The tournament's fixtures were announced on 20 April 2022. There were no Friday night fixtures. Other than the final weekend, the three kick-off time slots were the same each weekend of the tournament.
Round 1 Notes: •
Leigh Halfpenny (Wales) was originally named at full-back, but he was replaced by
Liam Williams ahead of the match, after suffering a back spasm in training. •
Jamison Gibson-Park (Ireland) was originally named at scrum-half, but withdrew on the day of the match due to injury. He was replaced in the starting line-up by
Conor Murray, whose place in the bench was taken by
Craig Casey. •
Cian Healy (Ireland) was originally named among the replacements, but withdrew on the day of the match due to injury. His place was taken by
Dave Kilcoyne. • Scotland retained the
Calcutta Cup. • Scotland won three consecutive games against England for the first time since
1972, and registered successive away wins against England for the first time since
1909. • With this win, Scotland moved up to fifth in the
World Rugby Rankings, equalling their highest position, last set in May 2018. ----
Notes: •
Edoardo Iachizzi (Italy) and
Ethan Dumortier (France) made their international debuts. • France retained the
Giuseppe Garibaldi Trophy.
Round 2 Notes: •
Dave Kilcoyne,
Andrew Porter and
James Ryan (all Ireland) earned their 50th international test caps. • Prior to this game, Ireland were ranked 1st in the men's
World Rugby Rankings and France were 2nd, the first time that a
Six Nations Championship match had brought the world's top two teams together. • This was Ireland's 13th consecutive win at home, their longest consecutive run of home victories. • Ireland brought to an end France's 14-match unbeaten run dating back to
November 2021. ----
Notes: •
Rhys Davies (Wales) made his international debut. •
Stuart Hogg (Scotland) earned his 100th international cap (98 for Scotland, 2 for the
British & Irish Lions). • This was Scotland's biggest win over Wales, surpassing the 25-point winning margin set in
1924. • Scotland won back-to-back matches in the opening rounds of the Six Nations for the first time. • Wales lost their opening two Six Nations games for the first time since
2007. • Scotland reclaimed the
Doddie Weir Cup. ----
Notes: •
Jack Walker (England) made his international debut. •
Dan Cole (England) earned his 100th international cap (97 for England, 3 for the
British & Irish Lions).
Round 3 Notes: •
Garry Ringrose (Ireland) was originally named to start at outside centre, but withdrew the day before the match due to injury. He was replaced in the starting line-up by
Stuart McCloskey, who started at inside centre with
Bundee Aki moving to outside centre. McCloskey's place on the bench was taken by
Jimmy O'Brien. ----
Notes: •
Mason Grady (Wales) made his international debut. • England won in Cardiff for the first time since their 21–16 victory in
2017. • Wales fell to tenth in the
World Rugby Rankings, equalling their worst-ever placement. ----
Notes: • France retained the
Auld Alliance Trophy. •
Mohamed Haouas (France) became the first player to receive two career red cards in Six Nations Championship matches, his first also coming against Scotland in
2020. • This was the 100th meeting between France and Scotland.
Round 4 ----
Notes: • France won against England at Twickenham for the first time since
2007, and in a Six Nations match at Twickenham for the first time since
2005. • France scored their most points against England (previously 37 points in
1972) to set a new record winning margin over England (previously 25 last set in
2006). • This was England's heaviest defeat at home (43-point difference), surpassing the 36 points to
South Africa in
2008, and was the most points they had conceded at home, surpassing the 42 points conceded in the same game. • This was England's heaviest defeat in any Home, Five or Six Nations match, surpassing the 43–13 loss to Ireland in
2007, and the most points conceded (surpassing the same game). ----
Notes: •
Stuart Hogg (Scotland) became the fourth Scotsman to earn his
100th test cap for Scotland. •
Garry Ringrose (Ireland) earned his 50th international test cap. •
Johnny Sexton (Ireland) matched
Ronan O'Gara's
record as the leading point scorer in
Six Nations Championship (557 points). • Ireland retained the
Centenary Quaich. • Ireland become the first team to record 80 wins across all editions of the
Six Nations Championship.
Round 5 Notes: •
Ben Healy (Scotland),
Simone Gesi and
Marco Manfredi (both Italy) made their international debuts. •
Tommaso Menoncello (Italy) had been named to start but withdrew ahead of the game and was replaced by
Luca Morisi and
Marco Zanon replaced Morisi on the bench. • Scotland retained the
Cuttitta Cup. ----
Notes: •
Taulupe Faletau (Wales) became the eighth Welshman to earn 100 test caps for Wales. •
Uini Atonio (France) and
Dillon Lewis (Wales) earned their 50th test caps. • France scored their most points against Wales when at home, surpassing the 38 points scored in 2020. •
George North (Wales) surpassed
Shane Williams's record of 22 Six Nations tries to become Wales' top try scorer in the Six Nations. • France surpass their record of 18 tries scored in a Six Nations campaign set in
2006 and
2021 and surpass their own record of 156 points scored in a campaign set in
2002. • Wales surpass their worst defensive record in a Six Nations campaign, conceding a total of 19 tries. It was previously 18 tries conceded in
2002. ----
Notes: •
Dan Cole (England) became the fourth player to earn 100 test caps for England. •
Freddie Steward was contentiously sent off during the game following a collision with
Hugo Keenan. The
red card was later rescinded by a
World Rugby citing committee as they ruled that referee
Jaco Peyper and his team were wrong to have sent Steward off. •
Josh van der Flier (Ireland) earned his 50th test cap. • Ireland won the Championship for the 15th time and a fourth Grand Slam, their first won at home since
1948 and a first home Championship win since
1985. • Ireland became the first team to win the
Triple Crown in back-to-back consecutive years since they last did it in
2006 and
2007. • Ireland became the first nation to see their senior men's side and
under-20s' side
win the Grand Slam in the same year. •
Johnny Sexton (Ireland) surpassed
Ronan O'Gara's record of 557 points scored in the Six Nations to become the competition's all-time leading point scorer. • Ireland retained the
Millennium Trophy. ==Netflix documentary==