Early years , versus
Scotland in Edinburgh, 1871 The expansion of rugby in the first half of the 19th century was driven by former pupils from many of England's
public schools, especially
Rugby, who, upon finishing school, took the game with them to universities, to London, and to the counties.
England's first international match was against
Scotland on 27 March 1871; not only was this England's first match, but it is also noted as being the first rugby union international. Scotland won the match by one goal and a try to England's one unconverted try, in front of a crowd of 4,000 people at
Raeburn Place, Edinburgh. A subsequent international took place at
the Oval in London on 5 February 1872, when England defeated Scotland by a goal, a
drop goal and two tries to Scotland's one drop goal. The early matches did not use a structured points system; this would not be introduced until after 1890 when a suitable format for the scoring system had been devised. In 1875, England played their first game against
Ireland at the Oval, winning by one goal, one drop goal and one try to nil; England defeated Scotland in 1880 to become the first winners of the
Calcutta Cup. Their first match against
Wales was played on 19 February 1881 at Richardson's Field in
Blackheath, where England recorded their largest victory, winning by seven goals, six tries, and one drop goal to nil, Two years later, England emerged as the inaugural winners at the first
Home Nations championship. In 1889, they played their first match against a non-home nations team when they defeated the
New Zealand Natives at Rectory Field in Blackheath by one goal and four tries to nil. England first played
New Zealand (known as the "All Blacks") in 1905 at
Crystal Palace in London. New Zealand scored five tries, worth three points at the time, to win 15–0. England played
France for the first time in March 1906 in Paris, winning 35–8, and later that year they first faced
South Africa (known as the "Springboks"), again at Crystal Palace.
James Peters was withdrawn from the England squad when the South Africans refused to play against a black player; the match was drawn 3–3. England first played
Australia (known as the "Wallabies") in January 1909 at Blackheath's Rectory Field, where they were defeated 9–3. showing the England versus
The Original All Blacks Test attended by a then-record crowd of at least 50,000. The New Zealanders won 15–0. The year 1909 saw the opening of
Twickenham Stadium as the RFU's new home, heralding a golden era for English rugby union. England's first international at Twickenham in 1910 brought them victory over Wales on their way to winning the
International Championship (known from then as the Five Nations) for the first time since
1892. Although England did not retain the Five Nations title in 1911, they did share it (with Ireland) in 1912. England then achieved their first Five Nations
Grand Slam in 1913, another in 1914, and a third in 1921 after the First World War. A further two consecutive Grand Slams followed for the England team in 1924 and 1925, this despite having started 1925 with an 17–11 loss to the "
Invincibles" in front of 60,000 fans at Twickenham. After winning a sixth Grand Slam in 1928, England were subjected to a
7–0 defeat by the Springboks in front of 70,000 spectators at Twickenham in January 1932. Following the expulsion of France from the International Championship in 1931 due to professionalism, which reverted the Five Nations tournament back to the Home Nations, England proceeded to win the 1934 and 1937 championships with a
Triple Crown, and achieved
their first victory over the All Blacks at Twickenham in January 1936. When the Five Nations resumed with the readmission of France in 1947 after the Second World War, England shared the championship with Wales. The early Five Nations competitions of the 1950s were unsuccessful for England, winning one match in the 1950 and 1951 championships. England did not win a single match in 1966, and managed only a draw with Ireland. They did not win another Championship that decade.
Don White was appointed as England's first coach in 1969. According to former Northampton player
Bob Taylor, "Don was chosen because he was the most forward-thinking coach in England". England started the following decade with a Grand Slam victory in the 1980 Five Nations – their first for 23 years. However in the
1983 Five Nations Championship, England failed to win a game and picked up the
wooden spoon. In the first
Rugby World Cup in New Zealand and Australia, England were grouped in
pool A alongside Australia,
Japan and the
United States. England lost their first game 19–6 against Australia. They went on to defeat Japan and the United States, and met Wales in their quarter-final, losing the match 16–3. In 1989, England won matches against
Romania and
Fiji, followed by victories in their first three Five Nations games of 1990. They lost to Scotland in their last game however, giving Scotland a Grand Slam. England recovered in the following year by winning their first Grand Slam since 1980. England hosted the
1991 World Cup and were in pool A, along with the All Blacks,
Italy and the United States. Although they lost to the All Blacks in pool play, they qualified for a quarter-final going on to defeat France 19–10. England then defeated Scotland 9–6 to secure a place in the final against Australia which they lost 12–6. The next year, England completed another Grand Slam and did not lose that year, including a victory over the Springboks. In the lead up to the
1995 World Cup in South Africa, England completed another Grand Slam – their third in five years. In the World Cup, England defeated
Argentina, Italy and
Samoa in pool play and then defeated Australia 25–22 in their quarter-final. England's semi-final was dominated by the All Blacks and featured four tries, now worth five points each, by
Jonah Lomu; England lost 45–29. They then lost the third-place play-off match against France.
