has been, their abundant riches suggest that they must come to the boil soon. And why not now? Having absorbed the agonies of the autumn campaign, with all those avoidable fourth-quarter collapses, Steve Borthwick has the perfect platform at this Six Nations to confound the doubters. Ireland appear to be coming to the end of their dominant cycle, while Scotland are still too prone to folding when the stakes are high. France look the class of the field, by some margin.
Player of the tournament
Antoine Dupont (France)
Perhaps the ultimate team showpiece, the Six Nations is seldom anticipated because of a particular player. Dupont is surely the exception, a freakish shape-shifter whom it is never anything but a privilege to watch. At 28, this is the moment for France's newly minted Olympic champion.
Top try-scorer
Louis Bielle-Biarrey (France)
The Bordeaux wing has already scored more tries this season for club and country than anybody else called up for Six Nations duty. His unerring ability to spot defensive gaps should be one of France's key strengths.
Breakout player
Asher Opoku-Fordjour (England)
He had an unmistakable swagger about him when he emerged at Twickenham for his 26 minutes against Japan. The young prop will need to impress quickly to justify the hype, but it is difficult to look past the verdict of Alex Sanderson, his director of rugby at Sale: 'He is a tighthead with fast twitch. You just don't get them.'
Most looking forward to…
It might arrive on only the second weekend, but 'Le Crunch' has the potential to be the Grand Slam decider. The memory of England's shellacking at Twickenham two years ago, when a rampaging Damian Penaud sealed a record 53-10 defeat, remains raw.
France
Ireland
England
Scotland
Italy
Wales
Ireland are the bookmakers' favourites, given they face France and England at home. But I am not sure how much Champions Cup rugby the oddsmakers have watched this season. Toulouse would probably win the Six Nations. Plus, Ireland did not look to be firing on all cylinders in the autumn and there is also the (no) Andy Farrell factor to consider. If England win in Dublin this weekend that would really put the cat among the pigeons, setting up a tasty 'Le Crunch' at Twickenham on February 8. Elsewhere, Scotland remain capable of beating anyone. But I fear for Wales. Friday night in Paris could get ugly, which could impact on the trip to Rome in week two.
Player of the tournament
Romain Ntamack (France)
We can't all pick Antoine Dupont.
Top try scorer
Louis Bielle-Biarrey (France)
Damian Penaud would have been my first choice, but the fact that he is missing Friday's opening fixture may well deprive the Bordeaux winger of a few tries. I will go with Bielle-Biarrey.
Breakout player
Tom Willis (England)
Hardly an unknown given he is carving it up in the Premiership, but the 26-year-old has won only one cap for England. How great would it be to see Willis cement the No 8 spot with some barnstorming performances over the next few weeks?
Most looking forward to…
The Ireland vs France fixture in Dublin will most likely decide the championship, but either way I am very much looking forward to watching England try to recover some pride after that record 53-10 battering at the hands of France at Twickenham two years ago.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Powys County Times
24 minutes ago
- Powys County Times
Sarina Wiegman: Pressure on England no different to Euro 2022
The Lionesses manager feels expectations remain the same as they did three years ago as she prepares for the opening fixture in Switzerland on Saturday. England will face France in their first match of the tournament but despite the label of title holders, Wiegman insists that expectations remain unchanged. 'For me it doesn't feel that different. It has always been there - high expectations. We have high expectations from ourselves, too,' she explained. 'We just want to do really well. We know we're here and we know exactly where we want to go, but we bring it back to [the fact] we have to be the best prepared, we have to have the best game plans and, if necessary, be able to adapt to what we have in front of us. 'The team is in a very good place, they're really well bonded. We have worked really hard and we will work really hard in every single game and every single training session. That's what we can control.' Since 2015, England have reached the semi-finals of every major tournament they have competed in and further success under Wiegman arguably only pushes expectations higher. Having claimed European Championship gold with the Netherlands in 2017, the Dutch manager repeated the feat with the Lionesses in the seminal home Euros in 2022. Such game-changing success was followed by a World Cup final in 2023, leaving expectations for England sky high. But while the outside world discuss the possibility of England becoming first team to defend a Euros title and repeating the feat that inspired so many at Wembley in that heady summer, in the Lionesses' camp no such conversations are occurring. Instead, Wiegman's squad are distancing themselves from past achievements in the search of a 'New England' that remains intune with the ever-increasing demands of women's football. 'We absolutely cherish what we have done before and we never forget it. Those are lifetime experiences for us, for our families and also for our friends but you have to move on,' said Wiegman. 'You have to be on top. Things are changing very quickly, things are developing very quickly so we have to do too. 'We came together in February and said it's a new challenge. The approach was there anyway but we called it a 'New England'.' The first glimpse of such that reformed Lionesses team will come against a France side who have undergone major changes of their own. Laurent Bonadei has opted not to include French legends and serial winners Eugenie Le Sommer and Wendie Renard in his Euros squad, but has so far not been proved wrong with France winning their last eight fixtures. It presents a huge task for Wiegman who is in no illusion of the strengths the French team possess, or the stature of their omissions. 'The French are very, very strong and they have great young players coming through. They have shown already that they are still a very powerful, quick team that can play really well,' she said. 'They have played games without [Renard] recently. I don't have the context but she is an absolute legend. They [Renard and Le Sommer] have been trailblazers for the women's game and they still are even though they are not here.'


