England suffer defeat in France

12 April 2012

England captain Phil Vickery was carried off three weeks before the World Cup as France powered to a 22-9 victory at the intimidating Stade Velodrome.

Vickery was left prone on the turf just before half-time after being laid out in a collision that saw lock Simon Shaw sin-binned for a high tackle on France centre Damien Traille. And England, who have now lost 15 of their last 16 away games, never really recovered.

Jonny Wilkinson, meanwhile, moved above Australian legend Michael Lynagh on Test rugby's all-time points chart, passing his mark of 911 as he kicked three penalties to claim third place behind Welshman Neil Jenkins and former Italy fly-half Diego Dominguez.

Flanker Martin Corry took over as leader for the second period, yet England's final World Cup warm-up game before they defend the Webb Ellis Trophy back in France next month effectively ended as a contest when centre Yannick Jauzion powered over for 49th-minute try.

Scrum-half Jean-Baptiste Elissalde put the boot into England by slotting 14 points through four penalties and a conversion, while fly-half Frederic Michalak landed a late penalty.

It was a another tryless England display, following up their 21-15 home defeat against France last Saturday, leaving head coach Brian Ashton with plenty to contemplate over the coming days before the world champions head to their Paris training base on September 3.

Previous French scalps in Marseille included England, New Zealand, South Africa and Australia, which underlined the degree of difficulty facing Vickery's team.

Vickery led a side showing 11 changes from the one beaten by France a week ago, with only Shaw, wing Josh Lewsey, scrum-half Shaun Perry and hooker Mark Regan retained.

Regan answered a late call to replace sprained knee victim George Chuter as England targeted only a fourth away win from their last 18 games on the road.

Inevitably, England received a hostile reception from the capacity 60,000 crowd, although the visitors looked to familiarise themselves ahead of a potential World Cup quarter-final against Wales or Australia at the same ground in early October.

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