Rugby Union Apr 23, 2026

Women's Six Nations: England's Red Roses still dominating and building depth despite absentees - 'Rugby doesn't care what you did last week'

👤
By Admin
Sports Journalist
Women's Six Nations: England's Red Roses still dominating and building depth despite absentees - 'Rugby doesn't care what you did last week'

The question before the Women's Six Nations was whether anyone could break England's stranglehold on world rugby. Two games in, and the Red Roses simply haven't missed a beat.

That's despite injuries and pregnancies ushering in a period of transition not seen for a decade. But the Red Roses' strength in depth appears limitless.

With World Cup‑winning captain Zoe Stratford (née Aldcroft) leading a lengthy list of absentees, England were rusty in their round‑one opener against Ireland, yet still had plenty in reserve to overcome that challenge.

The world champions, again without 10 players for their round‑two visit to Murrayfield, cleared that hurdle by running in 12 tries on their way to a record 84-7 victory over Scotland - and a 35th consecutive Test win.

On Saturday, England face Wales at Ashton Gate in Bristol for round three, and ahead of that contest two players spoke to media at vastly different stages of their Test careers: 28-year-old World Cup-winning prop Sarah Bern (81 caps), and 19-year-old back-row Demelza Short who made her Test debut last weekend in Edinburgh.

"We've had a real mix around," Bern said. "We've obviously got some amazing pregnancies in the squad, so that's opened up doors for the likes of Demelza and younger people coming through. We then had a couple of injuries again, so it's been very fast changing.

"But a lot of it is: 'Here's your license to go attack, thrive, be yourself and be brave and show what you can do.' That's how we attack it.

"No matter if you're a youngster coming through or you've been around the block a few times as a Red Rose, you have incredibly high standards.

"We always get asked: 'Do you ever get bored winning?' And actually, I don't think if you ask any of the girls yet, that we've put a performance out that we're super proud of.

"That's what we want to look at every week: How can we develop our game? How can we grow it? How can we push to have the best everything, the best attack, the best defence? That might seem like an unattainable task but that's in the Red Roses' DNA, to keep striving and pushing the barriers of what we can actually do.

"The messaging from all of us is that rugby doesn't care what you did last week. It doesn't care if you won a World Cup. It's how you show up on the day.

"Part of the challenge as well is helping those young players like Demelza and there's been a couple of others getting used to the environment, to get up to speed as quickly as possible."

Indeed the sheer level of change and unavailable players for England has forced them to build even greater depth to their ranks.

It's a scenario that has worked out swimmingly so far.

"We're ambitious, we're brave," Bern added. "We want to push those barriers. I think we recognise that, yes, we won a World Cup and it was great but we definitely could have made improvements in our attack, and now this is the opportunity to do that.

"A couple of injuries have definitely sped players' progression up and we are all under the understanding that we all have to function. We all have to fire in the same ways and that requires a lot of hard work off of the pitch.

"There's been a lot of conversations, leaders making sure people know their detail because then when you get onto that rugby pitch in the training session, you have to know it or it's going to be pretty tough for you. Every player in here has helped each other out.

"This is the opportunity. Also, it makes it way more exciting. We want people to come to the stadium. If they see the same thing every week, that's not going to be fun for them so we want to be entertaining.

"We want to show that all of our Red Roses have amazing abilities to carry, fend, play an exciting style of rugby, and we want to showcase that to the world.

"We just need to continue to push that, show our personalities, and show that women's rugby is a fantastic game to watch. It's different from the men's. Each of them have a selling point, but they're both just as entertaining."

For Short, in the space of 12 months she has gone from playing for England's U18 side at the Six Nations festival at Wellington College in 70-minute matches, to a fully-fledged Red Rose lining out alongside recent World Cup winners.

"I don't think I'll ever actually really take in what's happened. I don't think I think it's real yet. It's crazy. It's been a whirlwind for me.

"It hasn't really sunk in yet, but it's getting a bit more normal as the weeks go by, but not as normal.

"I'm not really sure entirely when I realised this could happen, because obviously I only played U18s last year.

"Just at the back of that and being selected for U20 camps I thought maybe it could go somewhere, but not obviously this season, maybe in the next one.

"Then getting the call-up for the Red Roses so soon, I thought I might be able to make my debut in this campaign and then managed to do it, so it's pretty crazy."

Tags:

rugby-union news

Share this article

Related Posts

Six Nations: Will Greenwood expects RFU to stick with Steve Borthwick and lead England into 2027 World Cup

Six Nations: Will Greenwood expects RFU to stick with Steve Borthwick and lead England into 2027 World Cup

Former World Cup winner Will Greenwood says he expects England to stick with head coach Steve Borthwick despite a shocking Six Nations campaign.After...

Six Nations: Maro Itoje says England 'are going places' despite record fourth tournament loss but will Steve Borthwick remain in charge?

Six Nations: Maro Itoje says England 'are going places' despite record fourth tournament loss but will Steve Borthwick remain in charge?

Maro Itoje insists England "are going places" despite enduring their worst Six Nations campaign, while head coach Steve Borthwick remains adamant he i...

Six Nations 2026: Men's fixtures, schedule, dates, Calcutta Cup and more as France defend championship title

Six Nations 2026: Men's fixtures, schedule, dates, Calcutta Cup and more as France defend championship title

All the fixtures and schedule for the 2026 Men's Six Nations as France defended their title against England, Ireland, Scotland, Wales and Italy. Franc...

England vs Wales: John Mitchell raises bar of expectation for Red Roses after flawless Women's Six Nations start

England vs Wales: John Mitchell raises bar of expectation for Red Roses after flawless Women's Six Nations start

England head coach John Mitchell says the Red Roses' clash with Wales is all about raising their game, as his side look to build on a dominant start t...

Ireland hand contract extensions to Bundee Aki, Dan Sheehan, Jamison Gibson-Park and Josh van der Flier with World Cup 2027 in mind

Ireland hand contract extensions to Bundee Aki, Dan Sheehan, Jamison Gibson-Park and Josh van der Flier with World Cup 2027 in mind

The Irish Rugby Football Union has announced contract extensions for Bundee Aki, Dan Sheehan, Jamison Gibson-Park and Josh van der Flier as they look...

Ireland 43-21 Scotland: Andy Farrell's side secure Triple Crown in Dublin but ultimately miss out on Six Nations championship

Ireland 43-21 Scotland: Andy Farrell's side secure Triple Crown in Dublin but ultimately miss out on Six Nations championship

Ireland were denied the Six Nations championship despite a 43-21 victory over Scotland at the Aviva Stadium, a result which secured the Triple Crown.A...