The results and final standings from the 2017 Six Nations, which ran from February 4 to March 18.
The 2017 RBS 6 Nations (February 4 to March 18) is now at a close with England crowned as champions, but were denied the Grand Slam and a world record 19th match unbeaten as they went down 13-9 to Ireland on the final day.
Six Nations Guide Contents
1. 2017 Full results
2. 2017 Six Nations Final Standings
3. Six Nations Trophy Winners
4. Team-By-Team Titles
5. Stadium Guides
6. Statistics & Records
Six Nations 2017: Results
Click on the scorelines for the full reports
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4
Scotland 27-22 Ireland (Murrayfield)
England 19-16 France (Twickenham)
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 5
Italy 7-33 Wales (Stadio Olimico)
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 11
Italy 10-63 Ireland (Stadio Olimico)
Wales 16-21 England (Principality Stadium)
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 12
France 22-16 Scotland (Stade de France)
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25
Scotland 29-13 Wales (Murrayfield)
Ireland 19-9 France (Aviva Stadium)
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 26
England 36-15 Italy (Twickenham)
FRIDAY, MARCH 10
Wales 22-9 Ireland (Principality Stadium)
SATURDAY, MARCH 11
Italy 18-40 France (Stadio Olimpico)
England 61-21 Scotland (Twickenham)
SATURDAY, MARCH 18
Scotland 29-0 Italy (Murrayfield)
France 20-18 Wales (Stade de France)
Ireland 13-9 England (Aviva Stadium)
Six Nations 2017: Final Standings & Bonus Points
England P 5 W 4 D 0 L 0 F 146 A 81 B 3 Pts 19
Ireland P 5 W 3 D 0 L 2 F 126 A 77 B 2 Pts 14
France P 5 W 3 D 0 L 2 F 107 A 90 B 2 Pts 14
Scotland P 5 W 3 D 0 L 2 F 122 A 118 B 2 Pts 14
Wales P 5 W 2 D 0 L 3 F 102 A 86 B 2 Pts 10
Italy P 5 W 0 D 0 L 5 F 50 A 201 B 0 Pts 0
Points System (including bonus details)
FOUR points awarded for a win
TWO points awarded for a draw
NO points awarded for a loss
ONE bonus point awarded for scoring four tries or more
ONE bonus point awarded if a team loses a match by seven points or less
THREE bonus points if a team wins all five of their matches
Therefore a winning team can gain a maximum of five points while a losing team can still earn up to two points. The maximum total number of points a team can win over the tournament is 28 (5x5 plus three Grand Slam bonus points).
Click here for all Sky Bet's rugby union odds!
Six Nations History: Past Winners & Trophies
2000
Six Nations Champions: England
Grand Slam: No
Triple Crown: No
Calcutta Cup: Scotland
Millennium Trophy: England
Centenary Quaich: Ireland
Giuseppe Garibaldi Trophy: N/A
Wooden Spoon: Italy
2001
Six Nations Champions: England
Grand Slam: No
Triple Crown: No
Calcutta Cup: England
Millennium Trophy: Ireland
Centenary Quaich: Scotland
Giuseppe Garibaldi Trophy: N/A
Wooden Spoon: Italy
2002
Six Nations Champions: France
Grand Slam: France
Triple Crown: England
Calcutta Cup: England
Millennium Trophy: England
Centenary Quaich: Ireland
Giuseppe Garibaldi Trophy: N/A
Wooden Spoon: Italy
2003
Six Nations Champions: England
Grand Slam: England
Triple Crown: England
Calcutta Cup: England
Millennium Trophy: England
Centenary Quaich: Ireland
Giuseppe Garibaldi Trophy: N/A
Wooden Spoon: Wales
2004
Six Nations Champions: France
Grand Slam: France
Triple Crown: Ireland
Calcutta Cup: England
Millennium Trophy: Ireland
Centenary Quaich: Ireland
Giuseppe Garibaldi Trophy: N/A
Wooden Spoon: Scotland
2005
Six Nations Champions: Wales
Grand Slam: Wales
Triple Crown: Wales
Calcutta Cup: England
Millennium Trophy: Ireland
Centenary Quaich: Ireland
Giuseppe Garibaldi Trophy: N/A
Wooden Spoon: Italy
2006
Six Nations Champions: France
Grand Slam: No
Triple Crown: Ireland
Calcutta Cup: Scotland
Millennium Trophy: Ireland
Centenary Quaich: Ireland
Giuseppe Garibaldi Trophy: N/A
Wooden Spoon: Italy
2007
Six Nations Champions: France
Grand Slam: No
Triple Crown: Ireland
Calcutta Cup: England
Millennium Trophy: Ireland
Centenary Quaich: Ireland
Giuseppe Garibaldi Trophy: France
Wooden Spoon: Scotland
2008
Six Nations Champions: Wales
Grand Slam: Wales
Triple Crown: Wales
Calcutta Cup: Scotland
Millennium Trophy: England
Centenary Quaich: Ireland
Giuseppe Garibaldi Trophy: France
Wooden Spoon: Italy
2009
Six Nations Champions: Ireland
Grand Slam: Ireland
Triple Crown: Ireland
Calcutta Cup: England
Millennium Trophy: Ireland
Centenary Quaich: Ireland
