France sealed their first Six Nations Grand Slam in six years when they weathered an England storm to run out 12-10 winners at the Stade de France last night.

Three Morgan Parra penalties and a François Trinh-Duc drop-goal were sufficient for a France team that had already seen off Italy (46-20), Wales (20-26), Ireland (33-10) and Scotland (9-18).

A fluid start by England promised something special from a side that has been roundly criticised for its boring play. But that fluidity was only really on show in the first and last quarters, as France upped their rush defence and were happy to sit back, soak up the pressure and gradually take control of the middle portion of the match.

Trinh-Duc opened the scoring with a neatly-taken drop-goal in the fourth minute after impressive French No. 8 Imanol Harinordoquy drove into England's 22-metre area.

But England hit straight back with full-back Ben Foden the welcome recipient of some swift midfield give-and-take, the last by solid debutant Chris Ashton, to slide unfettered into the left corner, Toby Flood nailing the touch-line conversion.

The visitors, with scrum-half Danny Care and Foden to the fore, took the game to the home side, for whom Parra missed a 45-metre penalty after 13 minutes.

While centre Mike Tindall offered a more robust defence against the imposing figure of Mathieu Bastareaud, he was penalised for not rolling away in the 18th minute, and Parra cut the deficit to one point with a penalty.

Dan Cole was then penalised for collapsing a scrum and Parra moved France into the lead with his second penalty.

A further Cole infringement at the scrum handed Parra another easy chance as France moved out to a 12-7 half-time lead.

Cole and hooker Dylan Hartley made way for David Wilson and Steve Thompson as England tried to shore up their creaking scrum in the second half.

Care's clever box kick into unguarded French territory almost paid off for the chasing Foden but the ball rolled into touch.

England's game degenerated into a procession of ugly pick-and-go's in a scrappy game in which the heavy rain saw a number of spilt balls at a packed and expectant Stade de France.

But the visitors were seemingly buoyed by France's lack of attacking spirit in the last quarter. Mark Cueto broke through but could not find Ashton on the wing, and the pressure finally told when Jonny Wilkinson kicked a 67th minute penalty after Parra failed to roll away after bringing down Cueto on the other side of the field.

France ground out the final five minutes for a result that was a lot closer than it should have been, but one which secured 'Les Bleus' a first Grand Slam since 2004.

Results

Wales 33
Scotland 23
Ireland 20
France 12
England 10
Italy 10

Standings

France 10 points; Ireland 6; England 5; Wales 4; Scotland 3; Italy 2.

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