Professional era England won their 20th Triple Crown title in 1997, but came second in the
1997 Five Nations Championship after a narrow defeat to France at
Twickenham. Sir
Clive Woodward replaced
Jack Rowell as the England head coach later that year. On 6 December 1997, England drew with New Zealand at Twickenham, after being
heavily defeated by
South Africa at the same venue the week before and by
New Zealand in Manchester two weeks previously. In 1998,
England toured Australia, New Zealand and South Africa; many of the experienced players were unavailable for what was to become nicknamed the "Tour from Hell" during which England lost all of their matches including a punishing defeat by the Wallabies. In the last Five Nations match on 11 April 1999, with England poised to win the championship, Welsh centre
Scott Gibbs sliced through six English tackles to score a try in the last minute, and the ensuing conversion by
Neil Jenkins handed the final
Five Nations title to Scotland. after England's
2003 World Cup victory England commenced the new millennium by winning the inaugural
Six Nations Championship, although they lost their last match to Scotland. They successfully defended their title
the following year, but missed out on the Grand Slam by losing (14–20) to Ireland in a postponed match at Lansdowne Road. Although France won the
2002 Six Nations Championship, England defeated the other Home Nations teams to win the Triple Crown. In 2002, England
beat Argentina (26–18) in Buenos Aires, and in the
Autumn internationals they defeated New Zealand (31–28), Australia (32–31), and South Africa (53–3) at Twickenham. At the
2003 Six Nations Championship, England won the Grand Slam for the first time since 1995, followed by wins over Australia and the All Blacks on their
June summer tour. Going into the
2003 World Cup as one of the tournament favourites, England reached the
final on 22 November 2003 against host Australia. The game went into extra time with the score tied at 14–14, after one penalty apiece and with just seconds to spare, a match-winning drop goal by fly-half
Jonny Wilkinson brought the final score to 20–17, making England rugby world champions for the first time. Not only was this England's first Rugby World Cup victory, but it was the nation's first world title since the
England national football team won the
1966 FIFA World Cup. On 8 December, the England team were greeted by 750,000 supporters on a victory parade through London before meeting Queen
Elizabeth II at
Buckingham Palace. England finished third in the
2004 Six Nations Championship after losing their matches to both France and Ireland. Clive Woodward resigned as head coach on 2 September and
Andy Robinson was appointed to replace him. Robinson's first
Six Nations campaign in 2005 resulted in fourth place for England, and although they defeated Australia at Twickenham in the
Autumn internationals, this was followed by a loss to the All Blacks. A loss to South Africa in the
2006 Autumn internationals was England's eighth defeat in nine test matches, their worst losing streak. Andy Robinson resigned as head coach after this run, and attack coach
Brian Ashton was appointed as his replacement in December. England started the
2007 Six Nations Championship with a Calcutta Cup victory over Scotland. That year's championship included a historic match at
Croke Park which England lost (13–43), their heaviest defeat against Ireland. At the
2007 World Cup, England were grouped in Pool A with Samoa,
Tonga, South Africa, and the United States. They progressed to the knockout stage despite a 36–0 loss to South Africa, and narrowly defeated Australia in the quarter-finals. England then faced hosts France in the semi-finals and triumphed (14–9) to qualify for the final, where they were subjected to a second defeat by the Springboks at this World Cup, losing the match 15–6. England followed up their World Cup disappointment with two consecutive second-place finishes in the Six Nations Championship, behind Wales (
2008) and Ireland (
2009). Former England team captain
Martin Johnson took up the job of head coach in July 2008 but, unable to replicate his on-field success in the management role, he resigned in November 2011 following a miserable
Rugby World Cup which featured a series of on- and off-field controversies and ended in quarter-final defeat by France. In March 2012, the
Rugby Football Union appointed
Stuart Lancaster, the former Elite Rugby Director at
Leeds Carnegie, as England's head coach. He had previously been employed in the position on a short-term basis, assisted by existing forwards coach
Graham Rowntree, and
Andy Farrell. Lancaster was considered a success in his first campaign as head coach: defending champions England took second place in the
2012 Six Nations Championship after losing to Wales at Twickenham, but successfully defended the Calcutta Cup by defeating Scotland at
Murrayfield. England finished the year on a high when they beat World Cup holders New Zealand at Twickenham in the
Autumn internationals; the England team dominated the match and completely outplayed the All Blacks, who had been unbeaten in 20 matches. At the
2013 Six Nations Championship, England again finished in second place behind Wales, and were deprived of the opportunity to win the Grand Slam for the first time since 2003 when they were defeated 30–3 by Wales in Cardiff. It was the first time since 1974 that every team in the Six Nations managed to win at least three competition points (the equivalent of a win and a draw, or three draws). However, England retained the Calcutta Cup by defeating Scotland at Twickenham. Lancaster took an experimental side on a