Giuseppe Garibaldi Trophy: France
Wooden Spoon: Italy
2010
Six Nations Champions: France
Grand Slam: France
Triple Crown: No
Calcutta Cup: Shared
Millennium Trophy: Ireland
Centenary Quaich: Scotland
Giuseppe Garibaldi Trophy: France
Wooden Spoon: Italy
2011
Six Nations Champions: England
Grand Slam: No
Triple Crown: No
Calcutta Cup: England
Millennium Trophy: Ireland
Centenary Quaich: Ireland
Giuseppe Garibaldi Trophy: Italy
Wooden Spoon: Italy
2012
Six Nations Champions: Wales
Grand Slam: Wales
Triple Crown: Wales
Calcutta Cup: England
Millennium Trophy: England
Centenary Quaich: Ireland
Giuseppe Garibaldi Trophy: France
Wooden Spoon: Scotland
2013
Six Nations Champions: Wales
Grand Slam: No
Triple Crown: No
Calcutta Cup: England
Millennium Trophy: England
Centenary Quaich: Scotland
Giuseppe Garibaldi Trophy: Italy
Wooden Spoon: France
2014
Six Nations Champions: Ireland
Grand Slam: No
Triple Crown: England
Calcutta Cup: England
Millennium Trophy: England
Centenary Quaich: Ireland
Giuseppe Garibaldi Trophy: France
Wooden Spoon: Italy
2015
Six Nations Champions: Ireland
Grand Slam: No
Triple Crown: No
Calcutta Cup: England
Millennium Trophy: Ireland
Centenary Quaich: Ireland
Giuseppe Garibaldi Trophy: France
Wooden Spoon: Scotland
2016
Six Nations Champions: England
Grand Slam: England
Triple Crown: England
Calcutta Cup: England
Millennium Trophy: England
Centenary Quaich: Ireland
Giuseppe Garibaldi Trophy: France
Wooden Spoon: Italy
Six Nations Team-By-Team Titles
Overall records since Five Nations began in 1910
Six Nations began in 2000
Shared Five Nations titles in brackets
ENGLAND
Six Nations Titles: 5
Six Nations Grand Slams: 2
Six Nations Triple Crowns: 4
Six Nations Wooden Spoons: 0
Five Nations Titles: 17 (6)
Five Nations Grand Slams: 11
Five Nations Triple Crowns: 16
Five Nations Wooden Spoons: 14
FRANCE
Six Nations Titles: 5
Six Nations Grand Slams: 3
Six Nations Triple Crowns: N/A
Six Nations Wooden Spoons: 1
Five Nations Titles: 12 (8)
Five Nations Grand Slams: 6
Five Nations Triple Crowns: N/A
Five Nations Wooden Spoons: 17
IRELAND
Six Nations Titles: 3
Six Nations Grand Slams: 1
Six Nations Triple Crowns: 4
Six Nations Wooden Spoons: 0
Five Nations Titles: 6 (5)
Five Nations Grand Slams: 1
Five Nations Triple Crowns: 4
Five Nations Wooden Spoons: 21
ITALY
Six Nations Titles: 0
Six Nations Grand Slams: 0
Six Nations Triple Crowns: N/A
Six Nations Wooden Spoons: 10
Five Nations Titles: N/A
Five Nations Grand Slams: N/A
Five Nations Triple Crowns: N/A
Five Nations Wooden Spoons: N/A
SCOTLAND
Six Nations Titles: 0
Six Nations Grand Slams: 0
Six Nations Triple Crowns: 0
Six Nations Wooden Spoons: 4
Five Nations Titles: 5 (6)
Five Nations Grand Slams: 3
Five Nations Triple Crowns: 3
Five Nations Wooden Spoons: 21
WALES
Six Nations Titles: 4
Six Nations Grand Slams: 3
Six Nations Triple Crowns: 3
Six Nations Wooden Spoons: 1
Five Nations Titles: 15 (8)
Five Nations Grand Slams: 6
Five Nations Triple Crowns: 11
Five Nations Wooden Spoons: 12
Six Nations 2017 Stadium Guides
ENGLAND
Twickenham Stadium, London
Capacity: 82,000
Stadium fact: Twickenham was once a 10-acre vegetable patch for cabbage, mushrooms and fruit trees prior to the Rugby Football Union purchasing the plot in 1907.
Website: http://www.englandrugby.com/twickenham/
FRANCE
Stade de France, Paris
Capacity: 80,000
Stadium fact: It is the only stadium to host the finals of both football (1998) and rugby (2007) World Cups.
Website: http://www.stadefrance.com/fr
IRELAND
Aviva Stadium, Dublin
Capacity: 57,000
Stadium fact: The Aviva Stadium is jointly owned by the Irish Rugby Football Union and the Football Association of Ireland.
Website: http://www.avivastadium.ie/
ITALY
Stadio Olimpico, Rome
Capacity: 82,000
Stadium fact: It was built in 1928 and hosted athletics at the 1960 Rome Olympics as well as the opening and closing ceremonies.
Website: www.rbs6nations.com/en/fanzone/venues_stadio_olimpico
SCOTLAND
BT Murrayfield Stadium, Edinburgh
Capacity: 67,130
Stadium fact: The ground was purchased from the old Edinburgh Polo Ground at Murray's Field in 1922 for £3,800, with Inverleith staging previous internationals.
Website: www.scottishrugby.org/bt-murrayfield-stadium
WALES
Principality Stadium, Cardiff
Capacity: 74,500
Stadium fact: The rebranded Millennium Stadium is the second largest venue in the world with a fully retractable roof.
Website: www.principalitystadium.wales