Daily Mail
37 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Supreme Court called it right on what makes a woman, says Judy Murray, as she welcomes 'common sense' ruling
Judy Murray has expressed support for the Supreme Court 's ruling that the legal definition of a woman is based on biological sex, saying 'welcome back, common sense'. The tennis coach and mother of Wimbledon champions Sir Andy and Jamie is well known for advocating 'fairness and safety' for women in sport. But in 2022 she faced a backlash when she criticised the prospect of professional golfer Hailey Davidson, of Ayrshire, becoming the first transgender woman to earn a Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA) tour card. Reacting to an article about the 32-year-old's attempt, Mrs Murray tweeted: 'No. Not fair at all. Protect women's sport. Listen to the facts, the scientists and the medics. This is wrong.' She defended her comments, saying her point was 'purely from a perspective of women's sport and protecting the fairness of competition for girls and women'. The 65-year-old has now hailed April's ruling on what defines a woman under equalities laws. In an interview with The Scotsman, she said: 'The ruling for me was just common sense. And welcome back, common sense.' Mrs Murray said: 'There have always been categories in sport and they're there to ensure fairness and safety.' Her comments come a year after she backed JK Rowling by urging her to 'preach' following a series of savage social media posts against Scotland's hate crime law as the Harry Potter author warned against 'dismantling' women's rights. Mrs Murray, who is celebrating the release of her new book, Game, Set and Murder, about the mysterious death of a tennis coach, established the Judy Murray Foundation in 2018 to improve accessibility to sports, particularly for young and female athletes. Meanwhile, gender critical campaigners have sent a further 'letter before action' to the Scottish Government, about access to toilets in government properties. Sex Matters want action by next Wednesday. The group calls on the government to state that 'all facilities designated as male or female within the Scottish Government estate are to be interpreted as meaning biological sex, and that gender-neutral options are widely available'. Tory MSP Tess White said: 'The SNP Government must stop dragging its heels. The Supreme Court ruling was crystal clear.' The Scottish Government has previously said it accepts the Supreme Court ruling.


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Boyce hat-trick as Derry City put seven past Waterford
Liam Boyce scored a hat-trick as Derry City thrashed Waterford 7-2 to extend their unbeaten run in the League of Ireland Premier Division to five games. Two early goals from Boyce, a stunning strike from Sadou Diallo and Mark Connolly's header gave Derry a 4-0 lead at the Padraig Amond and Michael Duffy netted early in the second half before Boyce completed his treble just before the hour mark. Gavin Whyte added to the impressive tally for the evening before Amond netted a late second consolation Candystripes, who have now won their past four games, sit eight points adrift of leaders Shamrock Rovers - who face Sligo Rovers on Saturday - in second with a game in hand. Candystripes race clear in first half The home side took the lead in some style just five minutes into the game when Boyce's powerful strike from the edge of the box found the top left-hand nearly doubled their lead just two minutes later when Connolly nodded Duffy's corner towards goal, but his header struck the doubled his tally when Duffy played the ball back from the left wing for the striker to convert on 24 Lynch's men did not settle for a two-goal advantage with Bradley Wade palming Ronan Boyce's effort to safety before twice thwarting the Waterford keeper could do nothing to stop Diallo who made it 3-0 on 36 minutes when his thunderous right-footed shot went in off the crossbar. Duffy was provider once again just five minutes later when his corner was headed home by Derry captain Connolly. Goals galore at the Brandywell Waterford got on the scoresheet four minutes after the restart when Amond controlled a long ball, burst into the box and slotted home through the legs of Duffy restored Derry's four-goal advantage when he slipped the ball on to his left foot to beat his marker Darragh Leahy and fired past and Boyce, who have a combined 58 Northern Ireland caps, linked up to make it 6-1 with the latter poking home Whyte's looping cross to complete his got in on the act in the 73rd minute when his low shot found the bottom right-hand netted the final goal of the game with 11 minutes to go when Amond struck again, but the night belonged to the free-scoring Candystripes, who travel to Sligo on 12 July.