summer tour of Argentina in 2013; after beating a
South American XV on 2 June, England achieved a 2–0 series victory over Argentina, their first away series win against
the Pumas for 32 years. In 2015, England hosted the
Rugby World Cup, but were eliminated in the pool stage. Despite this setback, and following the appointment of new head coach
Eddie Jones, England won the Grand Slam in the
2016 Six Nations Championship, and remained unbeaten for the whole of 2016, including a series whitewash of Australia in Sydney. They went on to equal the world record of 18 consecutive test wins with a 61–21 victory over Scotland in securing the
2017 Six Nations Championship. 2018 began well for England, seeing off a spirited challenge from Italy, and winning a tight contest against Wales in the first two rounds of the
Six Nations. However, it was not until June before England recorded another win, as the team lost their remaining games against Scotland, France and eventual Grand Slam winners Ireland at home in Twickenham. On their
summer tour of South Africa, England lost the first two matches, before winning the third test against a mostly second-string Springbok side. That autumn, after adding former New Zealand and United States coach
John Mitchell to the coaching setup, England won the return match against South Africa by a single point, and lost an equally close contest with New Zealand, both in controversial circumstances. England rounded out the year with wins over Japan and Australia. The win over Australia continued an unbroken run of victories over the Wallabies under former Australia coach Eddie Jones. England finished second in the
2019 Six Nations Championship. They beat Ireland, France, Italy but lost to Wales and drew 38–38 with Scotland after leading 31–0. In the
2019 Rugby World Cup warm-up matches they defeated Wales at Twickenham before losing in Cardiff. They then recorded their largest win over Ireland with a 57–15 victory at Twickenham before defeating Italy at
St James' Park. In the
2019 Rugby World Cup, England became the first team to qualify for the quarter-finals following a win over Argentina in
Chōfu. After their final match was cancelled due to
Typhoon Hagibis, England topped
Pool C and faced Australia in the quarter-finals. England won the quarter-final, recording a seventh consecutive victory over Australia which resulted in the Wallabies largest ever Rugby World Cup defeat. England then defeated New Zealand in the semi-final, equalling New Zealands largest Rugby World Cup defeat with a victory in which the All Blacks were kept scoreless for 57 minutes. On 2 November 2019, England were defeated (12–32) by South Africa in the
2019 Rugby World Cup final. In the
2020 Six Nations Championship, England were defeated in their opening game against France in Paris before recording victories against Scotland at Murrayfield and Ireland and Wales at Twickenham. The tournament was then halted due to the
COVID-19 pandemic and resumed with the matches played in empty stadiums in October. In the postponed matches, England recorded a bonus point win over Italy in Rome before France defeated Ireland by eight points which meant that England won the championship on points difference. Due to the pandemic, the scheduled 2020 Autumn Internationals were replaced by the
Autumn Nations Cup. England defeated Georgia, Wales and Ireland before facing France in the final match, winning after extra time at Twickenham to secure the tournament. England finished fifth in the
2021 Six Nations Championship, beating France and Italy but losing to all three home nations for the first time since 1976 and conceding defeat to Scotland at Twickenham for the first time since 1983. In the
2021 Autumn Internationals, England played three matches at Twickenham. They secured a victory over Tonga, recorded their 8th consecutive victory over Australia (32–15) and also beat the current World Champions South Africa (27–26). England finished third in the
2022 Six Nations Championship after defeating Italy and Wales but lost Ireland, France and Scotland. In the
2022 tour of Australia, England faced the Wallabies in a three-test series. They lost the first test match in Perth, but won the last two test matches in Brisbane, and in Sydney to win the test series 2–1. In the
2022 Autumn Internationals they lost to Argentina, beat Japan, drew with New Zealand, and lost to South Africa. England finished fourth in the
2023 Six Nations Championship. England defeated Italy and Wales but was beaten by Scotland, France and Ireland. At the
2023 Rugby World Cup, England beat Argentina, Japan, Chile, and Samoa to go undefeated in the pool stage. In the quarter-final, they defeated Fiji before losing to the eventual champions South Africa in the semi-final. They ended their campaign with a win over Argentina in the bronze final to finish the tournament in third place. England finished third in the
2024 Six Nations Championship. They defeated Italy, Wales and Ireland, but lost to Scotland and France. In the
2024 English tour of New Zealand, England faced the All Blacks in a two-test series. They were defeated in both test matches in Dunedin and in Auckland. In the
2024 Autumn Internationals, England lost to New Zealand, Australia, South Africa, but won against Japan. == Home stadium ==