2008 Six Nations Championship Explained
2008 Six Nations Championship |
Date: | 2 February – 15 March 2008 |
Countries: |
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Count: | 24 |
Grand Slam: | (10th title) |
Triple Crown: | (19th title) |
Matches: | 15 |
Tries: | 50 |
Top Point Scorer: | Jonny Wilkinson (50) |
Top Try Scorer: | Shane Williams (6) |
Previous Year: | 2007 |
Previous Tournament: | 2007 Six Nations Championship |
Next Year: | 2009 |
Next Tournament: | 2009 Six Nations Championship |
The 2008 Six Nations Championship, known as the 2008 RBS 6 Nations because of sponsorship by the Royal Bank of Scotland, was the ninth series of the rugby union Six Nations Championship, the 114th series of the international championship.
Fifteen matches were played over five weekends from 2 February to 15 March, resulting in Wales winning the Grand Slam, their second in the last four championships and tenth overall. In winning the Grand Slam, Wales also won the Triple Crown, for beating each of the other Home Nations, for the 19th time. Wales conceded only two tries in the championship, beating England's previous record of four tries conceded. Wales' Shane Williams was named the Player of the Championship.[1]
Participants
Results
Round 1
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Round 2
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Round 3
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Notes:- Jonny Wilkinson drew level with Wales' Neil Jenkins as the all-time leading point scorer in international rugby history with 1,090 career points (including points scored for the British and Irish Lions).
- This result left Wales as the only remaining team that could win the Grand Slam.
- This was England's first away win over France in the Six Nations since their 15–9 win in 2000.
Round 4
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Round 5
Notes- Despite victory over Scotland, Italy won the "wooden spoon", having failed to win by the necessary five-point margin required to avoid finishing at the bottom of the table.
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Notes- Shane Williams took sole possession of the all-time try scoring lead for Wales with his 41st try.
- Wales won the Grand Slam for the second time in four championships.
- By virtue of Wales beating France by more than three points, England finished second in the table, their best Six Nations finish since 2003.
- Wales conceded just two tries all championship, the tightest ever defence in the Six Nations.
Scorers
Notes and References
- News: Williams wins RBS player of the Championship . RBS 6 Nations . 19 March 2008 . 26 March 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110524062849/http://www.rbs6nations.com/en/10525.php . 24 May 2011 . dead . dmy-all .