That was the average number of tries per match in this year’s men’s Six Nations, after the tournament produced a record 111 tries across 15 games according to a report from WinSportsOnline. For a sport that used to treat 20 points as a solid winning total, that figure says everything about where elite rugby is heading. The modern game is getting faster, wider and far more open, and the latest Six Nations felt less like an exception than a warning of what is coming next.
France were the clearest example of that shift. They won the 2026 title, did it for the second year in a row, and built the campaign around attack. Louis Bielle-Biarrey finished with nine tries, breaking his own tournament record after scoring eight in 2025, and his four-try display against England on 14 March summed up the mood of the championship. France did not just edge to the trophy. They won it in a 48-46 match that looked more like a warning shot to every defence in world rugby.
But this was not only about France. The whole tournament kept producing scorelines that would have looked unusual not long ago. Scotland beat France 50-40 in a 90-point game at Murrayfield. Italy then beat England 23-18 for their first ever men’s Six Nations win over them. By the final weekend, the competition had stopped feeling like a contest between attack and defence. It felt like attack had moved ahead. Even Ireland, who finished with the tournament’s best defensive record, still conceded 14 tries.
That is what makes the 7,4 figure so useful for a rugby news outlet. It is not just a stat to drop into a roundup. It tells a bigger story. Coaches can still talk about shape, control and territory, but the numbers from 2026 show that the sport’s top level is now being pushed by finishing power and quick-strike attack. If this Six Nations was a sign of where the game is going, then rugby is entering a period where keeping teams below three tries may matter more than simply keeping them below 20 points.















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