Our guide to Sunday's Guinness Six Nations clash between France and England in Paris includes team news, predictions, statistics and more.
The match, which takes place at the Stade de France in Paris, will start at 1500 GMT on Sunday February 2 and will be screened live on BBC.
France team: Bouthier; Thomas, Vakatawa, Fickou, Penaud; Ntamack, Dupont; Baille, Marchand, Haouas, Le Roux, Willemse, Cros, Ollivon (c), Alldritt.
Replacements: Mauvaka, Poirot, Bamba, Palu, Woki, Serin, Jalibert, Rattez.
England team: G Furbank (Northampton), J May (Leicester), M Tuilagi (Leicester), O Farrell (Saracens, capt), E Daly (Saracens), G Ford (Leicester), B Youngs (Leicester), J Marler (Harlequins), J George (Saracens), K Sinckler (Harlequins), M Itoje (Saracens), C Ewels (Bath), C Lawes (Northampton), S Underhill (Bath), T Curry (Sale).
Replacements: L Cowan-Dickie (Exeter), E Genge (Leicester), W Stuart (Bath), G Kruis (Saracens), L Ludlam (Northampton), W Heinz (Gloucester), O Devoto (Exeter), J Joseph (Bath).
England begin their Six Nations quest with a tough away fixture which they are 8/15 to win. France, 11/8 for victory, are given a four-point handicap start by Sky Bet.
Tony Calvin preview: I have enough invested in a strong French opening performance to be going in personally again on any market here – and you will have too, if taking my outright advice – but clearly I would side with France on the handicap if pushed, even if the injury to hooker Camille Chat earlier in the week was a big loss and one that I was not happy at all to see.
"It's a young French team that's won the Under-20s (World Cup) and is building towards the World Cup in 2023. There are a couple of ways you can go in that regard," Jones said.
"When I took over England in 2016 I kept experienced players and brought young players in.
"Test match rugby requires experience and France have decided not to take experience in, they've gone with youth. And they might be wrong, they might right.
"We don't know but it's going to test those young players because they will have never have played against a brutal physicality and intensity that we are going to play with on Sunday.
"This is not domestic rugby. You don't get that intensity in domestic rugby. That's why you call it Test rugby. You don't get that in Under-20s competitions.
"So at stages they're going to be looking at each other wanting to know where the answers are going to come from.
"There are not too many of them who have experienced that before. They don't have the experienced players to call on to say 'what do you do?' and that's going to be our intent.
"We played with that brutal physicality for the last four years and we just want to get better at it."
2016 Six Nations: France 21-31 England (Stade de France)
2017 Six Nations: England 19-16 France (Twickenham)
2018 Six Nations: France 22-16 England (Stade de France)
2019 Six Nations: England 44-8 France (Twickenham)
Round One (February 1-2)
Round Two (February 8-9)
Round Three (February 22-23)
Round Four (March 7-8)
Round Five (March 14)